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From the North, ‘a storm is coming’

By Lasisi Olagunju

Decades ago, my late mother pointed at a house to me: “Someone in that house once snatched someone’s wife. In the evening, when it was time for husband and wife to sleep, a storm swept into the bedroom and carried off their sleeping mat. Then pandemonium followed…Ó di b’óòlo o yàá mi.”

She described that scene as one of a cyclone of vengeful rage. Wife snatcher fought back strongly, got his mat back, but had to let go of the woman he snatched. He had to.

There was an exchange on Seun Okinbaloye’s ‘Mic On Podcast’ programme on Saturday. The video is trending online. Answering Seun’s questions was beautiful, brainy, bold Zainab Buba Galadima. She is the daughter of fiery opposition politician from the North, Alhaji Buba Galadima.

Zainab is an APC member, a former public servant who served in the Buhari administration while her father was busy throwing darts at that same government.

Zainab is asked some really interesting questions, and she gives very interesting answers and insights. She is an APC member who is scared that the party has frittered away its goodwill and has incurred the people’s anger in indescribable ways. She looks into the belly of time and warns that a hurricane is hurtling towards our complacent country.

“I am really disappointed (with the APC and its government); very disappointed. You know, there are some places I cannot go to. During Buhari’s second term, they (the poor) broke my windscreen. They said ‘oh. You promised us, now you are enjoying. You are inside a car.’ Before, at the traffic light, you saw them begging with outstretched arms, now, they would knock on your window; now they would snatch whatever it is that you have (for them). So, even if you think it doesn’t affect me, it is coming. I am afraid of the storm that is coming”

“There is a storm?”

“Oh. Yeah. There is a storm that is coming. You know, people would think that ‘oh it’s the North, they don’t go to school, there is insecurity’. Look, if it blows up in the North, Nigeria is gone.”

At Phillipi, Shakespeare’s Cassius sees something exactly like this: “The storm is up, and all is on the hazard.” Zainab does not mince words about what is coming.

What she sees coming is not as portentous as the way she says it. Watch the video – almost 36 minutes long. Watch her; watch her eyes.

She is a foundation member of the APC. But, she is asked to look at the eight years of Buhari, and two years of Tinubu. “Are you proud of the APC?” She is fast in answering that question in the negative. She goes on to explain in ghastly details: “Unless you are in the government, you won’t know the extent of the damage. I am really not happy. I thought APC was ready for victory. But it did not know how to manage victory and I don’t think we were ready for governance. You see people who scream ‘I am for the people, I am for the people’ but once they get into government, you ask, ‘Is this the same person I used to know?”

The lady is asked if she is not proud of the Buhari government she worked for. She says: “There are a lot of regrets”, although she served in the government, not in a capacity where her performance could be assessed. “So, it is hard for someone like me to say, ‘oh I regret.’ But, there are some situations where I said, ‘no, we shouldn’t have done this.’

Who should then be blamed for the failure of the APC government? Her answer isn’t what APC politicians would say: “You know, I can’t single myself out. I was part of the people that actually campaigned and believed in that government. So, any failure on our part, I think I am one of the people that should be held responsible for it.” Compare her answer here to Adams Oshiomhole’s shameful sermon to APC governors at a meeting in Benin last week. The former APC national chairman said the current economic hardship was caused by Buhari’s government. Specifically, he accused that regime of “printing over ₦31 trillion.” Oshiomhole likened the heist to the fiscal suicide of Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe and Idi Amin’s Uganda.

Smooth-talking Oshiomhole spoke the truth to an audience that is complicit. Buhari is APC; the governors listening and nodding to Oshiomhole’s truth are all miserably APC. There are more twists in this tale: The ‘lecturer’, Adams, is an insider recasting himself as a truth teller. Adams was right there, hands on the steering wheel while the vehicle of Nigeria was driven into the ditch.

From 2018 to 2020, Oshiomhole served as national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC). He was not a bystander in the Ways and Means and other heinous acts of the government he put and sustained in power. Check his words, his utterances and interventions during that era. In August 2018 when Nigerians groaned under Buhari’s misrule, Oshiomhole went to Daura and declared there that “Buhari’s critics are saboteurs and thieves.” He was the party’s loudest cheerleader; he was the enforcer, the one who silenced dissent, who abused and mocked critics. He was in the room when the teapot was left at the edge. Now, with the teacup shattered, he blames someone else for the mess.

