Home Blog Page 196

Transgender woman sent to prison for hoodwinking man about gender in UK

For luring a man into sexual activity after claiming to be biological female, a British court has sentenced a transgender woman, Ciara Watkin, to 21 months in prison.

BBC, on Friday, said the victim told Durham Crown Court he would not have consented to the sexual encounter if he knew Watkin was biologically male.

The court heard that Watkin, 21, from Thornaby in Stockton-on-Tees, was found guilty of sexual assault after jurors rejected her claim that the man “would have realised” her gender identity.

Recorder Peter Makepeace KC said he was “certain” the victim “fully believed from start to finish” that Watkin was a woman due to her “lies and deception.”

Watkin, who was born male and had used the name Ciara since childhood, had not undergone any medical transition or surgery, the BBC reported.

Both Watkin and the victim were 18 when they met on Snapchat, where she used a female cartoon character as her profile picture. They later met in person, leading to sexual contact. Prosecutor Paul Reid told the court that Watkin even claimed to be menstruating to stop the man from touching her below the waist.

When Watkin later confessed to being biologically male, the man said he was “physically sick” and immediately reported the matter to the police.

“He said he was shocked and upset about being deceived, adding that he felt ashamed, embarrassed, and had been ridiculed online due to Watkin’s actions and deception,” the report stated.

The victim, who described himself as heterosexual, told the court he felt “part of his masculinity was taken away.”Related News

Defence counsel Victoria Lamballe argued that Watkin’s actions were not “predatory or sadistic” but stemmed from “shame and a deep sense of discomfort” with her own body.

She said Watkin, who has been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, identified as female from primary school and had endured years of bullying.

“It is hardly surprising that Watkin built up a façade and presented almost as a caricature of herself to mask the inner turmoil she feels at having been born into the wrong body,” Lamballe said, adding that Watkin “simply wanted to be loved.”

However, Recorder Makepeace ruled that the victim was “totally deceived,” saying Watkin had lied to “get away” with her deception and was aware the man would not have consented if he knew her biological sex.

The judge also criticised Watkin’s attitude during the trial, describing her as “flippant, disinterested, and bored,” showing “not a shred of remorse.”

https://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pagead/ads?gdpr=0&us_privacy=1—&gpp_sid=-1&client=ca-pub-7167863529667065&output=html&h=280&slotname=7613074554&adk=606622597&adf=1586783387&pi=t.ma~as.7613074554&w=747&fwrn=4&fwrnh=0&lmt=1760107397&rafmt=1&armr=3&format=747×280&url=https%3A%2F%2Fpunchng.com%2Ftransgender-woman-jailed-for-deceiving-man-about-gender-in-uk%2F&fwr=0&fwrattr=true&rpe=1&resp_fmts=3&wgl=1&aieuf=1&uach=WyJXaW5kb3dzIiwiMTAuMC4wIiwieDg2IiwiIiwiMTQwLjAuNzMzOS4yMDgiLG51bGwsMCxudWxsLCI2NCIsW1siQ2hyb21pdW0iLCIxNDAuMC43MzM5LjIwOCJdLFsiTm90PUE_QnJhbmQiLCIyNC4wLjAuMCJdLFsiR29vZ2xlIENocm9tZSIsIjE0MC4wLjczMzkuMjA4Il1dLDBd&abgtt=6&dt=1760108466054&bpp=2&bdt=9905&idt=2&shv=r20251009&mjsv=m202510070101&ptt=9&saldr=aa&abxe=1&cookie=ID%3D02d3010894fae082%3AT%3D1758127423%3ART%3D1760108442%3AS%3DALNI_MZJXHP3MYiYzD31zQn-esHIls7cdw&gpic=UID%3D0000114cf4b97902%3AT%3D1758127423%3ART%3D1760108442%3AS%3DALNI_MYcP51kPyS2cy27jZi3U316VJ4bBw&eo_id_str=ID%3D55a107b620c18a6b%3AT%3D1745243451%3ART%3D1760108442%3AS%3DAA-AfjaQiaUVNrKw2QcS8V0tp8FK&prev_fmts=0x0%2C1351x100%2C747x280%2C280x600&nras=1&correlator=652016637104&frm=20&pv=1&rplot=4&u_tz=60&u_his=3&u_h=768&u_w=1366&u_ah=728&u_aw=1366&u_cd=24&u_sd=1&dmc=8&adx=181&ady=3199&biw=1351&bih=607&scr_x=0&scr_y=774&eid=31095078%2C31095080%2C31095082%2C31095148%2C31095154%2C95374043%2C31095124&oid=2&psts=AOrYGsk3dJK0CehsBYzL454gN7rKW8aXyzJBzeB92zQxhqDBVUGYRjAzEYqhcp0HniPkL9WdbXb0HZ_yHFoQvXChUwrL1WJkR-vCs6-OwnOzCEAY7dM%2CAOrYGskP39t5fYnUkxVT5amX4SIJFJ9P-wz7Yam3ZHLjsUKf6BOw-DiypFuguYzE4lJOpoVVlXHW20ecXGskSJ1nYNNDU3lVmoQqxkLiB2HOo7CVbZk&pvsid=3524162088376478&tmod=1405116676&uas=1&nvt=1&ref=https%3A%2F%2Fpunchng.com%2F&fc=1920&brdim=0%2C0%2C0%2C0%2C1366%2C0%2C1366%2C728%2C1366%2C607&vis=1&rsz=%7C%7CpEebr%7C&abl=CS&pfx=0&fu=128&bc=31&bz=1&td=1&tdf=2&psd=W251bGwsbnVsbCxudWxsLDNd&nt=1&pgls=CAEaAzYuOA..&ifi=6&uci=a!6&btvi=3&fsb=1&dtd=20544

