17.7 C
Harare
Saturday, February 21, 2026
HomeEntertainmentJa Rule Accuses 50 Cent of “Dry Snitching”

Ja Rule Accuses 50 Cent of “Dry Snitching”

Date:

Related stories

Late Businessman Mutumwa Mawere’s SA Mansion Heads to Auction

JOHANNESBURG — The Bryanston mansion of the late Zimbabwean...

Shuntai Investments Targets 40 % Share of Zimbabwe’s Cement Market by 2027

HARARE — Emerging cement producer Shuntai Investments has announced...

Zimbabwe’s Trade Rebalancing: Export Surge, Value Addition, and the Fragile Path to Currency Stability

Zimbabwe’s latest trade figures point to something more consequential...

Zimbabwean man issued with Criminal Behaviour Order for persistent begging in UK

LONDON – A Zimbabwean-born resident of Amesbury has been...

Trumps says is considering limited military strike on Iran

WASHINGTON,-The United States is considering a potential limited strike...

Zimbabwe’s Constitutional Debate Reflects Global Reassessment of Executive Tenure

HARARE – Zimbabwe’s move to amend sections of its Constitution...

World shares, US futures advance after AI fears drag Wall Street lower

BANGKOK — European shares were higher Friday after a...

Rapper Ja Rule has reignited his long-running feud with 50 Cent by publicly criticising the G-Unit mogul’s involvement in the new Netflix docuseries Sean Combs: The Reckoning. The series, which 50 Cent executive-produced, explores decades of allegations of abuse and misconduct levelled against Sean “Diddy” Combs.

Taking to social media, Ja Rule accused his rival of hypocrisy, labelling him a “dry snitch” and claiming the documentary was motivated by personal vendettas rather than concern for survivors.

“[He’s] always telling on somebody… ol dry snitch ass,” Ja Rule wrote, adding that 50 Cent “doesn’t care about the victims” and should donate all profits from the project to domestic violence charities if his intentions are genuine.

He further pointed to 50 Cent’s own history, referencing a 2013 domestic violence case involving the rapper and his former partner Daphne Joy, as well as later accusations made by Joy in 2024—claims which 50 Cent has denied and countered with a defamation lawsuit. That case was dismissed without prejudice.

The Netflix series features interviews with former Bad Boy Records staff, alleged victims and industry insiders, drawing both praise for spotlighting survivors and criticism over its timing and motives. Diddy’s legal team has condemned the project as a “shameful” and opportunistic attack, disputing the inclusion of confidential footage and alleging exploitation of a sensitive legal situation. Netflix maintains that all materials were obtained legally.

The latest clash adds a fresh chapter to Ja Rule and 50 Cent’s decades-long rivalry, which has simmered since the early 2000s through diss tracks, public confrontations and social media exchanges.

As of now, 50 Cent has not responded to Ja Rule’s call to donate the documentary’s proceeds.

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

spot_img