Olakunle Churchill and Tonto Dikeh announcing reconciliation for co-parenting their young son

Nigerian Stars End 10-Year Feud to Co-Parent Their Son

✨ Faith Restored

After a decade of public conflict following their messy 2017 divorce, actress Tonto Dikeh and ex-husband Olakunle Churchill have reconciled to focus on raising their son together. The breakthrough came when their son called Churchill "Daddy" for the first time in years.

When Olakunle Churchill heard his son call him "Daddy" for the first time in years, he knew something remarkable was happening. The Nigerian businessman and his ex-wife, actress Tonto Dikeh, are putting aside a decade of bitter public battles to co-parent their son, King Andre.

Churchill confirmed the reconciliation on Sunday, responding to Dikeh's surprising announcement a day earlier. "The conflict is behind us," he wrote on Instagram, describing the moment he received that first phone call from his son as "deeply touching."

The couple's split in 2017 was anything but quiet. Dikeh left Churchill barely two years after their August 2015 wedding, citing infidelity and domestic violence allegations. Their separation sparked years of online altercations that played out publicly, with both parties trading accusations on social media.

But something shifted. After years of separation from King Andre, now eight years old, Churchill received that unexpected call. He described it as "a reminder that what God cannot do does not exist."

Nigerian Stars End 10-Year Feud to Co-Parent Their Son

Why This Inspires

This story isn't about romance rekindling. It's about two people choosing their child's wellbeing over pride and past pain. Churchill made it clear they're focused on "co-parenting with love, care, and a shared commitment" rather than reuniting as a couple.

For King Andre, the reconciliation means having both parents actively involved in his life. The young boy, who was born in February 2016, has spent most of his childhood caught between warring parents. Now he gets to simply be a son to both his mother and father.

The couple's public platform means their decision to choose peace ripples beyond their family. Thousands of divorced parents watching this unfold might find inspiration to put aside old wounds for their own children's sake.

Churchill says he's looking forward to "a future filled with collaboration, respect, and peace," trusting his faith to guide him through this new chapter of co-parenting.

Sometimes the bravest thing former partners can do is admit the fight isn't worth what their children are losing.

Based on reporting by Google News - Reconciliation

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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