Ayisha Modi has barbed her teeth at Ghanaian Hiplife legend Obrafour after he took Canadian rapper Drake to court for violating copyright in his song “Calling My Name” from his “Honestly, Nevermind” album from 2022.
According to the court document, which was cited by 3news.com, Obrafour declined Drake’s request to use the Tinny-featured remix of his song “Oye Ohene,” but Drake still went ahead with the move.
Obrafour, whose real name is Michael Elliot Kwabena Okyere Darko, filed the lawsuit in the Southern District of New York with the help of his attorneys. Obrafour is suing Drake for “at least $10 million in damages.”
Ghanaian social media users expressed their opinions and vowed to follow the case because it is interesting to many when news of the lawsuit first became public.
The reports, however, have prompted her to demand that Obrafour return every cent that she invested in his career.
READ ALSO: Obrafour Sues Drake For $10 million For Stealing His Song
You may remember that in 2020, she disclosed in an exclusive interview with the Delay Show that she was the only person who contributed $45,000 to Obrafour’s well-known “Kasiebo” album, which he released ten years prior, and received nothing in return.
In 2023, 13 years after the unsuccessful investment, Ayisha Modi wants Obrafour to take the appropriate action before he considers suing Drake for violating his intellectual property rights.
I produced Obrafour’s “Kasiebo,” Ayisha Modi said in the interview. I spent nearly $45,000, but I didn’t even receive GHS1 from the song. I made this investment when I didn’t even own a home or a piece of land.
Obrafour asserts that Ayisha deliberately lied throughout the interview in an effort to damage his well-earned reputation.
Later, the rapper’s management team filed a defamation lawsuit against Aisha, but the case’s outcome is still unknown.
Ayisha recently dragged Diamond Appiah for scamming her over some land documents.