More than a week after the now-infamous Ibom Air altercation, Comfort Emmanson has finally spoken out and her account paints a sobering picture of public shaming, fear and emotional exhaustion.
In a video posted on Instagram, Emmanson describes the August 10 incident in chilling detail. She insists that contrary to the airline’s claims, she never refused to switch off her phone.
She was simply struggling with a faulty power button. A fellow passenger eventually helped her do it. Before walking away, the flight attendant allegedly muttered “You will see.”
At the time, Emmanson says she thought nothing of it.
It wasn’t until the plane landed in Lagos and she was inexplicably blocked from disembarking , that the situation spiralled.
According to her, the same flight attendant dragged her by the hair, tore her clothes and called her a prostitute.
Worse still, male officials allegedly pulled her out of the aircraft so violently that her clothes were ripped off, exposing her body while multiple passengers filmed.
Those videos, now circulated across the internet, have turned her life upside down.
“People made stickers out of my body. I can hardly go out. I feel ashamed,” she said tearfully.
“What happened wasn’t that serious… I never expected it to become this. I don’t even know how to move on.”
Although the court later dismissed the assault charges and the AON reversed her flight ban, the damage , at least emotionally has been done. Emmanson says she now fears for her career, reputation, and future family.
And so this disturbing episode raises a harder question for the public:
At what point does accountability turn into collective cruelty?
A simple disagreement over a phone has snowballed into a nationwide spectacle one, that may haunt an ordinary citizen for years.




