Four days after the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) released Zlatan Ibile, the artiste has released a music video to address fake friends and those who snitched on him when he was in the EFCC custody, telling them not to be quick to judge.
Recently,the EFCC arrested and paradedĀ Zlatan IbileĀ together withĀ Naira MarleyĀ and three others over their alleged involvement in Internet fraud. After four days in the EFCC custody,Ā the anti-graft agency freed Zlatan IbileĀ on administrative bail and detained Naira Marley.
However, four days after he was freed, the artiste has released a music video titled ā4 days in Okotie EbohāĀ to express his disappointment about those he believed snitched on him while he was in the EFCC net.
The song which he published on his Instagram page on Sunday, May 19, 2019, the fast-rising artiste advised snitches not to be quick to judge because nobody is holy. The song started with a Yoruba proverb that loosely translates as āpretend you were dead, see who will shed tears over your death. Pretend to be broke and see whoāll ignore youā.
Other lines in the song, which was largely sung in the Yoruba language to address his purported snitches thus translates:
āMy people know me, forget the fact that they tried to give me a bad name.Ā
So, you too can talk (about me) like this and you call yourself my friend. We eat and drink together. Just four days and you canāt hide your hatred for me. You guys didnāt expect me to return. Nobody is holy and donāt be quick to judgeā
TheĀ Okotie EbohĀ in the title of the song is a street in Ikoyi, where the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) office is located in Lagos.