Author: The Nation

  • We’ve been vindicated, says Akingboye’s widow after DPP clearance

    We’ve been vindicated, says Akingboye’s widow after DPP clearance

    • ‘Advice has brought closure to our tragedy’

    The widow of late Chief Bamidele Akingboye, a former governorship aspirant of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in Ondo State, Mrs Christiana Akingboye, yesterday said she and her family have been completely vindicated following the final legal advice issued by the Lagos State Directorate of Public Prosecutions (DPP) on her husband’s death.

    Speaking at a press conference in Lagos, Mrs Akingboye said the DPP’s advice, dated January 5, 2026, brought to an end months of speculation, suspicion and emotional trauma that trailed the passing of her husband on September 3, 2025.

    She confirmed that the state’s chief prosecutorial authority found no case against her, her children or any member of their household.

    “The Lagos State Government has concluded its independent and thorough review of this matter and has cleared us of any wrongdoing.

    “The advice is clear: there is no case to answer, no foul play was established, and no prosecution should proceed against me, my children or any member of our family,” she said.

    Describing the advice as the final prosecutorial position of Lagos State, Mrs Akingboye said the decision affirmed what the family had consistently maintained since the tragic loss of her husband.

    According to her, the legal conclusion has brought a measure of closure after a prolonged period of public scrutiny that compounded their grief.

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    Identifying herself “first as a wife, a mother and a human being in grief,” she said the months following her husband’s death were among the most difficult of her life.

    She noted that instead of being allowed to mourn privately, her family was thrust into the public arena, forced to defend their integrity at a time of profound personal loss.

    “Before we could even begin to grieve properly, we were subjected to intense speculation and commentary. We found ourselves defending our love for a man we lost, while still trying to make sense of the tragedy,” she said. “The emotional toll on my children, in particular, was heavy and deeply painful.”

    Despite the strain, Mrs Akingboye said the family cooperated fully with all investigative and lawful processes initiated by the authorities.

    She stressed that they made themselves available to investigators at all times, even while navigating shock, loss and emotional exhaustion.

    “We did not evade any process. We submitted ourselves to every lawful inquiry because we believed in the system and in the truth. That process has now run its full course,” she said.

    Mrs Akingboye appealed to the public and the media to respect the family’s privacy and allow them the space to heal. She noted that while the legal process may have timelines, grief and healing do not.

    “Grief does not run on legal timelines. Healing cannot be rushed. We ask for compassion and understanding as we try to rebuild our lives after this loss,” she said.

    She also cautioned against harmful assumptions and stigmatisation, particularly around mental health issues.

    According to her, such assumptions not only deepen pain for grieving families but also discourage open conversations and compassion.

    “Mental health challenges are not crimes. They deserve care, empathy and support, not judgment, suspicion or sensationalism,” she said.

    Mrs Akingboye expressed gratitude to family members, friends and well-wishers who stood by her family during the difficult period.

    She paid special tribute to members of the Redeemed Christian Church of God, Jesus Assembly, for their prayers and support, and commended her children for their resilience in the face of adversity.

    “We seek no controversy and no further debate. We ask only for the dignity to mourn, to heal and to move forward in peace,” she concluded.

    Details of the DPP’s advice, signed by Dr Babajide Martins, indicated that the post-mortem examination conducted on the deceased found no injuries consistent with the involvement of a third party.

    The advice further noted that the medical findings were consistent with suicide, which could not be excluded in light of the deceased’s documented bipolar disorder.

    On the basis of the medical evidence and other materials reviewed, the DPP concluded that no prima facie case existed against the widow or any member of her family, and that no criminal prosecution should be initiated.

    Counsel to the family, Dr Abiodun Adesanya, confirmed the DPP’s position, describing it as clear, thorough and unequivocal.

    He said the advice followed a detailed assessment of all available evidence, including medical records, post-mortem findings, witness statements and other materials submitted to the authorities.

    “The conclusion was not reached lightly. The Lagos State Directorate of Public Prosecutions reviewed the totality of the evidence before it and found that while a death occurred, no act of foul play was established and there was no basis for any criminal charge,” Adesanya said.

    He noted that beyond the legal findings, the human cost of the prolonged scrutiny faced by the family should not be ignored.

    According to him, the widow and her children lived under a cloud of suspicion at a time when they should have been mourning privately.

    “This is not about triumph or blame. It is about truth, closure and compassion. The criminal aspect of this matter has now been conclusively settled,” he said.

    Adesanya added that while the family is still considering its personal options going forward, it hopes the conclusion of the investigation will put an end to speculation and allow them to grieve in peace.

    Earlier reports had highlighted the widow’s call for the release of her husband’s autopsy report amid widespread speculation surrounding his death, including claims by a blogger that the report confirmed foul play. The DPP’s advice has now laid those claims to rest, the family said.

  • Security company gets 10 days to resolve theft allegations

    Security company gets 10 days to resolve theft allegations

    NGX Regulation Limited has given a 10 working-day ultimatum to a securities company, Global Assets Management Limited, to resolve the allegations of alleged forgery, theft, diversion of proceeds, and possibly money laundering leveled against it by a complainant, Mr Kolawole Oladapo Adesina

    Adesina had alleged that shares belonging to him and his late father, Emmanuel Olanipekun Adesina, from different companies were stolen and proceeds diverted to unknown persons.

    In the same vein, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also launched investigations into the same complaints against the same securities company.

    NGX Regulation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Nigerian Exchange Group (NGX group) committed to promoting just and equitable principles of trade and sound business practices in the Nigerian capital market by strictly enforcing clients’ listing and trading rules in accordance with global best practices. Its activities seek to promote the integrity, transparency and efficiency of our market, ensuring that the standards set are effective in maintaining a fair and orderly market where investors are adequately protected.

    In a letter with reference number NGXRECO/MRIVG/7160/1/26, signed by Chinedu Akamaka, Head, Market Regulation, the regulatory body acknowledged the petition of the complainant and stated that “In line with rule 5(4) of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) rules on Complaints Management Framework of the Nigerian Capital Market 2015, your firm is required to solve this complaint within ten(10) working days and forward a report on resolution or non resolution. Your report should reach NGX Regco not later than 30 January 2026”.

    SEC, in its own letter dated January 7, 2026 and signed by Mr John Abel Briggs, the Head, Lagos Zonal Office stated that while acknowledging Adesina’s petition, it has commenced investigations into the matter. “Please be informed that we have commenced investigations by seeking Global Assets Management Limited, CSCS, and NGX to investigate the allegations in line with the Complaint Management Framework of the Nigerian Capital Market(NCM).

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    The company in the eyes of the storm, Global Assets, has however denied any wrongdoing in its reply addressed to NGX Regulation and signed by its Managing Director, Sir Babatunde Sobamowo, saying the allegations were unfounded.

    Adesina, still smarting from the shocking revelation that his father, Prince Emmanuel Olanipekun Adesina, a late Banker with the United Bank of Africa (UBA) who allegedly died intestate did not,  but has a will.

    He’s currently battling to have the will read at the Probate Registry of the High Court of Lagos State, Ikeja Judicial Division.

    In the many shocking revelations while going through his parents’ documents, he discovered many shares his father had bought for him since the time of his youth.

    Most of these shares, and that of his father, has disappeared without a trace, only relying on the father’s documentation to trace them.

    In a 15 paragraph affidavit he deposed to and filed at the registry of the Ikeja High Court, which formed his petition before SEC, the complainant narrated his ordeal this:

    “I am the beneficial owner of securities and investments held with Global Asset Management Limited under account number 23278460(old account number A0457245) and Clearing House No C4928105AN. I have held the investments registered in my name since my childhood, acquired and maintained by my late father for my benefit.

    My late father, whose particulars I can provide on request, purchased shareholdings  in my name up to and including the date of his death on February 21, 2006.

    I did not authorize any sale of the Securities held in my account and have never knowingly sold any holdings in that account;

    “On or about August 25,2022 when I attended the offices of Global Assets Management to effect a sale of certain securities to raise funds, I was provided with documentation and account records indicating that a substantial (and in some cases total) portion of my securities had already been sold and the sale proceeds diverted.

    “No such sale had been authorized by me and no proceeds of such alleged sale were paid to me or credited to the account records held by Global Assets in my name;

    “Upon inspection of the physical file and documents in my possession and in the custody of Global Assets Management, I discovered numerous stock transfers, notes on sale and other documents bearing my signature which I did not sign. I verily believe that the said signatures are forged”.

    With this discovery, Adesina directed his lawyers, Pich Solicitors, to write a letter of demand to the company requesting production of all documents and materials relating to his account from February 21, 2006 till date. The company however failed to comply. He therefore urges SEC to compel the company to produce the documents and other materials requested. He fears if it’s not compelled, the company may alter, delete, or otherwise fail to preserve records relevant to the matters that are subject of his complaint.

    Adesina exhibited over 10 documents to support his complaint which include copies of his account statements, copies of stock transfers bearing alleged forged signatures, CSCS certificate/ deposit forms relating to his holdings, sales contract notes and transaction confirmations, CSCS printout on stocks held in his name, dividend statements and dividend warrants in his name, copies of his share certificates in Berger Paints Nigeria Plc, Nigerian Bottling Company Plc, Grammac Industries Plc, and West African Portland Cement Plc. “I unequivocally and verily believe that the exhibits listed are materials relevant to the issues raised in this application and that they substantiate the allegations of unauthorized sales, forged signatures,and diversion of sales proceeds”, he averred.

