Toronto’s Matharoo sisters — accused of bilking a Nigerian billionaire — reportedly skipped their court hearing and may have fled to Canada.

Politics Nigeria reported that Kiran and Jyoti Matharoo are nowhere to be found and some Nigerians believe they were whisked out of the country by the men they’re accused of trying to extort.

The Toronto Sun earlier reported that the Matharoos planned to relocate to Las Vegas.

Fears that the sisters’ raunchy revelations could trigger a flurry of uncomfortable dinner-table conversations may have played a role in their absence on Wednesday.

The high-flying pair are accused of trying to extort money out of some of the Nigeria’s wealthiest and most powerful men.

Reports suggested that the Matharoos had warned the men they would release raunchy sex tapes of their amorous antics if they didn’t pay up.

But the scheme went south when the duo allegedly tried to blackmail billionaire Femi Otedola. They are charged with extortion, cyberbullying and blackmail.

Justice E.A Ojo issued a bench warrant for the Matharoos and ordered their sureties to show cause, Politics Nigeria reported.

The Toronto twosome posted hundreds of Instagram photos boasting of their lavish lifestyle in the jet-set’s hot spots, including London, Paris, Amsterdam and the Riviera.

Like a poor man’s Kardashians, the duo began flaunting their lifestyle on blogs, websites and to their 50,000 Instagram followers.

In Nigeria, they claimed they were celebrity stylists — but how their lavish lifestyle is funded has raised more than a few eyebrows.

Politics Nigeria reports that the sisters’ alleged Nigerian accomplice Babatunde “Baudex” Oyebode did appear in court. He claimed to have no idea where they where.

The sisters posted a video apology after the story exploded in the Nigerian media, claiming they had no intention of extortion or harming any of the many men they were involved with.

The pair went to Don Bosco Catholic Secondary School in Toronto. Jyoti is said to have graduated in 2003 and Kiran in 2004.

For a while, they were also staples of the Toronto party scene.