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Man set to face trial in Ondo for sexually abusing niece

  • 25-year-old stabbed to death in Ondo over ₦14,000 dispute

Babawale Kolawole, a 53-year-old man, was arrested by the Ondo State Police Command on Thursday for allegedly sexually abusing his 16-year-old niece.

The police command, in a statement, said the suspect committed the offence at No. 12 Okeodunwo Street, Igbado community, in the Ondo West Local Government Area of the state, last week.

According to the statement issued by the Public Relations Officer of the command, Mr Olayinka Ayanlade, the suspect is already in the police net. At the same time, an investigation is ongoing on the matter.

The police spokesman further disclosed that the victim had had abortions on the order of the suspect on two different occasions.

“On September 13, 2025, a 16-year-old minor reported to the command that her uncle, the above-named suspect, had been subjecting her to repeated sexual assault. The victim further alleged that the suspect engaged in the act almost daily, and that after each episode, he would clean her private parts with a piece of cloth. Shockingly, the suspect had also facilitated the termination of her pregnancies on two occasions.

“Upon receipt of this disturbing report, the Gender-Based Offences Unit of the command immediately swung into action, arrested the suspect, and diligently processed the case for prosecution,” the PPRO said.

The command reiterated its unwavering commitment to protecting the rights of women and children and to ensuring that offenders faced the full weight of the law without compromise.

Similarly, the command also disclosed the arrest of one Wale Ibrahim for stabbing his friend to death during an argument over N14,000.

“On September 13, 2025, one Akinsola Lukman, ‘m’, of No. 26 Areyetele Street, Sabo Road, Ondo, reported that while they were working at a construction site along Litaye Camp via Laje Road, Ondo, one Wale Ibrahim ‘m’ of No. 50 Oreborede Street, Ondo, arrived at the site and demanded the sum of N14,000 from one Gabriel Oyeniran, ‘m’, being money owed for wood he had earlier sold to him.

“An altercation ensued between the duo of Wale and Gabriel, during which the suspect, Wale Ibrahim, became violent and stabbed one Fisayo Ajetumobi, ‘m’, aged 25 years, on the chest with a knife. Sadly, the victim sustained fatal injuries and died on the spot as a result of this unwarranted act of violence.”

The PPRO stated that the suspect had been arrested by the police and would soon be charged in court to face the full weight of the law.

Seventy-Eight Steps: A tribute to Asiwaju Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo, SAN

By Olanrewaju Onigegewura

To many people across the world, Friday, 19 September 2025, is just another day in the year of our Lord. However, to the family, friends, mentees and proteges of Asiwaju Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, 19 September is always a special day. It is a day to celebrate and give thanks to God Almighty for the life and time of a living legend, a colossus at the Bar, an advocate of distinction, and a leader in name, in deed,  as well as in title.

Asiwaju Awomolo belongs to that rare class of human beings whose mission in life is to add value to whatever they touch. He is the practical embodiment of the truism: he adorns not what he touches not. His life has been a life lived to the full in the service of God and humanity. He has consistently enriched the lives of all privileged to encounter him.

When Shakespeare wondered what was in a name in Romeo and Juliet and concluded that “…that which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet”, the Bard of Avon did not take cognizance of African names. To us Africans, names are not random. Names are instructive, if not even divine. As Iya Agba would say: ile la n wo, ki a to so omo l’oruko [names reflect the heritage and circumstances of the child]. Is it therefore any wonder that a child named Adegboyega has continued to live up to his name by continuously seeking greater heights? Or a child christened Solomon has consistently exhibited Solomonic wisdom?

For decades, Asiwaju Awomolo’s name has been synonymous with excellence in the legal profession. This is not surprising for a man who cut his professional teeth learning from a foremost advocate, Chief Tunji Arosanyin, the Gbegbegun of Egbe. Asiwaju served in the chambers of his mentor selflessly and with uncommon passion. It is not unusual in our climes for a principal and associate in law firms to regard each other with mutual suspicion. The relationship between Chief Arosanyin and Asiwaju is, however, an exception to this rule.

Many years after leaving his principal to set up his own practice, Chief Arosanyin said of his former associate:

“Chief Adegboyega Awomolo, SAN came to the chambers also after completing his NYSC service in Kwara State. He came to the chambers with a very matured mind. He did not appear like a new comer to Law Practice at all. He brough a lot of good ideas which brough Destiny Chambers to the forefront in legal practice in Kwara State. When I started active politics, I handed over the administration of the chambers to him. He was really the doyen of Destiny Chambers and the story of Destiny Chambers can never be complete without stating the involvement and the contributions to the legal firm of Tunji Arosanyin & Co, Destiny Chambers, by Chief Gboyega Awomolo.”

What a most beautiful and fitting tribute.

With such a rock-solid foundation, it is again not a surprise that Asiwaju Awomolo was destined for the top echelon of the profession. According to a former Chief Judge of Kwara State, His Lordship Justice Timothy Oyeyipo:

As a practitioner, Asiwaju Awomolo has always been an exceptional advocate and an ethical counsel whose submissions in court always reflect his industry and intelligence.”

Justice Oyeyipo’s tribute is not an isolated view. It reflects the consensus of all who have known him that Asiwaju is an exceptional human being. In the words of Asiwaju Wole Olanipekun, SAN:

Chief Awomolo has etched his name in gold with the phylum of the very best the legal profession can boast of, particularly in terms of leadership acumen, administrative sagacity and organisational  dexterity.”

