Olakunle Churchill has spoken out against divorce rumors involving Nollywood actress Rosy Meurer, dismissing the claims as legally groundless.
The statement, posted on Churchill’s verified Instagram page and titled “False Divorce Claims and Public Misinformation,” marks the first time either party has publicly addressed the controversy that erupted after Meurer posted a video on social media in which she conspicuously reintroduced herself without any mention of Churchill and notably without her wedding ring, a detail eagle-eyed fans were quick to seize upon, igniting a firestorm of speculation across online platforms.
Churchill’s most striking revelation was not a denial of a breakup, but rather a fundamental challenge to the legal framing of the entire narrative.
“The reports circulating online about a supposed divorce between Roseline Meurer and me are completely false,” Churchill declared. “There is no truth to them, and they should be treated as such. There was no legally recognized marriage. There was no church wedding and no court wedding. What took place was an introduction. Therefore, the idea of a ‘divorce’ is baseless from the outset.”

The distinction is legally significant. Under Nigerian law, a marriage is only recognized if it is contracted under the Marriage Act, typically via a registry or licensed church ceremony, or under customary law with the appropriate rites observed.
A traditional introduction, while culturally meaningful, does not in itself confer the legal status of matrimony and therefore would not necessitate formal divorce proceedings to dissolve.
In essence, Churchill is arguing that there is nothing to divorce.
Churchill went further, directly challenging the authenticity of what he described as alleged divorce documents circulating in the public domain.
“Any valid judicial process required that all parties be formally served and allowed to react,” he stated pointedly. He confirmed that neither Meurer nor any legal representative acting on her behalf had served him with any such documents.
In remarks that were both pointed and laced with sarcasm, Churchill questioned the credibility of the legal actors purportedly involved: “I am 100% sure that individuals without proper experience in the media space are advising Rosy incorrectly, alongside legal practitioners who operate under a mango tree without due process and claim to produce divorce documents within 24 hours.”
He raised further doubts about the timeline of any alleged court proceedings, asking rhetorically, “Looking at the alleged hearing date of 3/5 and judgment dates, I am left asking, is this even possible in Nigeria?” It is a question that legal observers may find pointed, given that Nigerian courts are not generally known for resolving matrimonial disputes within a single 24-hour cycle.
No story involving Churchill is complete without reference to his turbulent and very public past with actress-turned-evangelist Tonto Dikeh, with whom he shares a son.

Their acrimonious split years ago played out in brutal detail across social media, with accusations traded publicly by both sides, and Meurer, who entered Churchill’s life during that period, was cast by many as a central figure in the drama.
Churchill addressed this chapter head-on, making clear he considered it closed.
“Tonto wronged me, and whatever existed between us was ours to resolve. No one confronted her or fought that battle on my behalf,” he said, adding that both he and Dikeh had since chosen to forgive one another. “I believe she has changed and is now in a better place.”
He was equally emphatic that Meurer had entered the relationship with full knowledge of his history. “Ms Meurer was aware that he had a child and issues with actress-turned-evangelist Tonto Dikeh before their relationship started,” the statement noted, with Churchill expressing his expectation that she would understand “such matters were strictly between the parties involved.”
Churchill appeared to gently push back against any narrative that cast Meurer as a long-suffering loyalist who had sacrificed her reputation for him, a framing that has featured prominently in sympathetic portrayals of the actress online.
“I do not agree with the narrative that Rosy ‘stood by me’ in a way that should now be exaggerated,” he said. “While I acknowledge that she faced public criticism, it is important to state that if she had not been there, someone else would have occupied that position in my life.”
It is a cold and clinical assessment and one that is unlikely to go unnoticed.
What remains conspicuously absent from this unfolding saga is any direct response from Meurer herself. Her team has yet to issue a counter-statement, and the actress has not publicly addressed Churchill’s claims as of the time of this report.
Churchill, for his part, ended his statement with what read as both a plea and a firm assertion of boundaries: “At times, it is necessary to allow a man to handle his responsibilities without interference, most especially when he is carried along. That is part of his role and duty.”
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Olakunle Churchill has denied divorce claims from actress Rosy Meurer by challenging the very foundation of the story, asserting that no legally recognized marriage ever existed between them.
Without a court or church wedding, there is legally nothing to divorce. He further dismissed circulating court documents as procedurally dubious, noting he was never formally served.























