
Moroccan Soccer Star Achraf Hakimi Allegedly Transfers His Entire Fortune to His Mom Right Before Nasty Divorce, Leaving Estranged Wife with Nothing But a Seat at the Kid’s Next World Cup Match
**Casablanca, Morocco** – In a power move that would make even the most seasoned corporate tax evader blush, Paris Saint-Germain and Moroccan national team star Achraf Hakimi has allegedly pulled off the financial equivalent of a perfect slide tackle right into his mother’s bank account, reportedly transferring his entire net worth to her just ahead of a high-stakes divorce filing from his estranged wife, Hiba Abouk.
Yes, you read that correctly. While most of us are out here arguing over who gets the air fryer and the emotional support pet in a breakup, Hakimi apparently looked at the divorce papers, looked at his bank balance, and said, “Nah, Mom’s getting the bag.”
According to reports swirling out of French and Spanish media (and subsequently burning up every single group chat from the Casbah to the Copa), Abouk, a 36-year-old Spanish actress, filed for divorce from the 24-year-old soccer star in early April. And she reportedly came looking for half of everything he’s earned from his $200,000+ per week PSG salary and his massive signing bonuses.
But here’s the kicker, and honestly, the part that has Reddit, Twitter, and every divorce attorney from New York to New Delhi absolutely losing their minds: Hakimi allegedly owns almost nothing in his own name.
Sources close to the situation (which is a fancy way of saying “someone who knows someone who read a leak from a Moroccan legal clerk”) claim that for years, Hakimi has been funneling his entire fortune into accounts and assets held exclusively by his mother. His mom, Saida Mouh, is the official owner of everything. The cars. The houses. The investments. The pile of gold bars shaped like a soccer ball. All of it.
So when Abouk’s legal team came to the table asking for a 50/50 split of what they assumed was a multi-million dollar marital estate? They were allegedly met with a spreadsheet that looked like a ghost had filled it out. Zero assets. Zip. Nada. The only thing in Hakimi’s name is probably his FIFA Ultimate Team account and a lingering sense of loyalty to his homeland.
Now, let’s be clear. Is this a masterclass in pre-nuptial planning so savage it would make Jeff Bezos weep? Or is this a deeply patriarchal, borderline fraudulent move that leaves his ex-wife, the mother of his child, out in the cold faster than a February blizzard in Buffalo?
Yes.
**The AITA Verdict (According to the Internet): ESH (Everyone Sucks Here)**
Look, I’m not a family lawyer. I’m a guy who types words into a box and hopes they don’t get ratioed. But even I can see this is a nuclear option in the divorce wars.
On one hand, you have Hakimi. This guy is playing 4D chess while the rest of us are still trying to figure out how to get the red peg into the round hole. In many Muslim-majority cultures, the financial ties between a son and his mother are incredibly strong. It’s not uncommon for the mother to hold the family assets. But let’s not pretend this isn’t a tactical maneuver. He didn’t transfer his life savings to his mom because he wanted her to buy a nice new rug for the mosque. He did it because he knew the divorce was coming, and he wanted to protect his bag.
Is it legal? In Morocco and France, it’s a gray area, but if the assets were transferred *before* the marriage, or if it can be proven they were never marital property? Good luck, Hiba. You’re now fighting for the right to his signed PSG jersey, and even that might be registered to “Mama Hakimi, LLC.”
On the other hand, you have Abouk. And listen, nobody feels bad for a celebrity athlete’s ex-wife. We get it. You married a guy who kicks a ball for a living. There’s a certain risk you run. But she’s also the mother of his child. And the idea that she walks away from a marriage to a man worth tens of millions of dollars with absolutely nothing because his mommy has the deed to the penthouse? That’s cold. That’s “ice in the veins, Mr. Freeze” cold.
The internet, predictably, has split into two camps:
**Camp 1: “The King of Financial Security”** – These people are mostly dudes, and they are hailing Hakimi as a genius. “He didn’t break the law, he broke the matrix,” they chant. “This is what happens when you listen to your mother. Mom always said ‘don’t trust these hoes’ and he listened!” (Classy, fellas. Real classy.)
**Camp 2: “The Human Red Flag”** – These people are mostly everyone with a functioning sense of empathy. They see a man who, at 24 years old, is so terrified of his wife potentially taking his money that he would rather make his mother the sole beneficiary of his entire life’s work than share it with the person he chose to marry and have a child with. They ask the hard question: “If you trust your mommy with your millions, but not the woman you married, why the hell did you get married?”
And honestly? That’s the real tea right there, isn’t it?
Hakimi married Hiba Abouk in 2020. They have a son together, born in 2020. Hakimi is a devout Muslim and a proud Moroccan. He’s known for his blazing speed on the pitch and his close relationship with his family. But this move screams one thing louder than a full stadium chanting his name: **I never saw this marriage as a partnership.**
When you marry someone, you are, in a legal sense, merging your life with theirs. You’re supposed to be a team. But Hakimi apparently treated his marriage like
Final Thoughts
It’s refreshing to see a figure like Achraf Hakimi embody the modern evolution of the Moroccan game—where raw African athleticism meets European tactical discipline, forging a unique brand of football that is both instinctive and intelligent. While his blistering pace and defensive grit earned him a World Cup semifinal, it’s his quiet leadership off the pitch that truly signals Morocco’s arrival as a serious footballing nation, not just a romantic underdog. Ultimately, Hakimi isn’t just a right-back; he’s the blueprint for how a new generation of Moroccan talent can harness diaspora experience to reshape the national identity of African football.