If any evidence of Asiwaju Awolomo’s leadership acumen is required, his stint as the pioneer Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice of Osun State is a ready example. As the first Attorney General of the newly created State, Asiwaju laid a solid foundation for justice sector reform, defence of human rights, and proactive legal architecture. More than three decades after his tenure, his administration continues to remain a reference point for succeeding Attorneys General.

In 1992, at the tender age of 14 years at the Bar, Asiwaju Awomolo was elevated to the Inner Bar as a Senior Advocate of Nigeria. He was the 88th distinguished practitioner to be so honoured. He was one of the youngest advocates to be admitted to the Inner Bar at the time.

It is doubtful if any book could be written on the history of the Nigerian Bar Association without a generous mention of the role played by Asiwaju Awomolo. A committed Bar Man, Asiwaju emerged on the national circuit of the Bar when he was elected the Chairman of the Ilorin Branch of the NBA. Prior to this, he had served as the Assistant Secretary of the Branch between 1980 and 1981, after which he was elected the Secretary of the Branch.

His election as the Chairman of the Ilorin Branch coincided with the period the national body of the Association was plunged into an internecine crisis which polarized the foremost professional association. It will be recalled that at the 1992 Annual General Conference of the NBA in Port Harcourt, the delegates who had trooped to the capital of Rivers State in peace left the oil city in pieces. For years after, the association was in comatose as a result of lack of leadership at the centre.

On 10 April 1997, the then existing registered 54 branches of the Association from all over the country converged in Ikeja and resolved that there should be established a body to be known as Committee of Chairmen and Secretaries of the Nigerian Bar Association. The mandate of the Committee was to resolve the festering crisis of the NBA which had  paralysed the body for five years. It was at this auspicious gathering of brilliant legal minds that Asiwaju Awomolo was unanimously elected as the Chairman of the Committee.

It was thus the lot of Asiwaju Awomolo, working together with the indefatigable Chief Richard Ahonaruogo, the secretary of the Committee, to pull out all the stops to ensure that the inferno of the crisis did not consume the Association and reduce it to ashes. Finally, five years after the Port Harcourt crisis, the Nigerian Bar Association under the leadership of Asiwaju Awomolo met in Jos – the first time it would be meeting as a national body after more than half a decade.

The Jos Conference affirmed the Committee of Chairmen and Secretaries of which Asiwaju was the Chairman as the body to coordinate the affairs of the NBA and restored it to its proper status. The historic conference marked the end of the war of attrition within the national NBA. It was the Awomolo-led Committee that midwifed the 1998 historic Conference in Abuja which led to the rebirth of the NBA.

In 2024, Asiwaju Awomolo was unanimously elected the Chairman of the Body of Benchers – the body of legal practitioners of highest distinction established by section 3 of the Legal Practitioners Act. Within the statutory one year tenure, Asiwaju consolidated on the achievements of his illustrious predecessors and put in place solid legacies for his successors. As a legal historian, I am particularly fascinated by the vision of Asiwaju which led to the establishment of the Museum and Archives of the Body of Benchers. I have been privileged to enter the Museum and one cannot but be impressed by the meticulous planning that must have gone into setting it up.

That was not all. With the support of the distinguished Benchers, Asiwaju’s administration succeeded in institutionalizing a number of projects which are intended to advance the statutory objectives of the Body. These include: publication of the Reports of the Directions of the LPDCC; the digitalization of the proceedings of the LPDC, installation of new signage at of the Body of Benchers Complex, the flag-off of the Annexe of the Body of Benchers Building; and introduction of Solemn Affirmation for applicants to the Bar, amongst others.

In recognition of the innovative leadership of Asiwaju Awomolo, his successor as the Chairman of the Body of Benchers, My Noble Lord Justice Olukayode Ariwoola, GCON, recently recommended that the Museum of the Benchers be named Adegboyega Awomolo Museum and Archives.

It has always been my opinion that one index for measuring the success of a leader is the number of other leaders who have passed through his tutelage. Any success that cannot be replicated in others is actually a failure in disguise. A candle loses nothing by giving its light to other candles. It is striking in this regard that Asiwaju Awomolo is a success story. Today, one of the leading lights of the legal profession in Nigeria is Prof. Yusuf Olaolu Ali, SAN, the Kuliyan Ngeri of Ilorin Emirate. What many younger generations of lawyers might not know is that Prof. Ali cut his professional teeth in the firm of Asiwaju Awomolo.

In a manner akin to history repeating itself, in the same way Asiwaju held forth for his principal, Chief Arosanyin, when the latter went into politics, Prof Ali stood forth for Asiwaju when he was appointed the 1st Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Osun State in 1992. It might come as a surprise to many to learn that Prof Ali’s popular sobriquet, ‘Mallam’, was actually given to him by Asiwaju Awomolo on account of his devotion to his faith and piety.

I want to believe that one of the secrets of the success of Asiwaju Awomolo is the peaceful home he retires to every day after the day’s work. It is doubtful if Asiwaju Awomolo could be seen alone without being accompanied by his ever dutiful and devoted spouse, Yeye Victoria Awomolo, who is a distinguished Senior Advocate of Nigeria in her own right.

Yeye Asiwaju’s professional career has never ceased to fascinate me. Here is a graduate of Chemistry who decided to start afresh and went back to the university to study Law, after more than a decade working as a teacher. In 2013, Yeye Asiwaju became the 16th female legal practitioner to be admitted to the Inner Bar, and the first female graduate of the University of Ibadan to become a Senior Advocate of Nigeria.