He said, “At the heart of this case was your frustration at wanting sexual experiences with heterosexual males, which, by definition, you needed to deceive to achieve.”

Watkin will serve her sentence in a male prison, where authorities said protective measures would be taken to ensure her safety. She will also remain on the sex offenders register for 10 years and has been issued a lifetime restraining order preventing contact with the victim.

Detective Constable Martin Scotson of Cleveland Police said Watkin “purposely concealed her sex in order for the sexual activity to take place,” adding that he hoped the conviction would allow the victim to “move forward with his life.”

Movement for global mental health

By Audrey Chinelo Ofoegbunam, Esq.

Distinguished colleague, as we observe World Mental Health Day 2025, let’s unite in our pursuit of a world where everyone can enjoy their human rights and live with dignity. Mental health is a fundamental human right, essential for overall well-being and a fulfilling life.

Let’s break the stigma surrounding mental health and create a society that values and supports mental well-being.

You, yes you! I, everyone, deserves access to quality mental health care, regardless of their background or socioeconomic status.

Let’s Move for Global Mental Health

  1. Promote Mental Health Awareness: Educate yourself and others about mental health to foster understanding and empathy.
  2. Support Mental Health Advocacy: Amplify the voices of mental health advocates and push for policies that prioritize mental health.
  3. Foster Inclusive Communities: Create safe spaces where everyone feels valued, respected, and supported.

Together, We Can Make a Difference
Let’s work together to create a world where mental health is prioritized, and everyone can thrive.

#WorldMentalHealthDay #MentalHealthMatters #MovementForGlobalMentalHealth

#BreakTheStigma

#SelfCare #MentalHealthAwareness #YouAreNotAlone

#YourWelfareMyPriority

#ImpactfulWelfare

#NBAWelfare #LegalTips #WelfareThatMatters #NBAWelfare2026

#Leadership #LegalProfession #ThinkWelfare #OurWelfareMatters!!!

Maria Corina Machado, Venezuela opposition leader wins Nobel Peace Prize

Venezuela’s opposition leader and democracy activist, Maria Corina Machado, on Friday clinched the Nobel Peace Prize.

While making the presentation, the Nobel jury said the award goes to a “unifying” figure in what has become a “brutal” state.

Maria Machado, who has lived in hiding for the past year, was honoured “for her tireless work promoting democratic rights for the people of Venezuela and for her struggle to achieve a just and peaceful transition from dictatorship to democracy,” said Jorgen Watne Frydnes, the chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee in Oslo.

“I am in shock,” the 58-year-old opposition leader could be heard saying in a video sent to AFP by her press team.

The committee hailed her as “one of the most extraordinary examples of civilian courage in Latin America in recent times”.

“Despite serious threats against her life, she has remained in the country, a choice that has inspired millions.”

Rumours have circulated on social networks that she is sheltering at the US embassy.

Venezuelan opposition figurehead Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia hailed her win as “a well-deserved recognition of the long struggle of a woman and an entire people for freedom and democracy”.

– Rock star popularity –

Machado was the opposition’s presidential candidate for Venezuela’s 2024 elections, but Nicolas Maduro’s government blocked her candidacy.

She then backed the reluctant, little-known ex-diplomat Gonzalez Urrutia as her stand-in, accompanying him on rallies.

Always dressed in white, she was welcomed like a rock star, her supporters rushing to get a glimpse or touch her, holding up babies and children and proffering handwritten notes of support and presents of baseball caps or flowers.

An engineer by training, Caracas-born Machado entered politics in 2002 at the head of the association Sumate (Join us), pushing for a referendum to recall Maduro’s mentor, the late socialist leader Hugo Chavez.

She was accused of treason over the referendum call and received death threats, prompting her to send her two young sons and daughter to live abroad.

Machado was not among those mentioned as possible laureates in the run-up to Friday’s announcement.

In 2024, Machado was awarded the European Union’s human rights Sakharov Prize, and the Council of Europe’s Vaclav Havel Prize.