    Adesina’s petition was copied to the Chairman of Global Assets Management, Dr S.T.V Adegbite and all other directors of the company. It’s also copied to DG SEC, CEO, Nigerian Exchange Group, MD, Central Securities Clearing System Plc(CSCS), The Chairman, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Director, Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit(NFIU), and Commissioner of Police, Force CID(Financial Crimes Unit).

    In its response addressed to NGX Regulation, Global Assets Management Limited described all the allegations as unfounded. “In compliance with our regulatory obligations, we have carefully reviewed the allegations contained in the petition and hereby provide our response, addressing each issue raised by the petitioner sequentially and supported by relevant documentation”, the response stated.

    The company explained that their real client was the petitioner’s mother, late Mrs Frances Omorolaun Adesina. “Our professional relationship with her spanned several years during which she conducted securities transactions through our firm until her demise. At no time prior to her death did the petitioner operate the relevant account independently or maintain a separate trading mandate with GAM”, it stated.

    GAM maintained that its first formal interaction with the petitioner occured through his lawyer, Pich Solicitors, requesting information relating to the state of the petitioner’s father. Subsequently the petitioner personally visited and was availed with a CSCS statement relating to his account and a KYC update form which the petitioner never returned.

    The company stated further: “According to records obtained directly from CSCS,  the only securities credited to the petitioner’s account were deposited on September 15, 2009, three years after the death of his father in 2006. We are unable, and not required to determine whether the shares were purchased by his late father or late mother. However the records show that no securities were deposited into the petitioner’s account in 2006 or earlier. Only three securities were deposited through GAM”.

    The company also listed as exhibits documents which includes a duly executed sale order form dated April 4, 2014, Statement of account of the late mother, copy of cheque, letter of authority dated January 11, 2014 signed by the petitioner and his sister authorizing their late mother to transact on matters relating to their father’s estate, and GAM bank statement confirming payment of the proceeds to the named beneficiary.

    However, there seems to be discrepancies in the signature tendered by both parties as they did not correspond. SEC will therefore determine which one is genuine and having regard to the power of a parent to trade on an adult child securities without proper consent.

  • Man bags life sentence for defiling six-year old girl

    Man bags life sentence for defiling six-year old girl

    • By Olamide Olakanse

    A 53-year-old man, Olumuyiwa Ajoto, has been in sentenced to life imprisonment for defiling a six year old girl.

    The prosecution team comprised of Inumidun Sholarin, I.E. Balogun, and B.E. Okeowo had charged Ajoto before Justice Rahman Oshodi of an Ikeja Sexual Offences and Domestic Violence Court.

    The victim, who was on holiday with the family, is the grandchild of his second wife’s younger sister.

    The convict was arraigned on a three-count charge  of defilement of a child,  sexual assault by penetration, and  indecent treatment of a child.

    The convict was represented by his counsel, Philip  Imuetinyan.

    During trial, the convict’s second wife, the IPO, ASP Adeniyi and Dr. Olatunji from the Mirabel Centre testifie for the prosecution.

    The convict testified for himself.

    Before sentencing, Ajoto through his counsel, Imuetinyan, pleaded with the court to temper justice with mercy.

    The prosecution counsel, led by Sholarin, urged the court to apply the maximum punishment for sexual offenders to serve as deterrence for others.

    She also prayed the court to register the name of the convict in the sexual offenders register of Lagos state.

    Justice  Oshodi  sentenced the convict after pronouncing him guilty of two out of a three count charge offence brought against him by the state.

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    Justice Oshodi found the convict guilty on counts one and two and consequently sentenced him to life imprisonment on both counts.

    He was, however, discharged of count three after the prosecuting counsel failed to provide convincing evidence for the charge.

    The sentences are to run concurrently at a maximum custodial centre.

    The judge also ordered that Ajoto’s name be registered in the Lagos State Sexual Offenders Register.

    According to information before the court, the convict on April 22, 2022, at about 1:00 PM in Badagry, Lagos, defiled the 6-year-old  child said to be the grandchild of his second wife’s younger sister.

    The victim was on a holiday visit when the incident happened.

    On the day of the incident, the convict’s second wife, Olayemi had gone to the market, leaving the victim and the defendant at home.

     While the child was doing her homework in the convict wife’s room, Ajoto was said to have entered, pushed her onto the bed, and sexually assaulted her by using his finger and penis to penetrate her.

    The court heard that when the victim shouted, he slapped her and told her to shut up.

    He later cleaned blood from his victim’s private part with a white cloth, bathed, dressed her and told her to go and play outside.

    The crime was discovered later that night when Mrs Olayemi, upon seeing the victim recoil from Ajoto’s touch, asked what was wrong.

    The victim said, “it’s daddy.” Mrs Olayemi examined the child and discovered that she had been deflowered.

    Pretending to go to a church vigil, Mrs Olayemi took the victim to the General Hospital in Badagry where doctors confirmed that her private part had been tampered with and noted other evidence of assault.

    The next day, April 23, 2023, the convict’s wife invited the police, who arrested him.

    The victim was referred to the Mirabel Centre, Ikeja where Dr. Olatunji carried out an medical examination on the victim and discovered she had been defiled and as reported by the Badagry General Hospital.

  • Otu Oka Iwu harps on justice

    Otu Oka Iwu harps on justice

    • SANs, others honoured

    Otu Oka Iwu, an association of legal practitioners of Igbo extraction, has reiterated its commitment to unity, communal upliftment and justice in Nigeria.

    This was restated at the association’s 2025 Annual Dinner and Award Night in Lagos, an event which brought together senior legal luminaries, government officials and leaders of major Igbo socio-cultural organisations.

    The event, which also featured the presentation of awards to a number of distinguished personalities, saw a succession of speakers who highlighted the collective resolve of Ndi Igbo to preserve their heritage, strengthen communal bonds and pursue excellence in the legal profession.

    In his welcome address, the President of Otu Oka Iwu, Mr. Okechukwu Unegbu, said the event was both a celebration of excellence and a recommitment to the association’s core responsibilities.

    His words: “Tonight, we gather to reaffirm our shared commitment to the values that bind us together as custodians of justice, interpreters of the law and ambassadors of the Igbo nation.”

    He praised the awardees for achieving excellence in their respective careers, and pledged continued support for young legal practitioners and defenders of justice.

    In her remarks, the Chair of the Planning Committee, Mrs. Augustina Igbokwe stated that the time had come to reposition the association to enable it serve as a rallying point for Ndi Igbo in Lagos. She noted that the awardees represented those “already building the walls” by defending Igbo interests, mediating disputes and mentoring young professionals.

    The President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr Afam Osigwe, SAN, cautioned against public commentaries on ongoing legal matters, particularly those involving prominent Igbo figures.

    His words: “When a man is standing trial,” he said in an apparent reference to the case of former Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu, ”we must respect the judicial process. We cannot be issuing statements.”

    He stressed that while communal solidarity is important, it must not be allowed to undermine the legal process, adding that “We must not imbibe extreme individualism. We keep poverty low in Igbo land because we lift ourselves by lifting others.”

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    Also speaking, the Abia State Deputy-Governor, Engr. Ikechukwu Emetu, who represented Gov. Alex Otti, charged Igbo lawyers to embody justice and integrity. “As a body of lawyers from Eastern Nigeria,” Emetu said, ”you must ensure that the pride of Ndi Igbo is protected in every sphere.”

    On his part, the President-General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, Dr. Azuta Mbata, celebrated what he described as a global resurgence of “Igboness.”

    According to him, Igbo communities across Nigeria and the diaspora are increasingly embracing their heritage with pride. “Many tried to hide their identity after the Civil War,” he recalled, “but the time is coming for the total emancipation of our land.”

    He described the Igbo personality as ‘the apex of the Nigerian intelligentsia’, while highlighting landmark achievements of Ndigbo in education, commerce and enterprise.

    He however noted that political representation at the highest levels remained a challenge.

    One of the highlights of the day was the presentation of awards to the following dignitaries: Dr. Monday Ubani (SAN), Chris Okeke (SAN), Lady Debbie Obodoukwu (Life Bencher), Chief Paul Obi, (SAN), Emeka Akabogu (SAN),:Ernest Ikeji (SAN), Leslie Njemanze, (SAN), ,George Ukaegbu (SAN), Adizua Chu-Chu Okoroafor, (SAN), Iteshi Fidelis (SAN),

    Kelechi Nwaizu (SAN), Ikechukwu Uwanna (SAN), Mrs. Chinyere  Moneme (SAN), Kingsley Udeh (SAN), Nkwegu Luke (SAN), Edwin Anikwem (SAN), Johnson Odionu (SAN), Udochi  Iheanacho (SAN),

    Matthew Echezona Esonanjor, SAN.

    They also include Boniface  Moore (SAN),  Christopher  Okeke (SAN), Chinasa  Unaegbunam (SAN), Theodore  Ezeobi (SAN), Ekele  Iheanacho (SAN), Ebere Nwosu and Leo  Ekeh.