How does one compress the lifetime of an achiever to a brief note of tribute? In this respect the title of the memoirs of Natwar Singh, a former Indian Minister of External Affairs came to my mind. The autobiography is aptly titled One Life Is Not Enough. Indeed, one life is not enough to enumerate the countless achievements recorded by Asiwaju in one’s single lifetime. He has made a success of virtually everything he has been involved with. As a Bar Man, he was the de facto president of the Bar in his capacity as the Chairman of Chairmen and Secretaries. His leadership at that critical time in history made the NBA to rise from its ashes like the proverbial phoenix. As a legal practitioner, he was Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice. As an advocate, he became a Senior Advocate of Nigeria. As a Bencher, he led the distinguished Body of Benchers as it is 52nd Chairman. What a life!

How then do I conclude this tribute of a leader of leaders? Well, that’s a task for Asiwaju’s mentor and leader, Aare Afe Babalola, Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Aare Bamofin of Yorubaland who said of his protégé:

“Chief Adegboyega Solomon Awomolo, SAN is a gentleman par excellence. A practising Christian, he is very caring, sincere, loyal, responsible and dependable.”

Happy Birthday, Sir!

May the seventy-eight steps you have climbed inspire generations yet to come! May you live long in good health and prosperity in your continued service to humanity.

-Olanrewaju Akinsola

The Onigegewura

19 September 2025

Blocking Senator Natasha’s resumption is a constitutional breach— NBA to Senate

The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has urged the Senate to act in accordance with the rule of law by allowing Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, representing Kogi Central, to immediately resume her legislative duties following the expiration of her suspension.

NBA President Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN, while addressing the press, stressed that the Senate’s continued refusal to reinstate the senator, despite the lapse of her six-month suspension, is legally untenable and constitutionally unfair to her constituents.

“First, the suspension was expressly for six months. Challenging the correctness of that decision in court is a completely different matter from whether the suspension has run its course. The period has expired, and that alone should guarantee her return,” Osigwe stated.

He further faulted the Senate’s reliance on the pending appeal at the Court of Appeal as justification for barring her from resuming. “The Senate cannot use the existence of a pending appeal as a tool to prolong a suspension that has already lapsed. That position undermines the principles of fair hearing, natural justice, and representative democracy. The constituents of Kogi Central cannot be denied their right to representation any longer,” he emphasised.

It would be recalled that Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended on March 6, 2025, after the Senate adopted the report of its Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions, which accused her of breaching chamber rules by refusing to vacate her designated seat during plenary.

The suspension deprived her of salaries, aides, and other office entitlements. Although she approached the Federal High Court to challenge the decision and later filed an appeal against Justice Binta Nyako’s ruling, Osigwe clarified that those legal processes cannot be used as a shield to extend her suspension indefinitely.

The acting Clerk to the National Assembly, Dr. Yahaya Danzaria, had in a September 4 letter informed the senator that her suspension would remain in force until the Court of Appeal determines her case.

Reacting to this, Osigwe described the Clerk’s position as a grave misinterpretation of the law. “The correct position is that once a suspension period lapses, the lawmaker must resume. The court may later decide whether the Senate was justified in suspending her in the first place, but until then, there is no legal or constitutional basis to keep her out of the chamber.”

Reports from other national dailies, including The Punch and Premium Times, corroborated Osigwe’s stand, with legal commentators noting that the Senate’s insistence raises serious constitutional questions about the limits of legislative disciplinary powers.

The NBA President, therefore, charged the Senate to uphold the sanctity of democratic principles by allowing Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan to immediately return to her seat. “The honour of the Senate lies in respecting the limits of its authority. To deny her resumption after the expiration of her suspension period is to deny her constituents a voice in the Senate. That is not only unjust but sets a dangerous precedent for legislative governance in Nigeria,” Osigwe concluded.

Chinedu Agu’s Invitation: Police must not be used as an instrument of oppression or political persecution

  • Says freedom of speech is not a crime

The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has expressed deep concern over the invitation of Chinedu Agu, Esq., former Secretary of the NBA Owerri Branch, by the Imo State Police Command. Agu was summoned to appear before the Command’s X-Squad Unit on Wednesday, 17 September 2025, over allegations of “criminal defamation” and “conduct likely to cause a breach of the peace.”

In a statement issued by its President, Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN, the NBA acknowledged the constitutional and statutory powers of the Police to investigate complaints but condemned any attempt to use such powers to intimidate or silence citizens, especially legal practitioners exercising their constitutional rights.

The Association stressed that criticism of government institutions or officials does not amount to a crime, adding that the continued reliance on criminal defamation as a pretext for harassment is a remnant of authoritarianism incompatible with democratic governance.

The NBA reaffirmed that freedom of expression, guaranteed under Section 39 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), is the bedrock of accountability and civic engagement. Any action that seeks to muzzle this right, it warned, is unconstitutional and inimical to democracy.

The statement further outlined the Association’s position:

  1. The NBA stands firmly with Chinedu Agu, Esq. and has directed senior members of the Bar to monitor proceedings to ensure his rights are fully protected.
  2. The Association called on the Commissioner of Police, Imo State Command, to resist using the Police as an instrument of oppression or political persecution.
  3. It reminded the Imo State Government and state actors that democracy thrives on debate, dissent, and constructive criticism—not suppression.

Reiterating its unwavering commitment, the NBA assured that it would take every lawful measure, both nationally and internationally, to resist attempts to criminalise free speech or intimidate its members.