Her latest accolade comes as the United States has increasingly carried out strikes off Venezuelan shore in international waters, claiming to act against drug smugglers.

Washington accuses Maduro of leading a drug cartel, and does not recognize him as the country’s legitimate leader.

Machado and Gonzalez Urrutia have backed US military pressure on the Maduro regime as a “necessary measure” towards the “restoration of popular sovereignty in Venezuela.”

– Trump’s hopes for prize –

Venezuela has evolved from a relatively democratic and prosperous country to a “brutal authoritarian state that is now suffering a humanitarian and economic crisis,” the Nobel committee’s Frydnes said.

The opposition has been systematically suppressed by means of “election rigging, legal prosecution and imprisonment.”

Machado has been a “key, unifying figure in a political opposition that was once deeply divided,” he said.

US President Donald Trump had meanwhile made no secret of his desire to win this year’s Peace Prize.

Since returning to the White House for his second term in January, the US leader has repeatedly insisted that he “deserves” the Nobel for his role in resolving numerous conflicts — a claim observers say is broadly exaggerated.

The committee had made its choice days before late Thursday’s announcement of a deal to end the fighting in Gaza.

Regardless, Nobel experts had insisted Trump had no chance, noting that his “America First” policies run counter to the ideals of the Peace Prize as laid out in Swedish inventor and philanthropist Alfred Nobel’s 1895 will creating the award.

Frydnes insisted the Nobel Committee is not swayed by lobbying campaigns for the prize.

“I think this committee has seen every type of campaign, media attention,” he said. “We base our decision only on the work and the will of Alfred Nobel,” he stressed.

The prize comes with a gold medal, a diploma and a prize sum of $1.2 million.

It will be presented at a formal ceremony in Oslo on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel’s death.

Vanguard

The armed robber who went straight: John McAvoy was born into the criminal life. Here’s how he escaped it

John McAvoy thought criminal life was like Hollywood

John McAvoy sat in a holding cell in Belmarsh prison, waiting to be processed, plotting his escape. It was 2007, he was 24, and he had been arrested for firearms offences and conspiracy to commit robbery. He knew he was facing a long stretch inside, having previously served three years for possession of a firearm. He also knew his only chance of running was through the hospital wing, so had spent the day lying to guards, pretending that he had sustained a concussion during his arrest. When the holding cell doors opened, he figured that’s where he was going. Instead, he was cuffed and led away to a high-security unit (HSU).

When McAvoy laid eyes on the unit, the magnitude of his situation hit home. “I thought: ‘I’m not going to see daylight for a long, long time.’”

Click here to continue reading.

Krasznahorkai, Hungarian ‘Master of the apocalypse’ wins 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature

Hungarian writer Laszlo Krasznahorkai, opens new tab won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday “for his compelling and visionary oeuvre that, in the midst of apocalyptic terror, reaffirms the power of art”.

“Laszlo Krasznahorkai is a great epic writer in the Central European tradition that extends through Kafka to Thomas Bernhard, and is characterised by absurdism and grotesque excess,” the Swedish Academy, which awards the prize worth 11 million Swedish crowns ($1.2 million), said in a statement.

“But there are more strings to his bow, and he also looks to the East in adopting a more contemplative, finely calibrated tone.”

‘MY LIFE IS A PERMANENT CORRECTION’

Speaking to Swedish Radio, Krasznahorkai, 71, said he had only planned to write one book, but after reading his debut novel, “Satantango”, he wanted to improve his writing with another one. “My life is a permanent correction,” he said.

He said his greatest inspiration as a novelist was “the bitterness”.

“I’m very sad if I think of the status of the world now, and this is my deepest inspiration,” he said in an interview published on the Nobel website on Thursday. He was speaking from Frankfurt, where he was visiting a sick friend.

The settings of his novels move across central Europe’s remote villages and towns, from Hungary to Germany, before skipping to the Far East, where his travels to China and Japan left deep-seated impressions.

The American critic Susan Sontag crowned him contemporary literature’s “master of the apocalypse”, the Academy said, “a judgement she arrived at after having read the author’s second book, ‘Melancholy of Resistance'”.

The second Hungarian to win the prize, after Imre Kertesz in 2002, Krasznahorkai was born in 1954 in the small town of Gyula in southeast Hungary, near the Romanian border.

“Satantango”, his 1985 breakthrough, is set in a similarly remote rural area and became a literary sensation in Hungary.

“The novel portrays, in powerfully suggestive terms, a destitute group of residents on an abandoned collective farm in the Hungarian countryside just before the fall of communism,” the Academy said.

Across the region, collective farms had been set up when land was confiscated at the start of communist rule, and many had become symbols of mismanagement and poverty by the time it ended in 1989.

“Everyone in the novel is waiting for a miracle to happen, a hope that is from the very outset punctured by the book’s introductory (Franz) Kafka motto: ‘In that case, I’ll miss the thing by waiting for it’,” the Academy said.

