💔 Lizzy Anjorin Crosses the Line: Vicious Curse Targets Iyabo Ojo’s Unborn Grandchild – Fans Horrified 😨🩸
They’ve never been friends.
That much is clear.

For years, Lizzy Anjorin and Iyabo Ojo have traded shade, barbs, and veiled jabs on social media.
But nothing — absolutely nothing — prepared fans for what Lizzy unleashed this week in a venom-filled tirade that has turned one of Nollywood’s messiest rivalries into something far more sinister.
In an Instagram Live session laced with fury, spiritual threats, and pure venom, Lizzy Anjorin didn’t just attack Iyabo Ojo — she reached into the future, placing a horrifying curse on her only daughter, Priscilla Ojo… and Priscilla’s unborn child.
“Your daughter’s baby will die.
Your lineage will know no peace.
You mocked my pain — now watch your joy burn!”
The room fell silent.

Then chaos erupted.
Fans flooded the comments section in disbelief.
Many initially thought it was an act.
A troll stunt.
But as Lizzy continued, her voice trembling with rage, it became terrifyingly clear: this wasn’t a metaphor.
This was a curse.
And it wasn’t accidental.
It was calculated.

According to insiders close to both actresses, tensions had been simmering for weeks.
Behind the scenes, both camps were locked in a brutal social media war involving money laundering allegations, political affiliations, and accusations of fake lifestyles.
But until now, the feud had stayed within adult boundaries.
This time, Lizzy crossed the sacred line: children.
Lineage.
Generational pain.
Priscilla Ojo, just 23 and currently one of Nigeria’s rising influencers, has never responded to Lizzy directly — nor has she been part of the public feud.
And yet, she became the target of what many are calling “a spiritual assassination attempt.

Iyabo Ojo’s response was swift — and brutal.
Within hours, she released a furious Instagram post (now deleted) saying:
“You will swallow those words in tears.
My child is covered by grace.
You — Lizzy — are darkness walking.
But Lizzy wasn’t done.
In a second video, filmed in a dimly lit room, she upped the ante — claiming that Iyabo “mocked” her after a recent personal tragedy and that she’s “only returning what was sent.
”
“You thought you could laugh at me and walk away? You danced on my pain.
Now, may your own joy be buried!”
This wasn’t shade.
It was a public curse, soaked in spiritual warfare.
And for Nigerian fans — where curses are not just metaphors, but real, feared consequences — this hit differently.
The backlash came like a tidal wave.
On Twitter/X, hashtags like #ProtectPriscilla, #LizzyAnjorinMustBeStopped, and #SpiritualAttack began trending by sunrise.
Even traditional spiritualists and pastors weighed in, with one saying:
“Invoking death on an unborn child is not beef — it’s spiritual wickedness.
This is warfare.
”
But Lizzy’s supporters argue that she was provoked — that Iyabo has mocked her, humiliated her, and even interfered with her brand endorsements.
They claim Lizzy is only “spitting back the poison she was fed.
”
Yet public sympathy is not with Lizzy this time.
Because no matter how deep a feud goes, wishing death on a child — even an unborn one — is a line most refuse to cross.
Many celebrities have distanced themselves from Lizzy publicly.
A-list actor Yul Edochie tweeted,
“We can fight, yes.
But not with our tongues dipped in death.
There’s power in what we say.
Let’s remember that.
”
Even brands once affiliated with Lizzy are reportedly in damage-control mode.
One luxury fashion label confirmed they are “reviewing” their relationship with her following the controversy.
Meanwhile, Iyabo Ojo has gone unusually quiet.
Sources close to her say she’s spiritually fortifying her home — consulting pastors and traditional elders to “cleanse the air” and “block any spiritual attack.
”
Her daughter Priscilla, meanwhile, posted a cryptic message on her Instagram story:
“You can’t curse what God has already blessed.
”
Fans are begging her to stay off social media, protect her mental health, and stay surrounded by love.
But the damage is done.
And the fear lingers.
This wasn’t just two women exchanging insults.
This was a generational curse, spoken out loud, on a global platform, in a society where words carry weight, and spiritual fire burns quietly behind closed doors.
As it stands, no legal action has been taken, but insiders say Iyabo’s legal team is exploring options, citing “defamation with intent to harm” and possible spiritual harassment — a growing but murky legal concept in Nigerian courts.
For now, the public is holding its breath.
Because when curses are spoken, something shifts.
And in the world of Nollywood, where fame, faith, and fear often intertwine, one can only wonder…
Did Lizzy Anjorin just speak into existence a tragedy too dark to reverse?
Or did she just curse her own soul in the process?