Signed:
Mazi Afam Osigwe, SAN
President, Nigerian Bar Association

Exhausted doctors, long wait times in public hospitals over brain drain

The growing exodus of doctors has pushed Nigeria’s health system to a breaking point, bequeathing to it pathetic legacies, including severe staffing shortages, horrible conditions of service, burnout, and preventable deaths. The worsening doctor-to-patient ratio on its part fuels preventable deaths among patients. With public hospitals overwhelmed by queues and staff stretched beyond limits, both patients and health workers remain trapped in crisis, Musa Adekunle reports.

At exactly 8:45 a.m., Busayo Ajayi (not real name) walked into Oshodi-Isolo Primary Health Centre in Lagos with severe body pain. She had delayed her visit for days, fearing the long wait, but her worsening symptoms left her with no choice. By 2:00 p.m., she was still seated on the same wooden bench.

“I waited almost five hours before I was attended to,” she said. “Only one doctor was on the ground. I wanted to go home and take the risk because people beside me said they had been here before 8:00 a.m.”

Next to her sat a mother and her 10-year-old daughter, who had also been waiting all morning. “I have been here before 8:00 a.m., and I have not seen the doctor,” the woman said.

Busayo admitted the words cut deep. “If it had been an emergency, something terrible would have happened. Even I could have collapsed there. It was that day that I realised that patients and doctors are both trapped in suffering.”

At the eye clinic of the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital (UCTH), another patient, Mrs Ekanem, described how hope slowly evaporated from people’s faces as they waited long hours to see a doctor.

“I got there as early as 7:00 a.m., but it was past 4:00 p.m. before I was attended to by the doctor. The doctors were clearly doing their best, but there are just not enough hands,” she lamented.

At the Olabisi Onabanjo University Teaching Hospital (OSUTH), a patient, who simply identified herself as Chiamaka, who underwent a routine check-up, stated that the delays were exhausting from start to finish.

“Getting to see the consultant on the seat took more than three hours. Then, heading to make payments for my medical tests took another couple of hours. Some test results, such as those for malaria, came quickly (in about seven days), but others took weeks to complete. It was draining,” she explained.

Up North, the situation is no different. For instance, at the Usmanu Danfodiyo University Teaching Hospital (UDUTH) in Sokoto, resident doctors are overwhelmed by an impossible workload as the hospital struggles to serve over 10,000 patients every week, a common issue nationwide.

In providing details, the president of the hospital’s Association of Resident Doctors, Dr Bello Ibrahim, said the manpower crisis has worsened despite fresh recruitment attempts.

According to him, a February and March exercise aimed at hiring 100 resident doctors ended with only 60 showing up for interviews, 45 completing documentation, and just 15 eventually assuming duty.

“In the surgery department where I work as a senior registrar, only one resident out of the 15 intended was employed. Imagine one person doing the work of 15. That is why you see residents almost on alternate-day calls. Sometimes, one person is on call for a whole week,” he said.

Ibrahim, who painted a pathetic picture of long queues and patients, with some lying on stretchers at the Accident and Emergency unit, waiting for hours to be moved into the wards, added that UDUTH remains the only major referral centre serving not just Sokoto, but also Kebbi, Zamfara, Niger State, Gusau, and even parts of the Niger Republic and Cotonou.

“To recap it all, we do not have up to 350 doctors across all specialities, including consultants and registrars. In fact, the resident doctors we currently have are just a bit over 200. So, if you compare that with the inflow of patients, it is way below the World Health Organisation standard,” he added.

Overworked doctors, fragile system
PATIENTS are not alone in their pain. Doctors say they, too, are victims of the system.
In Lagos, a doctor at the Federal Medical Centre, Ebute Metta, explained how colleagues are pushed beyond their limits. “Some doctors work 24-hour shifts. The alternate day does not mean rest. At one point, the hospital employed seven doctors and all resigned within a year because of how they were treated,” he said.

In Enugu, at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), a doctor who did not want his name mentioned told The Guardian that even when he fell ill, the only sympathy he received from senior colleagues was, ‘quickly finish your work so you can go and rest.’

“Sick leave hardly counts unless you have cancer or kidney failure. I was once sick and worked through illness for days because if you don’t do it, no one else will,” he said.

Another doctor at FMC Abeokuta painted a similar picture. “I work every working day, sometimes 48 hours on weekends. It is sad. We have tried to fight it, but the government is not making policies to help,” he said.

The President of the Association of Resident Doctors at the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, Dr Gboyega Ajibola, stated that resident doctors are overwhelmed by the workload created by severe staffing shortages. He explained that duties meant for 10 to 12 doctors are now being handled by just two or three, forcing them to work long hours without rest.

Ajibola noted that the crushing workload is pushing younger doctors away from clinical practice. Many graduates, he said, are choosing not to do residency in Nigeria after seeing how exhausted their seniors are.   Others write foreign examinations and leave the country entirely, while those who remain face poor pay, dilapidated training facilities, and disillusionment as even consultants and professors resign for better jobs abroad.

“Right now, the work that should be done by 10 to 12 people, 2 to 3 people are grappling to do. After the normal routine of resuming in the morning and leaving at night, we also take calls. Calls mean that after regular work is done, you stay behind until 8:00 a.m. the next morning, and then you continue working through the day. It is sad,” he said.