Krasznahorkai has repeatedly referenced “The Castle” by Kafka as a key influence.

“When I am not reading Kafka, I am thinking about Kafka. When I am not thinking about Kafka, I miss thinking about him,” he told the White Review in 2013.

ORBAN CONGRATULATES FIERCE CRITIC

A fierce critic of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Krasznahorkai has said his government was a “psychiatric case” because of its stance on the Ukraine war. Orban opposes military aid to Kyiv and says Hungary should stay out of the war.

“How can a country be neutral when the Russians invade a neighboring country?” Krasznahorkai said in an interview with the Yale Review in February.

Reacting to the news, Orban wrote in a short message on X: “Laszlo Krasznahorkai, Hungary’s Nobel Prize laureate in literature, brings pride to our nation. Congratulations!”

Much of Krasznahorkai’s inspiration comes from experiences in central Europe on the cusp of the fall of communism. In 1987, Krasznahorkai moved from communist Hungary to West Berlin, where he said he found “a democratic ambience” he had never experienced before.

“Ever since, I have never forgotten the taste of freedom,” he said in an interview on the Friderikusz Podcast in 2023.

DARK THEMES MAY RESONATE WITH 21ST CENTURY READERS

His writing may resonate with readers immersed in news from Russia’s war in Ukraine as well as the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, said Jason Whittaker, Professor of Communications at the University of Lincoln.

“We seem to have entered the 21st century in a more hostile and bleak environment than we hoped for at the end of the 20th,” Whittaker said. “… some of the bleak and darkly comic elements of books such as Satantango actually will resonate with many more readers than previously.”

Krasznahorkai had a close creative partnership with Hungarian filmmaker Bela Tarr. Several of his works have been adapted into films by Tarr, including “Satantango”, which runs to more than seven hours, and “The Werckmeister Harmonies”.

“When I read (Satantango), I knew it immediately that I must make a film based on it,” Tarr told Reuters by phone.

In 1993, Krasznahorkai won the German Bestenliste Prize for the best literary work of the year for “The Melancholy of Resistance”.

Crucial to the dramatic sequence of events is the arrival in the city of a ghostly circus, whose main attraction is the carcass of a giant whale.

The novel employs “dreamlike scenes and grotesque characterisations” to “portray the brutal struggle between order and disorder,” the Academy said. “None may escape the effects of terror.”

He was also the winner of the Man Booker International Prize 2015.

LITERATURE IS THE FOURTH NOBEL PRIZE OF 2025

Established in the will of Swedish dynamite inventor and businessman Alfred Nobel, the prizes for achievements in literature, science and peace have been awarded since 1901.

Past winners of the literature prize include French poet Sully Prudhomme, who bagged the first award, American writer William Faulkner in 1949 and Britain’s World War Two Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1953.

Last year’s prize was won by South Korean author Han Kang who became the 18th woman – the first was Swedish author Selma Lagerlof in 1909 – and the first South Korean to receive the award.

Credits: Reuters

Profs. Odinkalu, Osinbajo challenge legal institutions to teach history, decolonise Law

Professor Chidi Anselm Odinkalu has called for intellectual and institutional liberation in Nigeria’s legal education, urging that it’s time to decolonize legal education and governance systems by returning history to the classroom.

Speaking last Friday at the 2nd Prof. Yusuf Olaolu Ali, SAN Annual Lecture at the Kwara State University (KWASU), Malete, on the theme, “Decolonizing Legal Briefs: Towards Implementation of the Local Content Law for the Benefit of Nigerian Lawyers,” Odinkalu advocated for a rethink of the way law is taught and practiced in Nigeria.

The lecture, chaired by Prof Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, Nigeria’s former Vice President, drew leading voices from the legal and academic communities, turning the event into a rallying point for reforming how law is taught, practiced, and applied to governance.

A Professor of Practice in International Human Rights Law, Odinkalu, expressed concern that Nigeria’s legal system remains ideationally dependent on colonial structures, a situation he said has stunted both national development and the evolution of a justice system truly reflective of Nigerian realities.

“There is ideational dependence in our teaching and practice of law,” he said. “We export our role models to colonialists who never saw Africans as human beings in the first place.”

He cited the elevation of British legal icons like Lord Denning in Nigerian classrooms as an example of misplaced reverence, arguing that “British lawyers could never have handled the complexity of Nigerian law the way our own jurists like Prof Yusuf Ali or Prof Osinbajo can.”

For Odinkalu, the remedy begins with teaching history—not just as an academic subject, but as the foundation of national identity and jurisprudence.

“The teaching of law in our universities is rooted in colonialism,” he said. “We need to teach differently, beginning with history. Our children must know that we come from a shameful colonial past designed to make us dependent. Knowledge will empower them to reject those myths and rebuild their sense of community.”