  • Officer Yerima and the perilous defence of ‘superior orders’

    Officer Yerima and the perilous defence of ‘superior orders’

    • By Ben Ijeoma Adigwe

    The recent public confrontation involving the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and a young Naval officer, Lieutenant A. M. Yerima, has stirred more than momentary outrage or partisan debate. Beneath the headlines lies a deeper, older, and far more troubling question, one that has haunted military institutions, police force, and public service across generations and jurisdictions: what is the fate of an officer who obeys an order that may be unlawful?

    This is not a theoretical puzzle debated only in law classrooms or ethics seminars. It is a live dilemma, often unfolding in real time, under pressure, fear, and hierarchy. For officers like Yerima, the stakes are immediate and personal. Disobey a superior, and you risk court-martial, dismissal, career ruin, or worse. Obey, and you may find yourself standing alone before the law, stripped of institutional protection, asked to answer for actions you did not initiate.

    Lieutenant Yerima’s position, by his own account, was simple and terrifying in equal measure: he was instructed by his superiors to stand his ground. The instruction allegedly placed him in direct confrontation with a serving minister of the Federal Republic.

    In ordinary circumstances, such conduct would raise serious legal and constitutional questions. Ministers are not merely individuals; they are embodiments of executive authority. To resist or obstruct them is not something a junior officer does lightly, nor without consequence.

    Yet refusal, in a rigidly hierarchical military structure, carries its own severe penalties. This is the crucible in which the doctrine of “superior orders” is forged, a doctrine born not of moral comfort, but of institutional necessity.

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    Security personnel and public officers often operate in environments where clarity is a luxury. Orders come quickly, contexts are incomplete, and dissent is rarely welcomed. The culture of obedience is not accidental; it is drilled, reinforced, and rewarded. Militaries do not function on debate. They function on command like the Centurion of Capernaum.

    But the law does not entirely share this logic. While institutions demand obedience, the legal system insists on individual responsibility. This is where the fault line lies. When an officer is ordered to act, the law asks a brutal question: Did you know, or should you have known, that the order was unlawful? If the answer is yes, obedience may become complicity.

    For officers like Yerima, this question is not asked in the calm safety of hindsight. It is faced in the heat of the moment, often without legal counsel, and under the watchful eye of superiors whose power over one’s career is absolute. The law, unfortunately, offers no easy refuge.

    The defence of superior orders, sometimes referred to as the “Nuremberg defence”, has always been treated with caution, even suspicion. At its core, the argument is intuitive: how can a subordinate be blamed for carrying out instructions from those legally empowered to command him?

    Yet history has taught the world the danger of accepting this logic too generously. If obedience alone were enough to excuse wrongdoing, atrocities would always find shelter behind hierarchy. The law, therefore, has drawn a hard line: obedience may explain conduct, but it does not automatically justify it.

    The defining moment came after World War II. At the Nuremberg Trials, Nazi officials and military officers repeatedly argued that they were merely following orders. The international tribunal rejected this defence in emphatic terms. It held that individuals remain morally and legally accountable for their actions, even within a chain of command. Obedience could not erase the reality of choice.

    This principle was reaffirmed two decades later in the 1961 trial of Adolf Eichmann in Israel. Eichmann claimed he was a bureaucrat, a cog in a vast machine, carrying out policies designed by others. The Israeli Supreme Court dismantled this argument. It ruled that even within oppressive systems, individuals retain agency. The fact that disobedience is costly does not mean choice is absent.

    From these trials emerged a global consensus: superior orders do not provide a blanket defence. At most, they may mitigate punishment. They do not absolve guilt.

    Nigeria’s legal system aligns with this international outlook, though it expresses it in its own statutory language. The Criminal Code does not expressly label “superior orders” as a defence, but it gestures in that direction with strict limitations.

    Section 32(2) of the Criminal Code recognizes that an act done in obedience to the order of a competent authority may be justified, but only if the order is not manifestly unlawful. That single phrase does enormous legal work. It shifts the inquiry from mere obedience to the nature of the order itself.

    What is “manifestly unlawful”? In simple terms, it refers to an order whose illegality is obvious on its face. An instruction to torture a suspect, to shoot an unarmed civilian, or to assault a person without lawful cause would fall squarely within this category. No amount of hierarchy can sanitize such commands.

    Nigerian courts have repeatedly reinforced this principle. Judges have been clear: public office is not a cloak for illegality. The badge, the uniform, or the letter of appointment does not suspend the rule of law. Where an order crosses into clear illegality, obedience becomes no defence.

    At best, compliance with superior orders may be considered during sentencing. It may explain how an officer found himself in that position. It may soften the punishment. But it does not erase responsibility.

    Over the years, Nigerian courts have encountered numerous cases where public officers attempted to shield themselves behind directives from above. Police officers have cited instructions from commissioners. Civil servants have pointed to ministerial approvals. Military personnel have invoked command structures.

    The judicial response has been remarkably consistent. Courts have insisted that loyalty to the law must trump loyalty to individuals. Public service, the judiciary reminds us, is not blind service. It is a service bound by legality.

    This stance, while principled, places officers in a precarious position. The law demands courage, the courage to refuse unlawful orders.

    Yet institutions often punish such courage swiftly and quietly. Whistleblowers are isolated. Dissenters are labeled insubordinate. Careers stall or end.

    This gap between legal expectation and institutional reality is where injustice thrives.

    It is easy, from a distance, to pronounce moral judgments. It is harder to appreciate the lived fear of a junior officer standing before a superior. The power imbalance is real. Orders are not mere suggestions. They come with the weight of discipline, hierarchy, and tradition.

    Lieutenant Yerima is not a policymaker. He does not design the architecture of power. He operates within it. If he disobeyed, the consequences would have been immediate and personal. If he obeyed, the consequences may now be legal and public.

    This is why cases like his evoke sympathy beyond legal technicalities. They expose the vulnerability of those at the bottom of command structures. They reveal how easily power can insulate itself while responsibility trickles downward.

    There is a familiar pattern in public scandals involving authority. When conflict erupts, accountability often stops at the lowest visible rung. The junior officer becomes the face of an institutional failure. Superiors retreat into silence. Political actors issue statements. Investigations begin and end quietly.

    The danger here is that Yerima may become precisely that: a convenient villain in a story whose true drivers sit far above his rank. If that happens, the law will not merely punish an individual; it will reward the very abuse of hierarchy it claims to resist.

    African wisdom captures this injustice perfectly: when two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers. Yerima risks becoming that grass, trampled not because he wielded power, but because he stood in its path.

    This moment demands more than outrage or scapegoating. It calls for institutional honesty. If superiors issued the instructions Yerima claims, they must be scrutinized. Responsibility should move upward, not stop conveniently at the lowest officer in view.

    It also demands clearer protocols. Officers should not be left to guess the legality of politically sensitive orders in moments of tension. Training, legal support, and internal safeguards must be strengthened so that obedience does not become a trap.

    Most importantly, it demands courage from institutions, not just individuals. The law already requires officers to refuse manifestly unlawful orders. Institutions must match that expectation by protecting those who do so.

    Lieutenant A. M. Yerima’s case is not just about one officer and one incident. It is a mirror held up to the uneasy relationship between power and accountability in Nigeria. It asks whether the law will continue to punish the visible while shielding the powerful.

    Superior orders have never been a comfortable defence. History, international law, and Nigerian jurisprudence all agree on that. But neither should obedience become a weapon used by power to sacrifice its own.

    As this matter unfolds, one hopes that justice will look beyond rank and uniform. That it will ask hard questions of those who give orders, not only those who carry them out. And that Lieutenant Yerima will not be crushed under the weight of a system that demands obedience but disowns responsibility.

    This is so because when authority commands unlawfully, and the law punishes only the obedient, the rule of law itself stands on shaky ground.

    •          Adigwe is the Director, Department of Law Research, Review, Reporting and Publication, Ministry of Justice, Asaba.  Read more about him at benadigwe.com

  • Reviewing court jurisdiction challenges and need for, justice reform

    Reviewing court jurisdiction challenges and need for, justice reform

    • By Oseini Bamigbaiye

    The issue of jurisdiction is a very important factor in any justice system. It is the basis upon which the court or tribunal derives its power to hear and determine any matter at all in the first place.  If the Court does not have jurisdiction, whatever decision, no matter how beautiful, fair, well conducted the trial was and how good the decision is, it is a complete nullity. This is hinged on the principle that you cannot place something on nothing and expect it to stand.

    In the Nigerian justice system, jurisdiction is the legal authority of a court to hear and determine a case. It is considered the “lifeblood” of an action; if a court lacks jurisdiction, any proceedings it conducts are a nullity. The landmark principle established in Madukolu v. Nkemdilim remains the standard for determining a court’s competence. A court is only considered to have jurisdiction if:

    1.       It is properly constituted in terms of the number and qualifications of its members.

    2.         The subject matter of the case falls within its constitutional or statutory authority.

    3.         The matter is properly brought before the Court

    The Supreme Court in the 2022 case of MANOMI v. DAKAT   (2022) 15 NWLR Pt. 1853, explained clearly the position of the principles guiding issues of jurisdiction and how and when it can be challenged.

