TheCable Fact Check
  • Home
  • Fact Check
  • Fake News
  • Check Am For Wazobia
Reading: FACT CHECK: Did Rihanna say she’s originally Igbo?
Share
Latest News
Ị́hé ńgósị́ ébé ńdị́ ụ́ká Naijiria jị́ égbè n’ụ́lọ́ ụ́ká ézị́ghị́ézị́
Hotunan da ke yawo na kiristocin Najeriya rike da makamai a coci suna yaudarar
Àwọn fọ́tò tó sàfihàn àwọn ọmọ Nàìjíríà ẹlẹ́sìn Kristẹni tí wọ́n di nnkan ìjà mọ́ra kò seé gbàgbọ́
Viral foto wey show as Nigerian Christians dey cari gun for church dey mislead pipu
FACT CHECK: Viral photos of Nigerian Christians bearing arms in churches are misleading
Da’awar cewa Davido da Chioma suna tsammanin ɗansu na uku karya ne
Òótọ́ kọ́ ni ọ̀rọ̀ tó sọ pé Davido àti Chioma ń gbaradì fún ọmọ wọn kẹta
Evidence no dey sey Davido and Chioma dey expect dia third pikin
Advertisement
Aa
TheCable Fact CheckTheCable Fact Check
Search
  • Home
  • Fact Check
  • Fake News
  • Check Am For Wazobia
Follow US

FACT CHECK: Did Rihanna say she’s originally Igbo?

James Ojo
By James Ojo Published August 19, 2021 3 Min Read
Share

A report, which claimed Rihanna, the Barbadian singer, said she is originally an Igbo woman recently surfaced online and went viral.

“My mum told me that I’m originally an Igbo woman. Igbo is a tribe in Africa,” she was quoted to have said. 

The quote was circulated on various blogs and social media platforms, including Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

On the Facebook page of Daily Times Nigeria, for instance, the quote garnered over 19,000 likes, 7,000 comments and 2,500 shares.

Some social media users have also reacted to the claim.

“It’s good when someone knows where he/she from I’m originally an Igbo woman, #Rihanna reveals,” a Twitter user wrote.

It's good, when someone knows where he/she from I’m Originally An Igbo Woman, #Rihanna Reveals https://t.co/9i1TTYV8sS

— kenechukwu ilechukwu (@kenechukwu24h) August 13, 2021

“We her kinsmen have always known this. I had earlier mentioned this in one of my interviews…on June 12 2012 during the burial of my Mother. Rihanna is from our ancestral lineage in Amangwu Ohafia, in Abia State. This is a known fact,” another user wrote.

We her kinsmen have always known this. I had earlier mentioned this in one of my interviews with @SaharaReporters on June 12 2012 during the burial of my Mother.
Rihanna is from our ancestral lineage in Amangwu Ohafia, in Abia State. This is a known fact.https://t.co/iRSUrERhHM

— Luwehn JNK (@luwehn) August 13, 2021

Similarly, a user wrote: “#Biafrans we have people all over.”

#Biafrans we have people all over.https://t.co/gCbkAAmWzB

— @Charles (@Charles28952356) August 13, 2021

BUT DID RIHANNA ACTUALLY SAY THIS?

Checks by TheCable showed there was no credible source where the 33-year-old singer and entrepreneur made the claim. The music star did not grant any interview where she made the remark. 

Further checks on her social media accounts — Facebook, Twitter and Instagram — showed she did not post the viral claim attributed to her.

TheCable also found out that mainstream media platforms such as The Nation and Daily Post, which also published the claim, have deleted the report as seen here and here.

Rihanna, whose real name is Robyn Fenty, was born to Monica Braithwaite, an Afro-Guyanese, and Ronald Fenty, Afro-Barbadian with Irish descent.

In a 2019 interview with the New York Times, Rihanna, who recently became a billionaire, reflected on her ancestry.

“In my own household, my father is half black, half white. My mom is black from South America. I was seeing diversity. That’s all I knew,” she had said.

A look at her family tree also shows that there is no evidence that the singer has a Nigerian origin as suggested by the viral report.

VERDICT: The viral report quoting Rihanna as saying she is originally an Igbo woman is false. 

TAGGED: Igbo, nigeria, Rihanna

Please send your feedback, claims to fact check and corrections requests to [email protected]

James Ojo August 19, 2021 August 19, 2021
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POPULAR POSTS

Advertisement

Ị́hé ńgósị́ ébé ńdị́ ụ́ká Naijiria jị́ égbè n’ụ́lọ́ ụ́ká ézị́ghị́ézị́

Ka ndị omekome wakpochara ndị gara ụka na Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) dị na Oke…

December 4, 2025

Hotunan da ke yawo na kiristocin Najeriya rike da makamai a coci suna yaudarar

Biyo bayan harin da wasu ‘yan bindiga suka kai kan mabiya cocin Christ Apostolic Church…

December 4, 2025

Àwọn fọ́tò tó sàfihàn àwọn ọmọ Nàìjíríà ẹlẹ́sìn Kristẹni tí wọ́n di nnkan ìjà mọ́ra kò seé gbàgbọ́

Lẹ́hìn ìgbà tí àwọn oníwà jàgídíjàgan kan kọlu àwọn ènìyàn tí wọ́n ń jọ́sìn ní…

December 4, 2025

Viral foto wey show as Nigerian Christians dey cari gun for church dey mislead pipu

Afta bandits attack worshippers Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) branch for Oke Isegun inside di Eruku…

December 4, 2025
Advertisement
Advertisement

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

FACT CHECK: Viral photos of Nigerian Christians bearing arms in churches are misleading

Following the attack on worshippers by bandits at a branch of Christ Apostolic Church (CAC) at Oke Isegun in the…

Fact Check
December 3, 2025

FACT CHECK: Viral photos of Chioma with baby bump is from 2023

A post claims that Afrobeats star Davido and his wife, Chioma Adeleke, are expecting another child.  The claim was posted…

Fact Check
November 24, 2025

DISINFO ALERT: Video showing shooting of army general by ISWAP is AI-generated

A viral video has purportedly shown the moment Musa Uba, a brigadier general, was killed by insurgents in Borno state.…

Fact Check
November 19, 2025

FACT CHECK: No evidence Trump threatened to ‘capture’ Tinubu in 24 hours

A report claims that US President Donald Trump threatened to capture President Bola Tinubu within 24 hours without his security…

Fact Check
November 13, 2025

CableCheck seeks to provide reliable tools and resources for readers to tackle the menace of fake and misleading materials constantly pushed into the public space from various sources. We monitor the accuracy of claims made in traditional and social media. We also provide a tracker to hold politicians and policymakers accountable for the plans and promises they make to the public. CableCheck is a project of the Cable Newspaper Journalism Foundation (CNJF), supported by the MacArthur Foundation and implemented by TheCable newspaper.

Follow US: 

LINKS

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Non-Partisanship Policy
  • Funding
  • Correction Policy
© Copyright TheCable. All Rights reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?