“The UCH is supposed to be the last point of referral, but even cases that should be handled at primary health centres still get here. Our patients are plentiful, and the workload at UCH can be overwhelming at times. Even patients now see the fatigue in doctors. The number of people coming has dropped because they see doctors who have been working since yesterday morning still on their feet today.”

The President of the Association of Resident Doctors at UCTH, Dr Emmanuel Idoko, told The Guardian in Calabar that the number of resident doctors in the hospital has dropped drastically from over 600 to just above 250. He added that there are fewer than 150 consultants currently serving across the entire state.

The decline, he explained, has pushed the doctor-to-patient ratio in Cross River to about one physician for every 5,000 patients, far below the World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendation of one to 600.

“When we had over 600 doctors, I attended to about 30 patients daily. Now, with reduced manpower, I see more than 70 patients a day. This is what we call burnout,” Idoko said.

He attributed the situation largely to brain drain, noting that nearly 98 per cent of doctors who leave the state migrate abroad in search of better pay and welfare. Others, he added, relocate to neighbouring states with stronger security systems and more competitive salaries.

“Doctors are not just leaving because of remuneration. The hospital environment, lack of equipment, and insecurity in some areas also drive them away,” he explained.

Idoko stressed that urgent measures are needed to stem the tide, including equipping hospitals with modern facilities, improving security, and offering remuneration that will encourage doctors to remain in the system. If these gaps are addressed, many doctors who have left will even return to practice in Nigeria,” he said.

Downing tools over poor welfare, working conditions
IN Abuja, the Association of Resident Doctors (FCT) Branch, at its Emergency General Meeting on September 14, 2025, resolved to embark on an indefinite strike from 8:00 a.m. on Monday, September 15, 2025. The union said the action was to press government and hospital management to demonstrate a sincere commitment to improving doctors’ welfare and safeguarding the health of FCT residents.

“We’re going to need as many as 200 or thereabouts (doctors). We don’t even have anything close to that,” the General Secretary of the Association of Resident Doctors, FCTA, Affiong Agbor, said.

Read Also: Better pay for health workers will curb brain drain, says Ondo NMA

Just about the same time that resident doctors in the FCT downed tools, the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) declared an indefinite strike on September 12, 2025, following its Emergency General Meeting in Abuja. Again, the doctors cited poor welfare, manpower shortages, and the government’s failure to address long-standing demands, including payment of arrears and better working conditions.

Expectedly, the strike paralysed services across many federal hospitals, leaving patients stranded. After negotiations with the Federal Ministry of Health and interventions from key stakeholders, NARD suspended the action on Sunday, September 14. The association said it called off the strike to give the government time to implement agreements reached, but warned of future action.

Death and the young resident doctor 
TRAGEDY struck earlier in September at the Rivers State University Teaching Hospital in Port Harcourt when Dr Oluwafemi Rotifa, a young resident doctor, was found lifeless in the call room.
Initial reports suggested he had collapsed after a 72-hour shift. However, a report sighted by The Guardian indicates that the Nigeria Medical Association (NMA) in Rivers State disputed that claim.

According to NMA spokesperson Siene Orogun, Rotifa had been unwell for days and was excused from duty. Despite his condition, he chose to remain in the call room close to his colleagues. “Even his mother wanted him to come home, but he said he preferred to be in the call room. At least, when the guys go to work, they will come in to gist and play together,” Orogun explained.

She added that Rotifa had eaten and watched football with colleagues before they left to attend to patients. When they returned around 2:00 a.m., they found him lifeless. He had been on malaria medication and had administered intravenous Quinine to himself after his condition failed to improve.

Rotifa was buried on Friday, September 5. His death has deepened concerns over the fragile state of the healthcare system, where staffing shortages and the pressure of working conditions continue to claim lives, both of patients and of those meant to care for them.

The President of the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD), Dr Osundara Tope, described the tragedy as another stark reminder of the dangers doctors face. “There is no policy to safeguard doctors from overwork. Nobody pays overtime. Sometimes one name is on the call roster perpetually,” he said.

He added that poor manpower remains a major driver. “Nigeria still struggles with a doctor-to-patient ratio of 1 to 10,000. We are losing doctors to burnout, emigration and preventable death,” he said, calling for a one-for-one replacement policy and better welfare to stem the losses.
World Health Organisation warns as mass exodus leaves wards empty.

THE World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned of looming danger, predicting a global shortage of 10 million health workers by 2030, mostly in low-income countries like Nigeria.

According to the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, Nigeria has a skilled health worker density of just 3.9 per 10,000 people, far below the WHO’s recommended minimum. The factors behind this include low production of health workers, poor management, and persistent political and economic crises.

The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof Muhammad Pate, revealed in April that over 16,000 Nigerian doctors have left the country in the last five to seven years, worsening the ratio to 3.9 doctors per 10,000 people.

“This is not just about people leaving. It represents a fiscal loss. The estimated cost of training one doctor exceeds 21,000 dollars. That figure reflects the magnitude of public financing walking out of our countries,” he said at a workshop in Abuja.

He admitted that nurses and midwives have also emigrated in large numbers, leaving rural areas critically underserved. Pate said the government is now pursuing a National Policy on Health Workforce Migration under the Renewed Hope Agenda to retain doctors, improve welfare, and negotiate ethical recruitment frameworks with destination countries.

Call rooms unfit for short rest
BEYOND policy, the daily reality remains bleak. Many hospital call rooms are little more than storage spaces with torn mattresses, broken fans, and leaking roofs. Meals are irregular. Sleep is short.