He stressed that reforming Nigeria’s curriculum—especially in law and governance—was “urgent,” adding that true decolonization would regenerate leadership and civic consciousness.

“If we address this, we can begin to regenerate leadership—leadership that understands governance and politics from our own context, not colonial templates,” he declared.

Former Vice President Osinbajo, in his remarks as chairman of the occasion, aligned with Odinkalu’s position, describing the colonial hangover in legal practice as one of the biggest obstacles to justice and institutional reform.

“Our legal practice often operates at variance with our realities,” Osinbajo noted. “Ideational dependence has made it difficult for Nigerian courts to reform themselves. We see this clearly in how technicalities are used to dismiss cases with merit. Even in the UK, which we copied, the system has moved on and reformed.”

Both scholars agreed that decolonizing the law goes beyond intellectual exercise—it is a moral and national imperative to rebuild a justice system that reflects Nigeria’s social, cultural, and economic realities.

By the end of the lecture, the message resonated clearly through the packed KWASU auditorium: Nigeria must reclaim its legal consciousness, teach its history, and reimagine its governance away from the long shadow of colonialism.

Will Somtoo Get Justice? FCT Police arrest robbers behind death of Arise TV Journalist, recover weapons

The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command announced on Thursday the arrest of suspects suspected to be responsible for the killing of Arise News Television journalist, Somtochukwu Christella Maduagwu, in Abuja.

The police also arrested 12 other notorious armed robbers believed to have carried out a robbery incident at Unique Apartment, Gishiri Village, Katampe District, Abuja, where a security guard was killed.

The arrests followed a directive by President Bola Tinubu to security agencies to apprehend the killers. The suspects were arrested by operatives of the Scorpion Squad led by ACP Victor O. Godfrey through actionable digital and reconstructive intelligence following a directive by the FCT Commissioner of Police to identify and apprehend the culprits.

According to police reports, the robbery occurred on September 29, 2025, at about 3:30 a.m., during which the victims were murdered. The arrested suspects include:

  1. Shamsudeen Hassan, from Malumfashi LGA, Katsina State
  2. Hassan Isah, 22, from Zaria, Kaduna State
  3. Abubakar Alkamu (a.k.a. Abba), 27, from Musawa LGA, Katsina State
  4. Sani Sirajo (a.k.a. Dan Borume), 20, from Malumfashi LGA, Katsina State
  5. Mashkur Jamili (a.k.a. Abba), 28, from Igabi LGA, Kaduna State
  6. Suleiman Badamasi (a.k.a. Dan-Sule), 21, from Malumfashi LGA, Katsina State
  7. Abdulsalam Saleh (a.k.a. Na-Durudu), from Katsina LGA, Katsina State
  8. Zaharadeen Muhammad (a.k.a. Gwaska), 23, from Chikun LGA, Kaduna State
  9. Musa Adamu (a.k.a. Musa Hassan), 30, from Malumfashi LGA, Katsina State
  10. Sumayya Mohammed (a.k.a. Baby), 27, from Sammaka LGA, Kaduna State
  11. Isah Abdulrahman (a.k.a. Abbati), 25, from Zaria LGA, Kaduna State
  12. Musa Umar (a.k.a. Small), 31, from Maiduguri LGA, Borno State

Four suspects – Shamsudeen, Hassan, Alkamu, and Sirajo – were initially apprehended and confessed to their involvement. Shamsudeen admitted to shooting security guard Barnabas Danlami when he tried to stop them, while Sirajo confessed that he tried to hold Maduagwu as she fell from the third floor. Shamsudeen also confessed to driving away the victim’s white Honda CR-V after the operation. The suspects revealed they each received ₦200,000 from the crime proceeds.

Recovered exhibits include one fabricated AK-47 rifle, 36 rounds of 9mm live ammunition, one locally-made pistol, one pump-action gun, two live cartridges, four mobile phones, two sharp knives, one cutlass, and nine torchlights used during the operation.

Further arrests were made on October 8 when operatives intercepted Musa Umar and Hassan Isah while planning another armed robbery operation in Maitama. All suspects are in custody and have confessed to the crimes.

The FCT Commissioner of Police commended the Scorpion Squad for their swift action and assured residents that the command would sustain aggressive operations to rid the FCT of violent criminals.

What you might not know about late elder statesman Christopher Kolade

Nigeria’s one-time High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, veteran broadcaster, and business icon, Christopher Kolade, died on Wednesday at the age of 93.

PUNCH Online earlier reported that the family announced the elder statesman’s death in a statement on Thursday.

According to the statement, the late former Chairman of Cadbury Nigeria Plc died peacefully on Wednesday, October 8, 2025.

Below are the things to know about him.

Born on December 28, 1932, in Erin-Oke, Osun State, to an Anglican missionary father, Kolade’s early years were shaped by faith, discipline, and learning.

He attended Government College, Ibadan, before proceeding to Fourah Bay College, Freetown, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from one of West Africa’s most prestigious universities.