     Justice Nweze JSC on the fundamental nature of issues of jurisdiction held that:

      “The issue of jurisdiction is so radical that it forms the foundation of adjudication, it also lacks the necessary competence to try the case at all. A defect in competence is fatal, for the proceedings are null and void ab initio, however well conducted and well decided they may otherwise be. Due to its fundamental nature, it can never be too late in law to raise the issue of jurisdiction. Indeed, leave of the appellant court is unnecessary since the court can itself raise it suo motu as soon as sufficient facts or materials are available for it to do so.” (Pp. 261 -262)

    His lordship   on the need to determine issue of jurisdiction before determination of substantive matter at paragraphs A-B of page 262 held that further that:

    “The court must first of all be competent, that is has jurisdiction before it can proceed on any adjudication as it is fruitless venture to decide merit of a case without jurisdiction. If a court or tribunal is not competent to entertain matter or claim or suit, it is a waste of valuable time for the court to embark on the hearing and determination of the substantive matter. Therefore, it is an exhibition of wisdom to have the issue of jurisdiction or competence determined before embarking on the hearing and determination of substantive matter“.

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    From the position of the learned honourable Justice of the Apex Court, the following principles on jurisdiction in our justice system stand out:

    1.      The issue of jurisdiction is radical and fundamental and forms the foundation for adjudication.

    2.      If the Court or tribunal lacks jurisdiction, it also lacks the necessary competence to try the case at all.

    3.      A defect in competence is fatal,

    4.      Any proceedings conducted without the necessary competence are null and void ab initio, however well conducted and well decided they may otherwise be.

    5.      Due to its fundamental nature, it can never be too late in law to raise the issue of jurisdiction.

    6.      Leave of the appellant court is not necessary to raise the issue of jurisdiction.

    7.      The court can itself raise the issue of jurisdiction suo motu as soon as sufficient facts or materials are available for it to do so.

    8.      The Court must first of all be competent, that is have jurisdiction before it can proceed on any adjudication.

    9.      It is a fruitless venture to decide the merit of a case without jurisdiction.

    10. If a Court or tribunal is not competent to entertain matter or claim or suit, it is a waste of valuable time for the court to embark on the hearing and determination of the substantive matter.

    11. It is an exhibition of wisdom to have the issue of jurisdiction or competence determined before embarking on the hearing and determination of substantive matter.

    The Apex Court also went further to state when a Court is competent to exercise jurisdiction on a matter and that includes :

    a.      When it is properly constituted as regards the number and qualifications of the members of the bench and no member is disqualified for one reason or another

    b.     When the subject matter of the case is within the jurisdiction of the Court and there is no feature in the case which prevents the Court from exercising its jurisdiction.

    c.     When the case comes before the court initiated by due process of law and upon fulfillment of any condition precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction.

    The jurisdiction of any Court is granted aliunde from without and not from within. Courts are creatures of statutes and it is the statute or law creating the court that determines and defines its jurisdiction.  (Quoting the words of Honourable Justice Nweze JSC).

    The Jurisdictions of the Courts in Nigeria, especially Courts of records are clearly defined in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, especially as regards courts of records.

    A court of law can only have and properly exercise its jurisdiction to hear and to determine a case before it where it is satisfied that:

    a.      The proper parties are before the court

    b.     The court is properly constituted

    c.      The subject matter of the case falls within the subject matter jurisdiction of the Court

    d.      The matter is within the appropriate venue

    e.      The originating proceeding and processes are properly commenced and before the Court both in form and procedure

    f.       Any condition precedent for the institution of the matter before the court are duly complied with

    Challenging jurisdiction of court

    The Court can suo motu address the issue of jurisdiction at any time and confirm or deny jurisdiction or demand that the parties address the courts on jurisdiction.  A Claimant, petitioner, complainant, plaintiff, prosecutor whatever case it may be may at any time withdraw or discontinue the matter before the Court if it find that the Court has no jurisdiction to adjudicate on the matter as it is or as it is constituted.

    Also a Defendant or respondent may at any time challenge the jurisdiction of the court to hear the matter at any time, even for the first time on appeal and even at the Apex Court even on issues as little as failure to sign an originating process.

    The Supreme Court as recently as 2022 held in AYA v. NKANU [1] (2022)11 NWLR  (Pt. 1840 )  page 157 at 184 paras G-A per Justice Abba Aji JSC that:

    “A defect in the competence of a court process is fatal and the proceeding arising there-from is a nullity, no matter how well conducted. It follows, therefore that the present case initiated and commenced by an unsigned writ of summons was not initiated by due process of law and upon fulfilment of all conditions precedents for the exercise of jurisdiction. The issue being one of jurisdiction could be raised at any time, even in the Supreme Court after judgment had been delivered by the Court of first instance .”

    In this case, the Respondents instituted against the Appellant at the trial Court. The Respondents writ of summons was however, not signed at all by either the legal practitioner or any of the parties in accordance with the provisions of the law, though signed by the Registrar.

    The trial Court granted the reliefs of the respondents against the Appellant. On appeal by the Appellant to the Court of Appeal, the judgment of the trial court was upheld and the Appeal of the Appellant was dismissed.  The Appellant was aggrieved and appealed to the Supreme Court.

    In resolving the appeal , the Supreme Court considered the provisions of the High Courts of Cross River State Civil Procedure Rules 2008) and held that the filling was incompetent and dead on arrival and that the trial Court and the Court of Appeal proceeded on that invalid and incompetent writ of summons to adjudicate  on the suit. That the concomitant effect was that the instant appeal must be struck out for incompetence and it was accordingly struck out. The whole proceedings from the onset were a nullity.  Time, money and resources wasted.          

    The suit leading to the Appeal was filed on 31st day of October 2012, litigation in the matter lasted for over 9years from the date of commencement at the trial Court through the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court. This is one of the shortest time lapse of cases of this nature, probably because of the reforms in the justice system over the years and concerted efforts made to decongest the dockets of the Court of appeal and the Supreme Court to ensure speedy trial of cases. Ordinarily, cases can take up to 20 years litigating from the trial Court through the Appeal Court to the trial Court.

    This case is a clear demonstration of time, money and resources wasted and all these losses suffered by the plaintiff for the shortcomings and failure of both the Registrar of the trial Court, the Judge of the Trial Court and the respondents and their Counsels. If the Registrar of the trial Court was meticulous and vigilant enough in the performance of his duties, he would have noticed the incompetence in the writs and would have refused to register it until it is corrected, thereby safe the wasted 9 years of litigation. The Court has the power to suo motu raise the issue of the non-signing of the writ as it is connected to writ not being properly before the court and hence a matter of jurisdiction, in which case he can ask the litigants to address him on it or decide on it suo motu, thereby save a wasted nine years of litigation.  The Respondents and their counsel either did not notice the error or deliberately decided to weaponise it against the claimant and pull it out as an ace at the Supreme Court.

    Like in all similar cases, it is the claimant, petitioner or complainant that suffers the most when issue of jurisdiction is not raised timeously. It is the claimant who suffers the bulk of the wasted time, money and resources and not the Court nor the Defendant., the petitioner or the complainant, who, even after the wasted cost and time still end up with no result at all. The question is, is this justice? Can these be called substantive justice which should be the ultimate objective of the justice system? The answer is definitely no. Can these also be described as justice seen to have been done to the Claimant? The answer definitely is no. It’s not even justice for the court either, because valuable time, resources and energy of the Courts and judges have been expended and wasted.

    It is my humble submission and opinion that the long standing principle under our jurisprudence that the issue of jurisdiction can be raised at any time and even at the Supreme Court for the first time[1][2] is a little bit too harsh, does not truly meet the cause of justice and should be reviewed and restricted only to matters that can occasion miscarriage of justice .

    I think it is largely unfair and unjust to a litigant who run to Court for redress to litigate a matter from the trial Court through the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court, for a long number of years, expending time, money, resources, emotions and faith, and have all those wasted because the Judge who has not just the opportunity to see and identify the issue of jurisdiction but to also have the power to suo motu raise it and decide on it failed or omitted to do so and the defendant missed or deliberately failed to raise it , especially on mundane issues like failure to sign an originating processes.

    This explained the dissenting opinion of AGIM JSC.  in Aya v. Nkanu  at page 196-197 paras H-E  , where his lordship held that:

                “The suit leading to this appeal was filed on 31-10-2012. Litigation in the case has lasted for over 9 years from the date, from the trial court through the Court of appeal to this court. The judgment of the trial court was affirmed by the court of appeal. If the appellant has raised the issue of non –compliance with Order 8 Rule 2(3) of the Cross River State (Civil Procedure) Rules within the time limited by Order II Rule 2(2), it would have been determined in limine before the appellant filed its statement of Defence or at the trial. Without appealing against the holding of the court of that the objection is belatedly made raising it in the court is an abuse of court process. If the objection is upheld it would frustrate the respondent`s 9 years quest for justice in the courts and make a mockery of the courts. It would disrepute the court tio after 9 years of litigating in three courts, to tell the claimant that an originating process they filed 9 years ago is incompetent for non-compliance with Rules of Courts and for that reason all the proceedings and the judgment of the two courts in their favour are nullified. . It is obvious that at this stage the respondents who would have exhausted much of their resources, would have become litigation weary and too exhausted to commence another case. Raising such an issue at this stage smacks of bad faith. To uphold such an objection would elevate technicality over the pursuit of the justice of the case. The appellant should not be allowed to benefit from his failure to comply with Order ii Rule 2(2) in making the objections to the Writ for non –compliance with Order 8 Rule 2(2) of the same Rules.