“You work till midnight, sleep a few hours, and wake up early to resume,” a doctor in Enugu said.

For many young doctors, the toll is as much mental as it is physical. Cases of depression are rising. Some abandon practice entirely. Others seize opportunities abroad at the first chance.

The President of the Association of Psychiatrists in Nigeria (APN), Prof Taiwo Obindo, told The Guardian that doctors on the ground are overstretched. He cited the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital, Yaba, which recorded a 100 per cent increase in the number of psychiatric patients admitted in 2023 alone. “Even the doctors there have their own mental health at risk, given the rising number of admissions,” he said.

“A few are produced, but they do not have jobs. Some have to work in private facilities, which are not well-paying. Government needs to do more.”

Underfunded, overlooked…
NIGERIA spends just 5.18 per cent of its 2025 national budget on health—N2.48 trillion—far below the 15 per cent commitment made under the 2001 Abuja Declaration and reaffirmed in the 2013 Abuja+12 Declaration. Key allocations include N402 billion for health infrastructure and N282.65 billion for the Basic Health Care Provision Fund (BHCPF).

Meanwhile, the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) has described the shortage of doctors as unsustainable. At its 2025 Annual Delegates Conference in Katsina, the NMA President, Dr Bala Audu, warned that brain drain has pushed doctors to the breaking point.

He also confirmed that about 15,000 doctors left the country in five years. “If you divide the estimated population of 240 million by the number of practising doctors, which is 30,000, it gives you a doctor-to-patient ratio of 1 to 8,000,” he said.

He identified poor working conditions and poor pay as the leading drivers of the exodus. “There are difficulties pushing doctors to leave, one of which is poor working conditions and remuneration,” he added.

The association demanded the payment of seven months’ arrears owed to doctors and called for universal implementation of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS). It also rejected the proposed National Prescription Policy, insisting that only doctors are trained to prescribe medicines safely.

The National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has also repeatedly warned that doctors are “dying in silence” while government responses remain inadequate.

Lessons from the UK, USA
IN the United States, resident doctors are capped at 80 hours a week with compulsory rest periods. In the United Kingdom, strict rules regulate maximum hours, and breaches attract penalties.

Stakeholders say that Nigeria has no clear policy regulating maximum work hours for doctors. This gap leaves room for extreme rosters, such as one that surfaced on X showing a certain Dr Audu’s name listed for duty every single day of the month.

The Chairman of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) in Lagos, Dr Babajide Saheed, said hospital management and government are concerned only with service delivery to patients, with little regard for the welfare and health of healthcare providers. “Doctors should be allowed to rest when they are tired. They should be given sick leave when they are sick,” he said.

Patients bear costly consequences of overworked doctors  
WITHOUT a doubt, the ripple effects of the unfortunate milieu extend far beyond medical staff. Exhausted doctors are more likely to make mistakes, while misdiagnoses and surgical errors increase. Patients lose faith in public hospitals and turn instead to expensive private clinics or risky self-medication. Preventable deaths rise in waiting rooms across the country.

Experts have advised the government and hospital managements to prioritise the welfare and security of healthcare workers by ensuring better remuneration, improved welfare packages, and addressing the root causes of the “Japa” trend to retain more hands in the sector.

They stressed that doctors should not be made to exceed 24-hour call duties, must be allowed adequate rest and sick leave when unwell, while strenuous work schedules should be reduced and decent call rooms provided to enable proper recovery during shifts.

This article, written by Musa Adekunle, was originally published by The Guardian on 19 September 2025.

Court foils NUPENG’s bid to shut down Dangote Refinery, others over dispute

The National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN) has barred the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association from taking any step or strike action to shut down or disrupt the production activities of the Dangote Refinery.

The two bodies were temporarily restrained from embarking on any industrial strike through their members and agents pending the resolution of a suit instituted against them by Dangote Petroleum Refinery and two others.

Justice E. D Subilim of the National Industrial Court in Abuja issued the restraining order while ruling in an ex-parte motion brought before her by Dangote Petroleum Refinery, MRS Oil Nigeria Limited and MRS Oil and Gas Company Limited.

The ex-parte motion marked NICN/ABJ/279/2024 was argued on behalf of the three applicants by George Ibrahim SAN of Ogwu James Onoja SAN and Law Firm, Abuja.

Dangote refinery had in the motion prayed the court for an order of interim injunction restraining NUPENG, its members, agents or privies from embarking on any industrial action aimed at crippling, shutting down its operations or frustrating its business activities pending the determination of its motion on notice.

The Refinery also sought another order stopping Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association, its members, agents and privies from joining any strike orchestrated by NUPENG against it with a view to frustrating, its business.

The oil company and the two other applicants similarly asked Justice Subilim to order the Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association and its members to continue petroleum trucking services to them and the Nigerian public pending the hearing of their motion on notice.

The ex-parte motion was brought pursuant to Order 22 Rules 1, 2 and 3 as well as Order 17 Rules 1 and 4 of the Industrial Court and section 40 of the 1999 Constitution.

Justice Subilim upon taking the argument of the senior lawyer, granted the request, restraining NUPENG and its members and agents from embarking on any form of strike action until the issues in dispute are resolved one way or the other.

The Judge also stopped Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association and its members from joining or participating in any industrial action orchestrated by NUPENG against the three applicants with a view to frustrating their businesses.

Specifically, the Direct Trucking Company Drivers Association and its members are to continue rendering their services to the applicants until all issues are resolved.

