First Lady Fatima Maada Bio has issued a witty and pointed response to President Julius Maada Bio’s recent suggestion that wives should “learn to share,” following a weekend of lively exchanges between the nation’s First Couple over the role of “side chicks” at the Old Bo Boys Association (OBBA) gathering.

In a social media statement on Easter Monday, the First Lady, writing as the “appointed spokesperson for the wives,” questioned what exactly the President meant by “sharing,” noting that when extramarital partners collect what she called “rent money,” they are “certainly not sharing with the wives.”

“What an OBBA weekend it has been!” the First Lady wrote. “When the ‘landlord’ suggested that wives should ‘share’ during the Bo School dinner in such a provocative way, it seems the chicks took it as an open invitation. But what the landlord forgot to clearly explain is what exactly are we sharing?”

The exchange began on March 30, 2026, when the First Lady issued a pointed message directed at mistresses of OBBA alumni, declaring that “only wives sit at the main table” and that extramarital partners would find themselves “across the road, waving at properties” belonging to legal spouses.

During the OBBA event on April 4, 2026, President Bio responded by encouraging wives to “learn to share,” a remark delivered with humor that drew laughter and applause from the audience but quickly became a centerpiece of public discourse.

The First Lady, in her latest statement, noted that the President’s words may have been meant in jest but that “the joke didn’t quite land — and he has extended his apologies.”

The First Lady also poked fun at what she described as shifting rules emerging from the OBBA weekend. She referenced comments about Bo School boys being allowed only to “peep” and quickly return, and that “temple runs are allowed, but no one should open a station.”

“The rules seem to be changing depending on who is speaking!” she wrote.

She then proposed an alternative: “Since ‘sharing’ is the theme, we have proposed that if peeping is allowed, then sipping should also be allowed — for the wives too. Interestingly, the boys are now telling the landlord that on this one, they are not in agreement with him!”

The First Lady concluded by rallying fellow wives, quoting Reverend Johnson, a proud member of the Bo School boys, who advised wives to see themselves as “bulldogs — protective of their territory,” while also reminding them that OBBA wives are “like the UN — we must keep the peace.”

“So dear wifeys, let us not take the landlord too seriously,” she wrote. “His words may have been meant in jest, but he now understands that the joke didn’t quite land — and he has extended his apologies.”

She reminded wives of their dual role: “We are bulldogs — we protect what is ours. And we are also peacekeepers — so let harmony reign at all times. After all, we were once chicks who became wives, and as wives, we are the only ones still sitting proudly at the main table.”