    Sadly the majority decision is the law and the opinion of Justice Agim JSC as laudable as it is still remains an opinion and does not represent the laws as it is today. Jurisprudence in jurisdiction like the United Kingdom and the United State of America reflect a drift from the position of our laws on the issue of challenges to jurisdiction to reflect the position of Justice Agim JSC .

    The Honourable Justice Agim, tacitly suggested an ideal solution when he went further at page 195 -196 paras F-D and stated that:

    “The issue of non-signing of the originating summons by the Registrar of the trial court or an officer of the Court duly authorised to sign same is mere lapse on the side of the Registrar of the trial Court. It is non-compliance with the court rules of procedure which regulate the exercise of jurisdiction conferred   on a Court by a statute. It has nothing to do with the jurisdiction of that Court. In cases where the filed originating process was not signed by the officer authorized by the rules to sign and issue it, the originating process remains valid and competent. Such failure to sign the originating process is a mere procedural irregularity. A procedural irregularity should not vitiate a suit once it can be shown that no party suffered miscarriage of justice.”

     This position is similar and following in the line of the position of the law in the United Kingdom and the United State of America on the issue where the point at which the   application to challenges the jurisdiction of the Court is restricted only to non-subject matter jurisdiction and not procedural and other forms of jurisdictions which effects do not likely to occasion miscarriage of justice.

    In the United Kingdom , jurisdiction is primarily territorial, meaning courts generally only exercise authority over acts committed within their respective legal systems (England and Wales, Scotland, or Northern Ireland). However, this is supplemented by common law and specific statutes that allow for extra-territorial reach. Jurisdiction is also  includes subject matter jurisdiction, common law baselines for jurisdiction and specific Acts of parliament that create jurisdiction such as the International Criminal Court Act 2001 for genocide.

    In the UK justice system, challenging jurisdiction is a formal procedural step where a party disputes the court’s legal authority to hear a case. . For 2025, these challenges are governed primarily by Civil Procedure Rule (CPR) Part 11 and recent legislative updates like the Arbitration Act 2025. The grounds for Challenging Jurisdiction fall into two categories:

    a.       Lack of Substantive Jurisdiction: The argument that the court has no legal power over the defendant or the subject matter (e.g., the defendant has no “minimum contacts” or residency in the UK).

    b.         Forum Non Conveniens: The court has jurisdiction, but another country’s court is “clearly and distinctly” more appropriate for the trial.

    c.         Procedural Irregularity: Challenges based on defective service of the claim form or the expiration of time limits for service.

    d.         Exclusive Jurisdiction Clauses: The parties previously agreed in a contract that a different country’s courts would handle disputes.

    Under the UK, Civil Procedure (CPR Part 11), a defendant wishing to challenge jurisdiction must follow a strict timeline to avoid “submitting” to the court’s authority by default:

    1.      Acknowledgment of Service: The defendant must file an Acknowledgment of Service form and specifically tick the box indicating their intention to contest jurisdiction.

    2.      14-Day Deadline: Within 14 days of filing that acknowledgment, the defendant must make a formal application to the court for a declaration that it lacks jurisdiction.

    The application must be supported by written evidence, usually a witness statement, outlining why the UK is not the proper forum and crucially, the defendant should not file a defence on the merits of the case before this challenge is resolved, as doing so may be treated as accepting the court’s jurisdiction.

    Arbitration Act 2025 Updates: The Arbitration Act 2025, which came into force in August 2025, changed how jurisdictional challenges work for arbitral awards:

    •          Review, Not Rehearing: If an arbitral tribunal has already ruled on its own jurisdiction and a party participated in that process, any subsequent court challenge under Section 67 is now a “review” of the tribunal’s decision rather than a full new hearing (rehearing).

    •          Exceptional Evidence: New evidence or arguments can only be introduced in “exceptional situations” to prevent wasteful repetition of the arbitration proceedings.

    Extradition and “Forum Bar”

    In criminal and extradition contexts, a “forum bar” can be raised. This allows a defendant to argue that they should be prosecuted in the UK rather than extradited, provided a “substantial measure” of the alleged criminal activity occurred in the UK.

    As can be seen above, challenging jurisdiction under the UK justice system is not an open ticket as we have in Nigeria. For the purpose of challenging jurisdiction,  jurisdictions are categorized into territorial jurisdiction, subject matter jurisdiction, common law baseline jurisdiction and jurisdictions created by specific Acts. The mode of challenging these jurisdictions are specifically provided, in ways   which are not open ended and mostly within specific time limit otherwise they are taken to have been waived.

    Like under the Civil Procedure Rule (CPR) Part 11, the defendant must file an Acknowledgment of Service form and specifically tick the box indicating their intention to contest jurisdiction, and this must be done within 14 days, which is a formal application to the court for a declaration that it lacks jurisdiction, supported by a written witness statement as evidence. The defendant must not file a defenec before bringing the application otherwise it will be taken to have been waived.

    The UK Arbitration Act 2025 has an in-built mechanical provision on challenging jurisdiction that restrict the time line for doing so and prevent repetition of Arbitral proceedings, in the sense that a review of a decision on jurisdiction is what is allowed as against a rehearing. In criminal matter , the `Forum Bar ` is a device used to ensure that issue of jurisdiction are discussed and decided once and for all at the beginning of the matter and not left hanging to be raised at any point during the life of the matter .

    In the United States justice system, jurisdiction is the legal power of a court to hear a case and render a binding judgment. To exercise this power, a court must satisfy two primary constitutional requirements: Subject Matter Jurisdiction and Personal Jurisdiction.  Subject Matter Jurisdiction refers to a court’s authority to hear the specific type of legal issue in dispute.

    Federal Courts have Limited Jurisdiction in the sense that they can only hear cases specifically authorised by the U.S. Constitution or federal statutes. These generally fall into two categories, federal question which are cases involving the U.S. Constitution, federal laws, or treaties, and diversity of citizenship, which are Civil disputes between citizens of different states where the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.

    State Courts have general jurisdiction. State courts handle the vast majority of cases (over 95%), including family law, contracts, and most criminal matters (e.g., murder, theft).  They are presumed to have power over any claim unless federal law grants exclusive jurisdiction to federal courts (e.g., bankruptcy, patents).

    Personal Jurisdiction (The Power Over the Parties) also known as personam jurisdiction. This is the court’s authority over the specific individuals or entities being sued. Personal jurisdiction is typically established if the defendant is a resident of the state, was served with a summons while physically present in the state, or has voluntarily consented to the court’s authority. Under the 14th Amendment, a court cannot bind a defendant unless they have “minimum contacts” with the forum state, ensuring the lawsuit does not offend “traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice”.

    Under the dual Sovereignty policy, because the U.S. is a federalist system, both the federal government and state governments are considered independent “sovereigns.” A person can be prosecuted by both a state and the federal government for the same act if it violates both sets of laws, without violating the double jeopardy clause.  Often, both state and federal courts have the authority to hear the same case. In these instances, the plaintiff may choose where to file, though the defendant may sometimes “remove” a state case to federal court. While parties can waive (give up) an objection to personal jurisdiction, they cannot waive subject matter jurisdiction. If a court lacks the authority to hear the type of case, it must dismiss it immediately, even if neither party objects. In other words, in the US the court does not only have the power to suo motu to decide on issue of jurisdiction, it is obligated to, it is a must.

    In the U.S. justice system, challenging jurisdiction is a critical procedural step handled primarily through Rule 12 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (and equivalent state rules). These challenges focus on the court’s authority over either the legal topic or the parties involved.

    The major provisions of the Rules as regards challenging jurisdiction are:

    1. Core Jurisdictional Defenses (Rule 12(b))

    A defendant can move to dismiss a case at the outset based on several jurisdictional   grounds:

    a.       Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction (12(b)(1)): Arguing the court does not have the authority to hear this type of case (e.g., a state law claim filed in federal court without a federal question or diversity of citizenship).

    b.     Lack of Personal Jurisdiction (12(b)(2): Asserting the court has no power over the defendant specifically, often because the defendant lacks “minimum contacts” with the state where the court sits.

    c.       Improper Venue (12(b) (3): Arguing that while the court might have power, it is the wrong geographical location for the trial.

    d.     Insufficiency of Process or Service (12(b)(4)-(5): Challenging the technical form of the summons or the method by which it was delivered

    2. The Principle of Waiver (Rule 12(h)  : One of the most rigid aspects of the U.S.   

    system is the requirement to raise certain defenses immediately or lose them forever:

    •          Waivable Defenses: Objections to personal jurisdiction, venue, and service of process MUST be raised in the very first filing (either a pre-answer motion or the formal answer). If a defendant engages in the merits of the case (like filing a counterclaim) before objecting, these defenses are generally waived.

    •          Non-Waivable Defense: A challenge to subject matter jurisdiction can be raised at any time—even after a trial has ended or during an appeal. If a court discovers it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, it must dismiss the case sua sponte (on its own).

       3. Procedures for 2025

           For cases in 2025, several practical standards apply:

    •          21-Day Deadline: In federal court, a defendant typically has 21 days after service to either file an answer or a Rule 12 motion to dismiss.

