Lhe French rapper Nekfeu is accused of “psychological, sexual and physical violence” by his ex-partner, reveals a press release posted on X on the evening of November 3 by Florence Fekom, the plaintiff’s lawyer. The lawyer’s account was immediately deactivated by the platform, but the press release very quickly went viral. Contacted this Monday, the lawyer confirmed to Evening that she was indeed the author of the text. The artist, for his part, reacted at the end of the afternoon, denying the alleged facts.
The French rapper reacted late this afternoon via his lawyer. He denies the facts alleged by his ex-partner, which he describes as “unfounded and shocking accusations”. He still believes that his former partner did not accept their separation: “Since the divorce proceedings that I initiated three years ago and which she never accepted, she has tried to use our child to reach me. » And specifies that custody of their child was entrusted to him in March 2024: “I had already transmitted to the police all the elements proving my innocence and the malicious intentions of my ex-wife, including private exchanges and testimonies of his own family confirming my words. She will be tried again in January 2025.”
The document specifies that the rapper’s ex-partner – real name Ken Samaras – “reported to the police services acts of psychological, sexual and physical violence committed during their relationship, for almost 4 years”. Her lawyer further explains that her client denounces “acts of rape perpetrated by the latter against her on several occasions”. According to our colleagues from BFMTV.com, Nekfeu’s ex-partner would have already denounced in 2023 to the police services “in a precise manner” the facts of which she accuses her husband but that at the end of her testimony, she did not did not wish to file a complaint. His counsel also claims that last June, a Parisian police station refused to register his complaint. The young woman would then have sent a letter to the Paris public prosecutor in order to be able to be heard by another service and to officially file a complaint. The desire to publicize this violence is motivated by “the differentiated judicial treatment” to which Nekfeu’s ex-partner considers herself subject.
Belgium