Justice Subilim held that she was mindful of issuing the restraining order which shall last for seven days because there is a serious issue to be tried.

She said that the balance of convenience tilted in favour of the three applicants because irreparable damage may be occasioned if the orders are not granted.

The Judge further explained that the applicants are better placed having given an undertaking as to damages to the defendants.

A certified copy of the enrolled order issued and endorsed by the Judge indicated that the case file would be remitted to the President of the Court for reassignment to another Judge having completed the vacation period.

Afriland Towers fire started in inverter room, 10 deaths confirmed

Six more deaths have been confirmed following the fire outbreak at Afriland Towers, a six-storey commercial building on Broad Street, Lagos Island, Lagos State.

The victims were employees of United Capital, a financial and investment services firm occupying the 3rd and 4th floors of the tower.

The confirmation comes just hours after the Federal Inland Revenue Service announced that four of its staff members also died in the incident on Wednesday evening.

The PUNCH reported that the fire, which reportedly started in the inverter room in the basement around 1:30 pm on Tuesday, sent thick smoke into the air and triggered panic among occupants. Some individuals were seen attempting to escape through windows as emergency responders battled the flames.

Officials of the Federal Fire Service, Lagos State Fire and Rescue Service, and other first responders rescued at least nine persons from the building. Five were revived, while four remained unconscious.

“A total of nine victims have been rescued. Five individuals have been resuscitated. Several others escaped unhurt, while efforts are ongoing to revive the remaining four,” the Lagos State Fire and Rescue Service said in a statement on Tuesday, raising concerns about possible casualties.

In an exclusive statement shared with PUNCH on Thursday morning, United Capital confirmed it lost six members of staff to the tragedy. This takes the confirmed number of deaths from the Afriland Towers fire tragedy to 10.

“It is with profound grief that the Management and Staff of United Capital Plc announce the passing of six of our dear colleagues, following the tragic fire at Afriland Towers on Tuesday, September 16, 2025.

“Our departed colleagues were an integral part of our company and family. Their painful loss leaves an immeasurable void. We extend our deepest and heartfelt condolences to their families, friends, and loved ones, and we continue to hold them in our thoughts and prayers, as well as provide all the support we can to them during this most difficult time.

“We are making preparations for an appropriate memorial service to honour their lives and mark their passing with dignity and solemnity. We thank the emergency services and all those who responded for their valiant assistance at the time of the incident.

“In this moment of untold grief, we stand together in solidarity, drawing strength from one another as we navigate this period. May the souls of the departed rest in peace,” the company said.

Emergency responders had earlier confirmed rescuing several occupants after the fire, which was believed to have been triggered by an inverter explosion. While officials have yet to release an official casualty figure, eyewitnesses and internal company sources insist that “not everyone made it out alive.”

Attempts to reach the Lagos State Fire and Rescue Service, the National Emergency Management Agency, and the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency for confirmation were unsuccessful at the time of filing this report.

Tragic! One of 4 FIRS staff who died in Afriland Towers fire came to hand over

“The life of the dead is placed in the memory of the living” — Marcus Tullius Cicero

A heartbreaking report has emerged that Mr. David Sunday-Jatto, an Assistant Director at Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS, who also died in Tuesday’s Lagos office fire, was at the place to hand over to his successor.

It would be recalled that two fire incidents occurred simultaneously on Tuesday, September 16, 2025, torching some buildings in Mandilas, Lagos Island and the Afriland Towers on Broad Street also in Lagos Island.

Seven victims have ben confirmed killed in the fire that engulfed Afriland Towers, a building that serves as offices for several organisation including FIRS which four directors and UBA that also lost some staff members.

Read Also: Traders bemoan losses, UBA and FIRS mourn staff members lost in Lagos fire

Sunday-Jatto was said to have been transfered to a new branch and was in the office that day to hand over to his successor when he was caught in the raging fire.

“A very unassuming person, he was just transferred elsewhere and he came to the office on that day to hand over formally to his successor when the incident happened and took his life alongside eight others” sources narrated.

Some workers at the ill-fated building have expressed deep sorrow over the loss, describing it as a “devastating blow” to the entire workforce.

One of the workers, who identified himself simply as John, said those who were present at the time of the incident panicked when the fire alarm started ringing.

“At first, we thought it was something that would be easily contained by the tower’s internal emergency workers, but the smoke from the source of fire quickly spread, covering the staircase.

“Those who were on the ground floor, up to the second floor, raced out of the building, but many people sustained varying degrees of injuries. I was able to quickly exit the building. At this time, the light stopped working. Those who ran down the stairs tripped and fell while climbing down the staircase.

“We have been thrown into deep mourning by the loss of these dedicated and hardworking senior staff of FIRS,” he said.

‘How they died’

Sources told our correspondent that the four FIRS officers died of suffocation while trying to escape from the building.

Besides, rescue operations were said to be slow with workers in the building scampering for safety and falling in the process.  

“Thick smoke had already engulfed the building as a result of the fire. It is unfortunate that there were no functional smoke detectors in the building. This is really avoidable. It is so sad that our fire readiness is nothing to write home about,” another eyewitness said.

It was learnt that one of the directors, David Sunday-Jatto, who died in the inferno, was in the office briefly to hand over, having been transferred to another branch.

“He was an unassuming person, he was just transferred elsewhere and he came to the office on that day to hand over formally to his successor when the incident happened and took his life alongside eight others,” sources narrated.

Shola Oladimeji, a petty trader opposite the building, told Daily Trust that those who escaped from the building were already exhausted and were choking as a result of the thick smoke from the fire.