    •          Special vs. General Appearances: Modern federal rules have largely abolished the old distinction between “special” and “general” appearances. Simply appearing in court no longer automatically waives jurisdiction, provided the objection is included in the first responsive pleading.

    •          Factual vs. Facial Challenges: Defendants can make a “facial” challenge (arguing the complaint’s allegations don’t support jurisdiction) or a “factual” challenge (introducing outside evidence to prove the court lacks authority).

    In summary, under the US justice system like the UK system,  challenges to jurisdiction is not an open ended ticket that  can be used at will, and any time even for the first time at the apex court. The Courts do not only have the power to suo motu raise and decide issue of jurisdiction, they are under obligation to do so. For the purpose of challenging jurisdiction, defenses are classified into waivable and non waivable defenses. The challenges to personal, venue and service of processes jurisdiction are waivable, they must be raised at the very first filling, otherwise if the defendant engages in any merit of the case without objecting the challenge to jurisdiction is deemed waived

    It is only in cases of challenges to subject matter jurisdiction that the challenge is not waivable and can be raised at any time even after the decision has been given and even at appeal. But unlike in the case of Nigeria, there are still checks to the ticket. For example.  In federal court, a defendant typically has 21 days after service to either file an answer or a Rule 12 motion to dismiss. Also under the modern US Federal law, unless an objection is raised in the first responsive pleading, appearance in court will operate as a waiver of the challenge to jurisdiction. And unlike under the Nigeria justice system, challenges to jurisdiction can be made orally or factually introducing outside evidence.

    It seems obvious and clear that the world has moved away from the strict traditional position where the issue or defence of the court lacking in jurisdiction is been allowed to linger on and hanging from the trial court and allowed to be raised even for the first at the Supreme Court with its attendance miscarriage of justice is no more fashionable, and it is high time we amend our rules and laws to reflect the global trend in the matter.

    It is my humble submission and suggestion that:

    1.      the rules of court especially courts of first instances, should provide that matters of the jurisdiction of the court must be settled by all  parties before the court and the court must issue a certificate of clearance on it if it is settled and resolved that the court has jurisdiction, and that will and should put to rest the issue of jurisdiction in the matter. This should be a baseline procedure.

    2.      Just like under the US justice system, personal, venue , originating process and service of process based jurisdiction should be waivable and treated as minor procedural irregularities

    3.      The National Judicial Council and the Rules of Courts as well as the laws of courts should not only give judges the powers to suo motu raised the issue of jurisdiction but must also make it obligatory, before they can take any step in the matter . 

    •        Bamigbaiye, Acis. AciArb, is Principal Partner at Corporate Legal Consulting and can be reached at bamigbaiye@yahoo.com

  • Nigeria, a nation that remembers to forget

    Nigeria, a nation that remembers to forget

    • By Adaeze Anah

    January 15, 2026 marked the 56th anniversary of the end of the Nigerian Civil War, a date enshrined as Armed Forces Remembrance Day.

    It is the day in 1970 when General Philip Effiong of the defunct Republic of Biafra handed the instrument of surrender to Nigeria’s General Olusegun Obasanjo, formally ending a thirty-month battle.

    While the Nigerian Government has decided to honour its fallen soldiers on this important day, profound is the unacknowledged pivot in Nigeria’s journey.

    The day also marks the climax of a deep, festering grievance, a wound the state has repeatedly refused to acknowledge. And so to commemorate military sacrifice (like a victory parade), but stay silent on the sacrifice and sufferings of millions of Nigerians, and its consequential significance today reinforces selective memorialisation, a culture at the heart of Nigeria’s tremulous security structure.

    The Nigerian/ Biafran war, which ended on January 15, 1970, was among the most devastating of the 20th century, with casualties estimated at three million, predominantly civilians who died from starvation due to the Federal Government’s war policy of food blockade. Its root lay in the catastrophic failure of the post-independence state to manage its profound ethnic and political divisions, culminating in pogroms against Igbos in the North and a consequent loss of faith in federal protection. This, many argue, made the declaration of war inevitable.

    The war’s end was met with a federal policy of “Reconciliation, Reconstruction, and Rehabilitation. (the 3Rs)” However, as scholars have noted, this was a state-imposed “forgiveness” that prioritises a singular narrative over genuine engagement with history. This approach created systemic dimensions of violence against the ‘defeated’ communities, enduring political and developmental marginalisation of the Igbo people and other minorities of the defunct Biafra. The government’s victory was memorialised; the victims’ suffering was relegated to private memory.

    This act of official silence, a deliberate “remembering to forget,” rejects the essential peacebuilding component necessary for sustainable peace, which requires acknowledging historical grievances. Organisations like the Centre for Memories in Enugu continue to advocate for January 15 to be recognised as a National Day of Peace or any nomenclature that reflects as true reconciliation cannot begin without firm, symbolic memorialisation.

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    The trial and life sentence of Nnamdi Kanu represent a pivotal moment in Nigeria’s long-standing failure to reconcile with the grievances of the Igbos of its Southeast. This article will not engage in an analysis of the specific court proceedings.

    Rather, it questions the fundamental choice to deploy the judicial system as the primary instrument to resolve a crisis that is, at its core, political, economic, and historical. This is not an argument in defence of Kanu’s rhetoric or actions but a critique of prosecution as a legal mechanism ill-suited for the task.

    Criminal litigation, by its nature, makes little room for the nuanced political, economic, and social contexts that surround a crime. To prosecute Kanu for separatist agitation while ignoring the decades of state denialism, marginalisation, and unhealed civil war wounds that created the conditions for his rise is not justice. It is a maladjusted use of memory, treating the symptom while systematically ignoring the disease.

    The application of the Terrorism Prevention Act in Nnamdi Kanu’s case presents a complex legal dilemma, one that sits at the intersection of national security, political grievance, and unresolved historical conflict. A legal analysis reveals tensions that arise when counter-terrorism legislation, often crafted for groups engaged in systematic violence, is deployed against a movement whose origins are deeply rooted in decades of unaddressed marginalisation following the civil war.

    This approach raises questions about contextual proportionality. While the state has a legitimate duty to proscribe and prosecute incitement to violence, the narrow legal framing of the case isolated it from the broader political and historical narrative. This narrative includes the documented grievances of the Southeast and the absence of any formal transitional justice process, such as truth-seeking or reparations, to address the wounds of the war.

    Consequently, litigation in this instance risked being perceived not as a neutral administration of justice, but as a continuation of a political conflict through legal means, potentially undermining the law’s legitimacy in the eyes of the affected community.

    The courtroom operated in a historical vacuum. The state’s case focused exclusively on Kanu’s later speeches and the proscription of IPOB, while ignoring the profound, documented grievances of economic neglect, political exclusion, and the unhealed trauma of the war; factors even state security officials have alluded to in other forums are treated as irrelevant to the question of justice.

    This decontextualisation transforms a complex socio-political crisis into a simple criminal matter, guaranteeing that the verdict, however legally sound on its narrow terms, will never address the concerns of the aggrieved communities.

    The Nigerian government’s approach to the separatist agitation in the Southeast suffers from a fundamental contradiction that undermines its own legal and moral standing. This failure was starkly demonstrated in the employment of a legal mechanism that conveniently divorces the history of the crime prosecuted.

    This constitutes a violation of Nigeria’s binding international obligations to provide ‘effective’ remedy for human rights violations under Article 1 and Article 7 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, and Article 2(3) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

    By prosecuting present-day agitators while refusing to acknowledge or address the mass atrocities that created the underlying grievance and the systematic injustices that continue to follow, the Nigerian state actively negates its duty. This litigation-first strategy thus boomerangs: it delegitimises the state’s authority, deepens the perception of systemic injustice, and ultimately reinforces the very cycle of resentment and insecurity it purports to solve.

    This tension is not unique to Nigeria. Comparative international law shows similar challenges where states face separatist or self-determination movements. The critical distinction in international frameworks, such as the guiding principles suggested by UN Security Council Resolution 1566, often hinges on the predominant nature of the acts in question: whether they are essentially political dissent that has turned violent or primarily criminal and terroristic acts aimed at civilians.

    A purely security-focused response, devoid of political and historical context, always fuels the very grievances it seeks to suppress, leading to cycles of impunity, a dynamic observed in several post-conflict regions globally.

    Therefore, a more holistic strategy would consider how legal instruments interact with broader peacebuilding objectives. An exclusive reliance on judicial mechanisms, without parallel methods that address underlying historical and political contexts, offers a short-term judicial solution but fails to provide the long-term foundation for sustainable security and national cohesion.

    So herein lies the crisis of moral standing. A government that has not accounted for its own role in a historical cataclysm that killed millions of its citizens lacks the foundational integrity to demand unquestioning loyalty or to assert that its subsequent use of force is solely in the service of justice. Its authority is comes across as transactional, based on power, not relational, and based on trust and legitimacy.

    This deficit is starkly visible in the Southeast today, where insecurity is mostly met with a purely militarised response. The Nigerian state’s denialism surrounding the Biafran War established a destructive national template: prioritising political order over genuine justice.

    This pattern of denying truths about Human Rights violations is not confined to the Southeast; it replicates itself in the government’s handling of the Boko Haram insurgency in the Northeast. Reports detailing the severe neglect of survivors, particularly women and children who escape captivity, contradict the information disseminated by official channels.

