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Ayisha Modi Demands $8,000 Debt from Late Daddy Lumba’s Estate: ‘Dead or Alive, I’ll Get My Money’

Controversial social media personality Ayisha Modi has reignited her long-standing feud with the late highlife legend Daddy Lumba, insisting his estate owes her $8,000 for medication she personally procured in the US during his severe spinal health crisis years ago.

In a recent interview with blogger De Godson TV, Modi declared she will pursue repayment “dead or alive,” emphasizing she raised the issue publicly while he was living and refuses to forgive the debt.

Modi recounted how Lumba, through Kumawood actor Lil Win, contacted her from Ghana unable to source the expensive drug locally. With assistance from singer Prince Bright, she secured a US doctor for a legal prescription, spending $8,000 on the medicine plus $1,500 in fees. “I didn’t purchase the $8,000 medicine and get the doctor to issue a prescription form for free,” she stated, adding the doctor advised against buying in her name to avoid medical record complications. Lil Win, she claims, was to reimburse her upon delivery.

Upon returning to Ghana, Modi delivered the medication alongside Lil Win and Lumba’s former manager, Zack GH. She also alleged spending an additional $4,000 on shopping gifts for Lumba, his partner Odo Broni (Priscilla Ofori Atta), and their children. “I was told that I would be paid when I bring the medicine. Lil Win was the one supposed to pay that money because he was the one who called me,” she explained, expressing frustration over non-payment despite multiple visits to Lumba’s home.

“I spoke about him owing me when he was alive,” Modi insisted. “A dead body cannot owe anyone. I cannot forgive the debt like that.” Her comments, shared in a video interview, have sparked mixed reactions online, with some viewing it as a valid claim against Lumba’s estate—still embroiled in disputes over his widow status—and others dismissing it as opportunistic amid his recent passing on August 26, 2025.

Lumba, 60 at his death, had battled health issues, including spinal problems, and Modi previously aired the grievance in 2025 TikTok lives, where she tearfully accused him of ingratitude. Lil Win and Zack GH have not responded, and Lumba’s family, focused on funeral rites, has not addressed the allegation. Under Ghana’s Intestate Succession Law, 1985 (PNDCL 111), creditors can pursue estates, but Modi’s claim—lacking public evidence—may require legal action.

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