Broadcasting trailblazer

Kolade began his professional career in the 1950s as an Education Officer in the Western Region. However, following Nigeria’s independence in 1960, he transitioned to broadcasting — a move that would define the early part of his illustrious career.

At the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation (now the Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria, Kolade rose through the ranks to become Director-General.

Those who worked under him remember his professionalism, dignity, and insistence on ethical journalism — qualities that set him apart in Nigeria’s early broadcasting years.

His collaboration with the late Segun Olusola helped lay the foundation for modern television and radio in the country.

Corporate leader

After nearly two decades in broadcasting, Kolade joined Cadbury Nigeria Plc in 1978 as Administration Director. He later became Managing Director, Chief Executive, and eventually Chairman, leading the company through what many described as its “golden era.”

Beyond the corporate boardroom, Kolade was a champion of ethical business practices. He chaired both the Integrity Organisation and The Convention on Business Integrity, long before “corporate governance” became a popular phrase in Nigeria’s business lexicon.

Teacher, mentor, and voice of values

Even after retiring from corporate life, Kolade continued to shape minds and values.

At the Lagos Business School, he taught Corporate Governance, Human Resource Management, and Leadership, where generations of business executives recall him as a mentor who began each class with questions about values rather than profits.

He later served as Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of Pan-Atlantic University, which houses both LBS and the School of Media and Communication, and as Chancellor of McPherson University, Ogun State.

Diplomat and devout Anglican

From 2002 to 2007, Kolade served as Nigeria’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, earning widespread respect for his diplomacy, humility, and integrity.

A devout Anglican, he received the Order of St Augustine Medal from the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1981 and was later installed as a Lay Canon Emeritus at Guildford Cathedral, United Kingdom. He was also organist and choir director at St Peter’s Church, Faji, Lagos, a testament to his lifelong commitment to faith and service.

Despite his towering résumé, which includes Fellow of the Institute of Directors, Past President of both the Nigerian Institute of Management and the Institute of Personnel Management, and recipient of the Commander of the Order of the Niger, Kolade remained remarkably humble.

Family life

He was married to Beatrice Egochukwu Ukogu, with whom he had two sons. Those close to him describe him as a devoted husband and father who balanced public duty with family warmth and simplicity.

Kolade’s life was anchored in family, faith, and service — values he lived and passed on to all who encountered him.
Enduring Legacy

In business circles, Kolade will be remembered as a leader of principle, while in academia, as a mentor who shaped minds with moral clarity and in diplomacy, as an envoy who carried Nigeria’s name with dignity.

PUNCH

At 80, The UN must renew itself or risk irrelevance

By Sonnie Ekwowusi

The United Nations clocked 80 on October 24, 2025, amid calls for its reform. While we join world leaders, diplomats, multinationals, and others in wishing the UN a brighter future, we urge the octogenarian organization to renew itself through meaningful reforms to surmount the great obstacles lying ahead. Founded on October 24, 1945, to succeed the League of Nations in the aftermath of the Second World War, the United Nations marks its 80th anniversary against a backdrop of deep global uncertainty and skepticism about its future.

Established to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, promote fundamental human rights, and foster international cooperation, the UN has been celebrated as humanity’s greatest experiment in multilateralism and criticized as an institution trapped in its own contradictions.

Over the last eight decades, the UN has recorded undeniable achievements. For instance, its specialized agencies have advanced global health, development, and humanitarian relief. Through the World Health Organization (WHO), diseases such as smallpox were eradicated; through UNICEF, millions of children have been rescued from hunger and ignorance. Despite occasional setbacks, the UN’s peacekeeping missions have, since 1948, deployed over 70 operations, helping to stabilize countries such as Namibia, Cambodia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire, and Timor-Leste. The UN’s conflict mediation has successfully facilitated negotiations in conflicts like the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988), El Salvador (1992 peace accords), and Mozambique (1992).

Its disarmament efforts have led to the creation of key treaties such as the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT, 1968), the Chemical Weapons Convention (1992), and ongoing arms control discussions. The UN has also established landmark frameworks such as the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS, 1982) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC, 1989). Through the UNHCR (UN Refugee Agency), millions of refugees and internally displaced persons have been safeguarded, notably after wars in Afghanistan, Syria, Sudan, and Ukraine.

On human rights and justice, the UN adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), a landmark document that has influenced constitutions, treaties, and legal systems worldwide. It also established tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, paving the way for the permanent International Criminal Court (ICC).

Yet, as the UN turns 80, the cracks in its edifice are difficult to ignore. Indeed, the organization marks this milestone at a time when the ideals that gave it life are under unprecedented strain. For example, for eight decades, African countries—Nigeria inclusive—have been victims of organized deception, coercion, bullying, blackmail, manipulation, and abuse of power within the UN system.

