Popular TikTok content creator Elizabeth Amadou, widely known as Jarvis, has confirmed that she has ended her relationship with fellow influencer and livestreamer Hamzat Habeeb, popularly called Peller, while urging the public to stop mocking him following his recent car crash during a livestream.
Jarvis made the disclosure during a live video on Tuesday, as reactions continued to trail Peller’s hospitalisation after the incident on the Lekki–Epe Expressway in Lagos.
Addressing widespread online commentary surrounding both the crash and their relationship, Jarvis condemned the ridicule directed at Peller, warning that public mockery was worsening an already delicate situation.
“It’s always people mocking. I see the concern online, but people still mock him. Please stop mocking him. Stop shading him,” she said.
She stressed that the incident should not be used to define Peller’s character, insisting that she never portrayed him as a bad person.
According to Jarvis, Peller’s challenges stem largely from emotional struggles rather than ill intent.
“Yes, he cannot control his emotions. That’s the problem. I can control mine, but he can’t control his. We need to join hands to help him,” she explained.
Confirming the breakup, Jarvis said the decision was difficult but necessary, clarifying that it should not be interpreted as abandonment.
“Peller is a sweet guy. I didn’t want it to end, but it has happened. The relationship is not the focus right now. It’s not about going back to who we were,” she said.
She added that the separation was intended to create space for healing, growth, and emotional stability, not hostility or silence.
“The solution is for us to put our heads together and work on him, to be better. This is not about us not talking; it’s about the relationship ending for now,” she stated.
Jarvis further appealed to fans and social media users to stop what she described as harmful narratives and online shaming.
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“Stop the shading. How is it helping? Don’t use this against him. Encourage him. Encourage us. Help us. Stop using our pain to mock us,” she said.
Visibly emotional, the influencer noted that the online reactions had intensified the distress surrounding the situation, urging the public to focus on gratitude rather than blame.
“All you should be saying is thank God for life. Thank God for Peller. Thank God that nothing happened to him,” she said.
Jarvis concluded by emphasising that her priority is the well-being of both herself and Peller, noting that breakups do not always arise from hatred but sometimes from the need for clarity, healing, and peace.
“I love him, but right now we both need to be okay. I’m not okay anymore, and he also needs to be fine,” she added.