    This neglect violates Nigeria’s obligations under international law, such as the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and deepens community resentment. By consistently choosing suppression of truth over substantive justice and repair, whether in the Southeast, Northeast, or in communal crises, the state erodes its own legitimacy and ensures that the root causes of violence remain unaddressed, perpetuating a national cycle of conflict.

    The path forward is not a mystery; it is memory. As emphasised at the recent African Union event under the auspices of the African Union Transitional Justice Project, in an expert seminar held in Abuja in June 2025, reparations and acknowledgement are not mere gestures but a “legal and moral imperative” for healing and sustainable peace. Addressing the wounds of the war is not an act of charity or a revision of history.

    It is the discharge of a long-overdue legal and ethical obligation. It involves, at minimum: official acknowledgement of the war’s full history and civilian suffering; symbolic acts of memorialization, a fair and inclusive review of the structural marginalisation that still follows and a commitment to a justice process that sees historical context as evidence, not noise.

    Fifty-six years after the guns fell silent, Nigeria stands at a crossroads. It can continue to prosecute the ghosts of its past as criminals, using laws that cannot contain historical truth. Or, it can choose the harder, more honourable path of courageous introspection and repair. The trial of Nnamdi Kanu will be recorded in law books.

    But the true judgment on Nigeria’s commitment to justice and unity will be written by its willingness or otherwise to finally confront the meaning of January 15, 1970. Until it does so, its claim to moral leadership in Africa and within the global community will remain fundamentally contested, and its pursuit of security will remain elusive. True security is not born from the barrel of a gun, but from the unwavering administration of justice and social justice.

    •          Anah, a lawyer, social justice Advocate and writer, can be reached at adaezeanah@yahoo.com

  • Using education as tool for liberation, empowerment

    Using education as tool for liberation, empowerment

    In a country where conversations about education are often dominated by failing infrastructure, underpaid teachers and alarming out-of-school statistics, stories of impact can feel increasingly rare. Yet, across Nigeria, there are educators quietly rewriting this narrative; teaching not just to complete syllabuses, but to change lives. In this report, CHINYERE OKOROAFOR highlights the resilience and innovation of an English language teacher in Tudun Wada, Lugbe in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja Sarah Yusuf, who continues to make a difference despite daunting challenges.

    Sarah Yusuf teaches English language at Wisdom International School of Excellence (WISE), Tudun Wada, Lugbe in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja. As a teacher who walked into slum communities with books instead of excuses, she stayed back after school to prepare pupils for greater future.

    She is convinced that education must do more than prepare children for examinations. It must prepare them for life. This conviction earned her a place at the 11th edition of the Maltina Teacher-of-the-Year Competition during which she was announced the overall winner.

    On November 21, last year, that quiet conviction took her to Nigeria’s biggest teaching stage, where she clinched a N10 million cash prize, overseas capacity development training, and a N30 million school infrastructure project in her honour.

    Long before her name echoed recently through the ballroom of Eko Hotels and Suites in Lagos, the 31-year-old Yusuf was already known. But, her real story did not begin that night. It began years earlier, in places many teachers would rather look away from.

    Wisdom International School of Excellence is located in a community that mirrors the reality of millions of Nigerians-low income, under-resourced and often overlooked by policymakers and planners.

    For Yusuf, teaching was never meant to be mechanical. It was deeply personal and purpose-driven.

    “My teaching philosophy is anchored on the belief that education must go beyond informing the mind to transforming lives.

    “I do not regard learning as the memorisation of facts alone but as a pathway to empowerment, purpose and self-reliance,” she said.

    In Tudun Wada, this philosophy translates into lessons that are practical, reflective and firmly rooted in everyday realities. She noticed that many children struggled not because they lacked intelligence, but because learning was disconnected from their lived experiences.

    Rather than teach in abstraction, she began drawing deliberate connections between the classroom and the world her students navigate daily. Education became practical, relatable and empowering; lessons turned into conversations about life, writing exercises became tools for self-expression and reading opened windows to possibility.

    “In my classroom, students are encouraged to think critically, apply knowledge practically and understand how education connects to their lives and communities,” she said.

    The approach has shaped not only how her students learn, but how they see themselves; as thinkers, contributors and problem-solvers in their own right. What sets Yusuf apart is not just how she teaches, but where and why she teaches.

    Through the Voice from the Slum Initiative (VOISIN), Yusuf also began extending learning opportunities to underprivileged children who had either dropped out of school or never enrolled. In makeshift learning spaces, she introduced literacy, mentorship and life skills; turning education into a lifeline.

    “My teaching extends beyond the school walls into the streets, slums, and various settlements, where I turn learning into liberation and education into empowerment.

    Her work also took another bold turn with Sarah’s Small Scale Fish Farming Initiative, a project that blends education with entrepreneurship. While teaching English language, Yusuf introduced students to fish farming, using it to teach vocabulary, record-keeping, financial literacy and business thinking.

    The initiative did more than feed families. It reframed learning as a pathway to self-reliance, aligning with the global goal of zero-hunger while grounding it firmly in local reality. The innovation earned her the phenomenal Edupreneur Challenge Award. More importantly, it equipped students with practical skills they could apply beyond the classroom, underscoring that in today’s world, education rooted in real-life use is far more empowering than theory alone.

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    In many low-income Nigerian communities, girls are still subtly discouraged from exploring technology and leadership. Yusuf noticed this gap early and decided to confront it head-on.

    Through the WISE Girls in ICT initiative, she began mentoring female students in digital literacy, debate and leadership. Computers became tools of confidence, not intimidation. Girls were encouraged to speak, code, question and lead.

    The results were striking. Her students emerged winners of the PLAN International Nigeria Debate and Quiz Competition, proving that when opportunity meets encouragement, excellence follows. For Yusuf, it was never about trophies. It was about visibility.

    “When girls see themselves represented in spaces of innovation, their dreams expand,” she said.

    The night Nigeria noticed

    From the dusty paths of Lugbe to the polished floors of Eko Hotels, Yusuf stood visibly moved as her name was announced as Nigeria’s 2025 Maltina Teacher of the Year. She was shocked as she admitted later. She never imagined her quiet efforts would attract national recognition.

    As applause filled the hall, Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, represented by the Commissioner for Commerce, Cooperative, Trade and Investment, Folashade Ambrose-Medebem praised the initiative for elevating the teaching profession and highlighting its critical value to society.

    Sanwo-Olu also expressed his profound appreciation to the Nigeria Brewery-Felix Ohiwerei Education Trust Fund for its enduring commitment to celebrating teachers, supporting schools and investing in the future of Nigerian children.

    “Nigerian Breweries, what you’re doing here today goes beyond corporate social responsibility; it is simply nation-building. Tonight, we honour the remarkable men and women whose passion, resilience and creativity shape destinies and prepare our children not just for examinations, but for life,” he said.

    He congratulated the overall winner, urging her to carry the honour with pride and humility as an ambassador of excellence for young people nationwide.

     “To every teacher being recognised today, whether you leave with a trophy or not, Lagos State celebrates you and Nigeria celebrates you. You are the heroes whose work often goes unnoticed, yet whose impact is profound-resounding in every success, every breakthrough and every community that thrives,” he added.

    The Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaiba Ahmad, hailed the initiative as a remarkable collaboration between the government and the private sector to honour those dedicating their lives to shaping the next generation.

    “Today is a powerful reminder that teachers are the true architects of national transformation. Behind every thriving society lies a corps of educators whose daily labour shapes minds, nurtures values and builds the foundation for future progress,” she said.

    The Corporate Affairs Director of Nigerian Breweries Plc, Uzodinma Odenigbo described this year’s turnout as unprecedented, with over 2,000 entries submitted, the highest in the 11-year-old history of the competition.

    He credited the milestone to the growing trust teachers across Nigeria place in the programme, and he praised the judges for their integrity and professionalism in evaluating the entries.

    Odenigbo also expressed gratitude to the competition’s partners, including Union Bank, Air Peace, FCMB and Eko Hotels and Suites, as well as key stakeholders such as the Federal Ministry of Education, Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), All Nigeria Confederation of Principals of Secondary Schools (ANCOPSS) and Teachers’ Registration Council of Nigeria (TRCN), whose support in funding teacher registrations helped in making the record-breaking turnout possible.

    Miss Yusuf

    In her remarks, Yusuf expressed her gratitude to the Education Trust Fund for recognising the invaluable role of teachers.

    She described her win as a powerful motivation to deepen her work, particularly in slum communities.

    “I feel very excited after I was declared the winner. Initially, I was shocked because I never thought my effort would be worthy of this great award. With this news, I am motivated to do more and expand the activities I have carried out in slum communities.

    I am grateful to Nigerian Breweries Plc for creating this platform to honour and recognise teachers. I dedicate this award to children living within the slum communities,” she said.

    It was a rare moment when the spotlight shifted, from power to purpose, from ceremony to service.

    Beyond the prize money

    The N10 million prize is significant, but Yusuf is more focused on what matters most.

    The overseas capacity development training, she said, will expose her to global best practices in inclusive education, innovation and leadership.

    But she does not intend to keep that knowledge to herself. Plans are already underway to translate what she learns into teacher mentorship, training programmes, and collaborative learning within her community.