If the UN must remain credible, its reform can no longer be deferred. Thankfully, the UN Secretary-General, António Guterres, has launched the UN80 Initiative aimed at reforming the organization to deliver tangible improvements in peace, development, and humanitarian aid.

Addressing world leaders at the 80th session of the UN General Assembly in New York recently, President Bola Tinubu called for sweeping changes at the UN, including a fairer partnership, a permanent Security Council seat for Nigeria and Africa, a new global financial court to manage sovereign debt, and greater fairness in the distribution of mineral wealth. President Tinubu stated that if the UN must recover its relevance, Nigeria must have a permanent seat on the Security Council. He highlighted Nigeria’s evolution from “a colony of 20 million people, absent from the tables where decisions about our fate were taken,” to a “sovereign nation of over 236 million, projected to be the third most populous country in the world, with one of the youngest and most dynamic populations on earth.”

The United Nations ought to be a meeting ground for equal sovereign nations. Unfortunately, the impression being conveyed today is that only the United States is calling the shots at the UN, while African countries are relegated to subservient roles. For example, at the 79th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) held at the UN headquarters in New York, President Tinubu requested a permanent seat for Nigeria on the powerful UN Security Council. However, the United States Ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, stated that if permanent seats were to be given to Nigeria or other African countries, they would be without veto power, because granting such power to African states would make the Security Council’s work “dysfunctional. This is a big insult to Nigeria and other African countries. Therefore, an end must be put to the marginalization of Nigeria and other African nations at the UN. Such marginalization is detrimental to the maintenance of international peace and security. Africa deserves the respect it is owed within the United Nations. The African continent has come of age. It deserves a place among the permanent members of the Security Council, with the same veto rights and responsibilities as other permanent members.

Most tragically, the UN has been captured by a narrow Western ideological perspective, prioritizing the funding and promotion of controversial issues such as LGBT rights (the UN has even produced gay-themed postage stamps), abortion, population control, teenage sexual rights, teenage masturbation, and transgender rights in Nigeria and other African countries.

The consensus reached at various United Nations conferences is that laws passed in every developing country, including Nigeria, must reflect the diverse social, economic, and environmental conditions of that country, with full respect for the religious and cultural backgrounds and philosophies of its people. Yet, UN agencies operating in Africa — heavily funded by organizations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the Ford Foundation, the Open Society Foundations, Marie Stopes International, Rutgers, and the International Planned Parenthood Federation — continue to promote the aforementioned practices that are antithetical to Africa’s culture, tradition, and philosophy.

Therefore, the UN is in dire need of reform. In the years ahead, the organization should refocus on fulfilling its founding objectives. Essentially, the UN was established, as stated in its Charter, to maintain international peace and security through collective action, peacekeeping missions, and diplomacy. Unfortunately, the United Nations has been unable to live up to this mandate.

The UN symbolizes the quest for world peace, yet, since its founding 80 years ago, global peace has remained elusive. From North to South, East to West, the horizon resounds with wars, rumors of wars, deadly scourges of terrorism, suicide bombings, conflicts, and killings. Deprived of justice, many people have resorted to violence and other forms of self-help to seek redress. Millions of innocent lives have been lost in horrific genocides — from Cambodia to Rwanda. We have witnessed an unprecedented buildup of weapons so deadly that millions of lives could be snuffed out at the push of a button.

Examining the precarious state of world affairs over the past 80 years, what stands out most is war. Often, with the UN Security Council paralyzed by the veto powers of its permanent members, the world has witnessed numerous devastating conflicts — the Korean War (1950–1953), the Vietnam War (1955–1975), the Arab–Israeli conflicts (since 1948), the Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970), the Six-Day War (1967), the Yom Kippur War (1973), the Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988), the Falklands War (1982), the Gulf War (1990–1991), the Yugoslav Wars (1991–2001), the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Afghanistan War (2001–2021), and the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian war, among others. In fact, an uncountable number of people, mostly women and children, have been deliberately killed in the ongoing Israeli–Palestinian conflict.

The failures of the UN are not merely the product of circumstance but of structural design. The Security Council remains frozen in a post-1945 power arrangement dominated by five permanent members with veto authority. This outdated configuration has left the UN unable to reflect the geopolitical realities of the 21st century.

That is why the UN should be reformed to give Africa and Latin America permanent representation, to democratize decision-making, and to strengthen accountability — have grown louder with each passing decade, yet they remain unheeded. Moreover, the UN often finds itself trapped between high ideals and weak enforcement. While its declarations and resolutions inspire, they rarely compel. Countries flout international law with impunity, undermining the credibility of the system. The reliance on voluntary contributions has also compromised the independence of key UN agencies, leaving them vulnerable to the influence of donors

Still, to dismiss the UN as irrelevant would be shortsighted. In an interconnected world, no single nation can address transnational threats — climate change, pandemics, nuclear proliferation, or cybercrime — on its own. The UN remains the only universal platform where all countries, big and small, can engage in dialogue. Its convening power, moral authority, and institutional memory are assets that cannot easily be replaced. Despite its imperfections, the UN remains a beacon of hope for global solidarity, championing peace, human rights, and development across nations. Its journey is a testament to humanity’s enduring belief in collective action for a better world.

