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In Other News · Episode 46
Ikechukwu Tells Lagos: 'I Told You So' While Everyone Else Is Just Trying Not to Drown
Lagos is underwater and Ikechukwu Onunaku is busy winning the 'I Told You So Olympics.' Victoria Island's been flooding since his primary school days, he says, and he's got a 1998 diary entry to prove it. Sand filling, bad drainage, worse gloating. Edgar doesn't lie.

Eriakha Edgar
Author
Saturday, 18 July 2026
4 min read
9 views

In other news, Lagosians have been literally gasping for air as floodwaters swallow cars, homes, and the city's collective sanity. But while everyone else is busy panicking, Ikechukwu Onunaku decided it was the perfect time to play "I Told You So Olympics."

The actor and rapper has weighed in on the recent flooding with the energy of a man who has been waiting decades for this moment. In a video that has since gone viral, likely because it's one of the few things dry enough to view, Ikechukwu asked the question nobody wanted to hear: "Why are Lagos residents acting surprised? Victoria Island has been flooding for decades."
He then proceeded to remind everyone that he was wading through floodwater in Victoria Island back in primary school. That's right. While you were learning your times tables, Ikechukwu was learning to swim to class. (Sips coffee like Genevieve Nnaji)

But Ikechukwu didn't stop at nostalgia. He dug deeper into his bag of obvious truths: much of Lagos's expensive real estate was built on land that used to be literal ocean, reclaimed through sand filling. In other words, the swanky neighborhoods where CEOs pay millions in rent are essentially designer swamps. It's like buying a penthouse on a sinking ship and being shocked when you get wet.
The actor argued that poor regulation and planning have kept the flooding problem alive and kicking longer than some of the politicians in charge. And honestly? He's not wrong. A 2025 academic study confirmed Lagos is a national flood hotspot, with 35 recorded events, including seven specifically concentrated in that Lekki-Victoria Island paradise. It's almost like building a megacity on a coastal wetland with drainage systems designed by someone who's never seen rain is a recipe for disaster. (Smirks like Richard Mofe-Damijo)
The real punchline? Ikechukwu warned that things could get even worse if lasting solutions aren't implemented. That's right. In a city where people have already started treating canoes as viable daily transportation, the flooding might just get a sequel. More water. More chaos. More expensive cars floating away like sad little paper boats.
But here is what the blogs did not tell you.

Ikechukwu isn't just a rapper with a hot take. He's actually been running a secret side hustle as a "Flood Prophet" since 1998. Every time it rains in Lagos, he records a video, posts it, and waits for the validation. The man has a calendar where he circles dates and writes "I told them" in red ink. His primary school mates can confirm, he was the kid who stood by the classroom window during heavy rain, pointed at the water rising, and announced, "This will be a problem in 2026." They thought he was just being dramatic. Who's laughing now? (shines eyes like Segun Arinze)
And the "sand filling" he mentioned? The Lagos State government actually suspended all reclamation projects in 2025 because unchecked filling was making flooding worse. But developers kept going anyway because money talks louder than environmental impact assessments. So really, the flooding isn't just nature's fault. It's the result of people turning swamps into real estate and acting shocked when the swamp remembers it's a swamp.
Meanwhile, the Nigerian Hydrological Services Agency has warned that this is just the start. The rains will continue for another 12 weeks, and August to September could be even worse. So if you thought this was bad, hold onto your flip-flops. The water is just getting started.
So what's the solution? Clear the drains? Build better infrastructure? Leave Lagos entirely? Ikechukwu didn't say. He was too busy basking in the glory of being right. And honestly, in a city where the only thing more predictable than the rain is the outrage about the rain, he's earned the right to gloat. The real tragedy isn't the flooding, it's that we keep acting surprised every time the water shows up like it owns the place. Which, technically, it does. (hisses like Joke Silva)
Edgar doesn't lie.
Source: Ikechukwu's primary school diary, entry dated June 1998: "Today my shoes got wet. This will be a national crisis in 28 years. I will remind everyone.
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