“You can imagine that some of the trapped workers jumped down from the third and fourth floors of the building. It was very horrific because everything started, and within minutes it had spread,” she said.

The incident has sent shockwaves throughout the entire area, with many traders taking to social media to express their condolences and outrage over the tragedy.

FIRS response

The management and staff of the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), in a statement, expressed deep mourning and grief over the death of four staff members in the fire incident .

A statement by Dare Adekanmbi, Special Adviser on Media to the FIRS chairman, gave the names of the affected staff as Mrs Ekelikhostse George (Assistant Director), Mr David Sunday-Jatto (assistant director), Mrs Nkem Onyemelukwe (senior manager) and Mr Peter Ifaranmaye (manager).

“It is with a heavy heart that FIRS announces the tragic loss of four of its staff members during the fire incident at Afriland Towers, Broad Street, Lagos, on Tuesday.

“FIRS is one of the tenants occupying the towers, with our Medium Tax Audit and Onikan Emerging Tax Office housed on the sixth and seventh floors.

“Our Security and Safety officials quickly mobilised and contacted the fire service as soon as they were alerted. On getting to the scene, thick dark smoke was already billowing out of the building.

“The Management and entire staff are in deep shock and sorrow over the development. They offer their condolences to the grieving families and are in touch with the families of our departed colleagues whose commitment to excellence, dedication and professionalism were never in doubt. We will provide all the necessary support at this trying time.

“We are working in collaboration with all relevant agencies in Lagos to get to the root cause of the unfortunate incident. While this is going on, we will be reviewing safety measures across FIRS offices in both rented and owned buildings nationwide,” the statement said.

Elumelu reacts

Chairman of Heirs Holdings, Tony Elumelu, has disclosed that United Bank for Africa (UBA) staff members died in the fire outbreak.

Speaking in a statement on Wednesday, Elumelu, who is also the chairman of UBA, said he was shattered by the fire outbreak, describing the inferno as a devastating incident.

UBA has a space in the six-storey building.

Elumelu, who did not disclose the number of casualties recorded in the incident, said: “No words can capture the magnitude of this loss — not for their families who loved them, not for the friends who valued them, and not for those of us who worked beside them.

“Yesterday was a stark reminder of what truly matters: our irreplaceable people, those who walk through our doors each day and share our mission.”

The UBA boss further revealed that he learnt of the fire outbreak while on his way to the United States, en route to New York for the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA).

He, however, said he had cut short his foreign trip to return to Lagos as “a mark of respect to our lost colleagues.”

Elumelu, who enjoined all Heirs Holdings staff to reach out to those receiving treatment, added: “In the coming days, we will convene colleagues in a memorial to honour the memories of the departed, as we provide support to their families.”

He also thanked emergency responders and first aid workers, as well as members of the public, for showing courage and compassion.

Senator Ekwunife apologises to Soludo and wife over allegation of infidelity

Senator Uche Ekwunife, the Deputy Governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress, APC, has apologised to the Governor of Anambra State, Prof Chukwuma Soludo, and his wife over an allegation of infidelity against Mrs Nonye Soludo.

The senator and the governor’s wife had been engaged in a bitter war of words, following a verbal exchange said to have been sparked by the governor, who accused the senator of holding a fake PhD.

In her response to the governor, Ekwunife dragged his wife into the dispute with claims of infidelity, an allegation Mrs Soludo has long rejected, challenging both a fidelity test and a paternity test for all their children.

However, in what is being described as a courageous move, Ekwunife, in a press release signed on her behalf by her Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Tony Ezike, apologised to Soludo and his wife.

She also urged the public to disregard a trending story suggesting she had alleged that former PDP godfather, Chief Chris Uba, fathered some of the governor’s children. She clarified that the story did not emanate from her or her supporters and urged members of the public to dismiss it.

The statement read: “The attention of Sen. Uche Ekwunife, the Anambra All Progressives Congress (APC) Deputy Governorship Candidate, has been drawn to an article falsely attributed to her camp, alleging that Mrs. Nonye Soludo, the wife of the Anambra State Governor, had children for Chief Chris Uba.

“Sen. Uche Ekwunife categorically states that although she has been maligned, defamed, and disparaged by the governor’s media team, the said publication did not emanate from her or her camp.

“She further wishes to apologise to the Governor, his wife, and the general public who may have been affected by the altercations of the past few days.

“Sen. Ekwunife calls on her supporters to remain focused and avoid any media writing that may suggest altercation with the First Family or any other person as she continues with her campaigns.”

AWLA Nigeria celebrates a visionary leader @ 60!

The President of AWLA Nigeria, Mrs. Caroline Ibharunaefe, on behalf of the entire members of the association, heartily felicitates with Mr. Frank Nweke Jnr, former Minister of Information, on the occasion of his 60th birthday today, 18th September 2025.

Having served as the Keynote Speaker during the AWLA Nigeria 2025 Parley in Enugu, you inspired us with your thought-provoking insights and deep passion for justice and good governance. This has further endeared you to the AWLA Nigeria family and strengthened our resolve to continue advancing the rule of law and social justice.

🙏 Our Prayers & Good Wishes:

May your years ahead be filled with divine health, renewed strength, greater exploits, and joy that knows no bounds. May God bless you with unprecedented opportunities and surround you with peace and fulfilment.

Happy 60th birthday once again, Mr. Frank Nweke Jnr!

TIPS