The challenge, therefore, is not whether the UN should exist, but that it must undergo reforms to stand the test of time and realize its founding objectives. As the UN enters its ninth decade, it must pursue bold reforms: expanding the Security Council to reflect present-day realities and include African countries such as Nigeria. The UN Human Rights Commission and its agencies should also stop funding abortion, LGBT advocacy, population control, contraceptives, and the sterilization of women in Africa. African women need food, good health, and quality education — not abortion or sterilization.

The UN should streamline bureaucratic inefficiencies and strengthen mechanisms for compliance with international law. The sovereignties of African countries must be respected within the UN. The organized coercion, bullying, blackmail, and manipulation of African countries at the UN must stop. Above all, the UN must reclaim the moral courage and moral voice to stand on the side of justice, even when doing so runs counter to the interests of the powerful.

At 80, the UN has come of age. It is no longer the utopia envisioned by its founders, nor the irrelevance its critics claim. Though still an unfinished project — flawed in many ways — it should strive to fulfil the objectives for which it was founded. Whether it withers into obsolescence or renews itself through reforms as a credible guardian of peace depends on the choices made today. The world deserves no less than a United Nations fit for the challenges of the 21st century.

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

Alleged Fraudulent Acts: NGO protests at CBN, Sterling Bank, submits petition against bank

A Coalition of Civil Society Organizations against Banks Fraudulent Practices and Customers Victimization, on Wednesday, staged a peaceful protest at the Abuja headquarters of Central Bank of Nigeria and an Abuja branch of Sterling Bank Plc.

At the apex bank’s office, the group submitted a petition, which was received by
the Acting Director, Corporate Communications, Central Bank of Nigeria.

The petition dated Monday 6th October, 2025, was addressed to Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria, Abuja.

The protesters displayed placards with several inscriptions like; conspiracy;
forgery; criminal breach of trust; taking loan is not a crime; Sterling Bank Plc stop suffocating your customers; theft; make loan repayment transparent etc.

Comrade Flora Elekwa, Director, Mobilization and Advocacy of the CSO, told officials of the CBN that the trend of fraudulent activities occasioned by unwarranted deductions is becoming alarming and portrays the banking sector in bad light.

The petition was signed by Comrade (Dr.) Sam Wisdom, National Coordinator; Comrade Flora Elekwa, Director, Mobilization and Advocacy; and Lady Cecilia Bisong, National Organizing Secretary.

The CSO stated that it is common knowledge that for a long time, bank customers have been at the mercy of some banks, which on a regular basis debit them for all manner of reasons, some of which are questionable and dubious including hidden charges. She said the coalition was starting with Sterling Bank on Monday and would picket other banks later.

When put together, according to Mrs Elekwa, “these charges amount to loss of millions of Naira by banks customers to the effect that banks declare trillions yearly as profit at the detriment of the customers who lacked the voice to complain.

“Even the regulatory agencies seem to be helpless in this situation.

“The street protest and advocacy match was aimed at drawing the attention of the government, regulatory authorities, and the general public to these unwholesome, illegal practices with a view to rectifying the situation” Mrs Elekwa said.

Particularly, the group pleaded with the CBN as a supervisory government agency responsible for monitoring and supervision of all banks and financial institutions in Nigeria to immediately ask the Management of a new generation bank to meet the Management of Miden Systems Ltd and harmonize the accounts and refund the company its money.

The company alleged that the bank through its Chief Executive Officer together with the bank’s Financial Holdings Company Plc and four other defendants used it’s name to open various spurious accounts through which it allegedly syphoned the company’s funds domiciled with the bank up to the tune of over $200,000,000 (Two Hundred Million Dollars).

According to the Company, allegely, “Funds were moved and misappropriated by the bank at reckless abandon with huge and massive spurious debits to the company’s account.

The Company further stated that in line with standard bank practices and extant applicable laws, it continuously and consistently demanded for its statement of account”.

However, the company alleged that the bank rather than do so, denied it access to its funds, the group stated in the petition.

Responding, the Acting Director, Corporate Communications, CBN, assured the protesters that their grievances would be addressed, and thanked the group for organizing a peaceful protest.

Similarly, the group headed to the office of Sterling Bank in Abuja’s Central Business District, to submit a petition.

However, the bank authorities didn’t come out to address the group of protesters who felt slighted and disrespected.

For over two hours, the very large number of protesters occupied the frontage of the bank’s office, chanting and singing, while many passers by joined them, and voiced out their anger against the punitive charges many banks make against their customers.

The two day protest is billed to continue on Tuesday. 

TIPS