    The N30 million school infrastructure projects, to be built in her honour, represent something even deeper: a legacy. She envisions improved digital learning facilities, better classrooms, and spaces where skill-based education can thrive.

    In a system where infrastructure often lags behind ambition, the project offers a glimpse of what is possible when investment meets vision.

    Yusuf’s journey also exposes a painful truth: many Nigerian teachers work under conditions that test resilience daily. Poor remuneration, limited professional development, and inadequate recognition continue to erode morale.

    She said: “There is need for reforms that prioritise teacher welfare in the newly launched National Teacher Policy (NTP), continuous professional development and recognition of innovation. Teachers should be supported with fair remuneration, access to training, and platforms that reward creativity and impact in education.

    “Support systems such as professional learning communities, mentorship networks and partnerships with development organisations are essential. When teachers are empowered to innovate and are recognised for their contributions, teaching becomes not only respected but also fulfilling and sustainable.”

    Her story also challenges a single narrative of despair. It shows that even within broken systems, innovation can flourish when teachers are supported, recognised and trusted.

    For Yusuf, the award is more than recognition; it is a call to action for teachers across Nigeria.

    “As teachers, it is easy to feel unseen or discouraged, especially when the system is demanding and recognition seems distant. But your work matters, even when it feels invisible. Every learner you inspire, every value you instill, and every problem you help a child solve contribute to shaping the future of our society,” she said.

    She urged educators to look beyond textbooks and timetables. “Dare to do something different, both in the classroom and beyond it. Look around your community, identify real problems, and allow learning to become part of the solution. When education is connected to societal needs, it becomes powerful and impactful,” Yusuf said.

    Her advice is simple, yet profound: excellence and innovation speak for themselves.

    She said: “When teachers teach with purpose, creativity and courage, the world eventually takes notice. Stay committed, keep learning, and believe in the value of your contribution. If you remain faithful to impact and service, recognition will come, and when it does, it will not only celebrate you, it will celebrate the future you helped build.”

    With these words, Yusuf leaves a message for the country: that the true legacy of teaching is not measured in awards or applause, but in lives transformed and futures reshaped.

    The Maltina Teacher-of-the-Year Competition, now in its 11th year, has become one of the few national platforms that celebrate such impact, producing a growing league of education ambassadors across Nigeria.

    As the applause fades and the headlines move on, Yusuf will return to Tudun Wada. She will stand before students whose names may never trend online, but whose futures are being shaped, lesson by lesson.

    In a country where education often struggles for attention, her work reminds us that transformation rarely begins in conference halls. It begins in classrooms with limited resources, in slums where hope is fragile, and in the hearts of teachers who refuse to give up.

    Yusuf teaches where the system is weakest, and in doing so, she shows its greatest strength. And that may be the most powerful lesson of all.

  • Temporary relief

    Temporary relief

    • Military-police joint task forces cannot solve our policing problems; we must revamp and reform our police force

    Former Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai (retd.), made a good observation when he said deploying soldiers to strictly police duties is weakening the capacity of the Nigerian Police Force (NPF) and other civilian security agencies. Buratai noted that this anomaly could only provide temporary stability.

    The former army chief said this last week in his keynote address at the 2026 Armed Forces Celebration and Remembrance Day lecture in Abuja.

    “The extensive deployment of the Armed Forces of Nigeria in internal security provides immediate stability, but it also perpetuates a cycle of dependency that weakens civil police capacity and strains defence resources,” Buratai said.

    He noted that “Internal security should be civil-driven and intelligence-led, primarily by the police and state security services.”

    General Buratai’s observations should be noted even if he has not said anything novel. Some Nigerians had made similar observations in the past. These included the former Director-General of the Nigerian Army Resource Centre, Major-General Garba Wahab, who told ‘ThisDay’ about seven months ago that “You cannot continue to use them (soldiers) in internal security because they are not meant to maim people. They are meant to kill. By deploying, you are wasting resources. It is a monumental waste we are having right now.”

    He said successive governments continue to use the soldiers because “it is cheaper, easier, faster to deploy the military”.

    Former Inspector-General of Police, Mr Sunday Ehindero, has had cause to speak in the same vein, as well as several security experts. They cannot all be wrong.

    Unfortunately, this trend started during the military era.

    We recall the ‘Operation Sweep’  that the General Buba Marwa government established to tackle the then seemingly intractable security challenges in Lagos State. Because the outfit largely succeeded in reducing crime wave, we did not seem to realise the inherent weaknesses in that initiative.

    Even after returning to civil rule on May 29, 1999, the practice continued. Indeed, at some point in time, at least about 28 of the 36 states in the country had joint military-police outfits under all manner of names, to tackle the rising crime wave.

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    Yet, the 1999 constitution is clear on the duties of both the NPF and the armed forces.

    Indeed, Section 214 of the constitution that establishes the police force outlines its responsibilities: including prevention and detection of crime, apprehension of offenders, and preservation of law and order.

    On the other hand, Section 217 of the constitution defines the duties of the soldiers: They are to defend Nigeria from external aggression, maintain territorial integrity and borders, suppress insurrection, and assist civil authorities to restore order when directed by the President, plus any other duties prescribed by the National Assembly.

    In all of these, they must remain subordinate to civilian authority.

    It would seem it is on this premise of subordination to civil authorities that the military cannot lawfully refuse presidential or legislative orders to help the police force to maintain law and order.

    But then, while this joint military-police assignment could have provided temporary relief, it cannot be a permanent solution.

    As has been severally pointed out,

    Continued deployment of soldiers for internal security is an erosion of police capacity; it overstretches the military; as well as  a misallocation of resources, among others.

    We need a permanent solution fast.

    The problems militating against effective policing are well- known: We need more policemen. We cannot get this just by recruiting, so we don’t engage the wrong persons. It has to be done systematically and painstakingly. This involves upgrading their training institutions that have been abandoned for decades.

    It is gratifying that President Bola Tinubu set up the National Economic Council (NEC) Committee on the Overhaul of Security Training Institutions late last year, to review, overhaul, and revamp the police colleges and security training institutions in the country.

    Headed by Governor Peter Mbah of Enugu State, the goal of the committee is to prepare the facilities for the training of 30,000 newly approved police recruits.

    We urge the committee to expedite action on its assignment which is crucial to revamping the police force.

    The police force also needs improved funding, modern policing tools, etc., decent welfare packages to perform effectively and efficiently. Not crutches that the military represents in assisting it to secure the country.

  • Ridiculous proposition

    Ridiculous proposition

    • How can Gov. Radda be thinking of freeing suspected bandits undergoing trial in the name of ‘prisoners exchange’?

    We are shocked that Governor Dikko Umar Radda of Katsina State appears to be walking the same worn-out path treaded by his predecessors, without any benefits, in fighting banditry in his state.

    Last week, news broke that Katsina State government was making plans to release 70 bandits facing charges in various courts within the state, in what a state official called prisoners exchange.

    We wonder who was exchanging prisoner with whom?

    As expected, Nigerians are aghast and they condemned what they see as an appeasement of sundry criminality by the state government.

    According to the state Commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, Dr Nasir Muazu, the release of the suspects was aimed at consolidating a peace deal entered into between communities affected by insecurity and repentant bandits. He said: “World over, everyone knows that after a war is fought, there are usually prisoner exchanges. If you take Nigeria, for example, during the civil war, many prisoners were set free and exchanged between the Nigerian side and the Biafran side.”

    We consider the argument appallingly scandalous. Is Muazu saying the war with bandits has ended?

    He continued his putrid argument: “If you look at the issue of Boko Haram, prisoners were also released after an agreement was reached. Even the Chibok girls that were released also saw some Boko Haram members who were in prison set free too.” His clincher: “Both warring groups have prisoners they set free for the other. So, it is not an issue of whether an offence had been committed or not, so long as there is peace. The issue is that prisoner exchange is not a new thing in the history of war and peace.”

    Is Katsina State now a sovereign entity with power to set free those who have committed heinous crime against the country?

    We also wonder whether the national security hierarchy was involved in making that decision. While banditry may directly be impacting local communities, it is the national resources which could have been budgeted for education, health and other social infrastructure that is being used to fight the menace, just as enormous resources have been committed to other forms of insurgency in the north.

    The leaders of the affected states must not give the impression that they are treating banditry with kid gloves.

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    When a commissioner in a state appears to be making a decision over far-reaching national security issues, then some laxity exists. We are aware that many of the so-called repentant bandits have gone back to their nefarious trade soon after they have been handsomely rewarded to forsake their criminal activities. The so-called non-kinetic approach should only apply when remorse is established.

    When bandits claim to repent, what plans are in place to ensure that they don’t go back to their evil ways? Or, is the state merely exposing its weakness by surrendering arrested bandits in exchange for its citizens unlawfully held by non-state actors?

    We hope the state authorities have a way of tracking the activities of those let go, out of weakness. Such persons must be monitored to ensure that they do not go back to their evil ways. The state should capture their biodata and develop a data base with which to track them.

    We urge Governor Radda to seek counsel from his predecessors and those of surrounding states affected by banditry. Those who have walked the path he is currently trending will tell him that you cannot make deal with these criminals. Aminu Masari, as governor of Katsina State, after wasting resources in the name of amnesty, later regretted his actions.

    Governor Radda should not do the same. Enough of the nonsense of appeasement as a tactic to deal with bandits.