A proverb for the elder who acts this shameful way: Àgbà tí kò ní’tìjú, ojú kan ni ò bá ní; ojú kan òún, l’ógangan iwájú orí è ni yí o wà (An elder without self-respect might as well have only one eye; that one eye being in the centre of his forehead). Instead of forging a furnace of informed efforts, Oshiomhole is helping his party to mint fake notes of self-indicting excuses. In societies that have consequences for actions, and punishment for crimes, Oshiomhole’s confession is enough to sink the ‘Hispaniola’, the ruling party’s ship with Long John Silver and his gang of pirates.

One day, the volcanic ash of today will clear from the skies. But, if we are not careful and deliberate in refreshing the memory of history, today’s abortionists will write it in our skies that they were midwives of peace and plenty. The complicit must not return, dust ash off their clothes, and then point fingers at the fire they helped ignite and say it is someone else’s misdeed. They cannot stroll into the marketplace, clad in the immaculate innocence of the prophet who warned the people, after the flood.

Zainab is not like Oshiomhole. She asks to be joined among the damned who acted Ali and the Angel; those who burnt the barn and packaged its ash, and labelled the ash as sugar and sold it to Nigeria. Zainab is asked to speak on Tinubu’s cabinet. “There isn’t much they are doing. I think it is just a waste.” I don’t think anyone outside the regime would say she is wrong. Nigeria is in a mess and the Tinubu government is clueless. Can they still fix the broken system? She says they can.

“How?”

“They should get experts; people who can do the job.” The ones there now don’t know Jack? No. They don’t. Or, rather, they know something: how to borrow and spend money on inanities.

Zainab’s appearance on Okinbaloye’s Mic On stirred more than foaming content; it dropped an omen: “A storm is coming.” She thinks the storm is coming from the North. I don’t think she is entirely right. I think the storm is coming from everywhere we have the ditched, the stranded. It is coming from the four cardinal points; and they, in their millions, are raring to go; seething.

When I watched the way Zainab announced the coming of the storm, I remembered the old American blues lyric by Richard Hawley:

“There’s a storm a-comin’, you’d better run.

There’s a storm coming, goodbye to the sun…”

Nigeria is in wedlock with storms; it gets tossed from one to the other. This one that is coming, when it comes, how many caps and roofs do you think will stand? No one knows. The year 2027 has been primed by politicians to be a mountain of the heartless (òkè òdájú) which all must climb, the orphans inclusive. From the North, we hear stuff like ‘even if Bola Tinubu’s son is made the INEC chairman, he will hit the canvas (ó máa lu’lè).’

It is scary. The man won’t do what the wife snatcher I started this piece with did. He will demand his furled mat and hold on to the snatched wife. He is wired that way. His pestle pounds in a mortar of brass (omo olódó ide). That is what his oríkì says.

His enemies probably know all these about the man they are raging against. The coalition that will do the pig fight with Tinubu morphed into ADC last week. Its choice of battle-tested David Mark as leader has created enough jitters. The howling of the winds presages what is coming.

I am not done with Zainab and her ultrasound scan of our politics and prospects. She paints the profligate APC with what she believes it truly is: a party that never should have been trusted with power. She is searing in her reflections. Hear her again:

“I am highly disappointed… I thought APC was really ready for victory. They did not know how to manage victory and I don’t think we were ready for governance.”

From the totality of what she is saying, would it be correct to say that APC is a difficult name to bear in public now?

She says “Yes.” And she explains: “Let me tell you. There was a reconciliation meeting at the Women Centre for FCT APC members. I swear to God, I only saw one APC cap. People went there as APC people but they did not go there for the government. People are scared…” They should be.

She says the country is worse now under Tinubu. She hints that the APC is in disarray inside but looks perfect outside. Fish rots from the head. Zainab says in the APC “you can’t vie for positions if you really want to serve the people. (You won’t get the ticket). You have to buy it or steal it and run with it, with your full chest too, proudly.”

While the ruling party misbehaves and misrules, daily the country goes down, progressively. “People are saying Goodluck was better than Buhari; people are saying Buhari is better than Tinubu. That is how it will keep going…We have to fix the system.”

She has reservations about the coalition that was unveiled last week. “Some of them were in government for eight years. What did they do to help the people?” Despite that, however, she says the coalition’s ADC is definitely not good news to (and for) the APC and Tinubu.

Does she think this coalition can remove Tinubu and the APC in 2027? She is asked and she answers “Ah” and smiles, and says “If they are united. And they have to bring all their… army…on board.”

So, looking at 2027, as a Northerner, what is the North saying about Tinubu? She says she honestly does “not have good reviews. It is bad; it is really bad.”

Specifically, does she think the North will vote for Tinubu? She says the man will get, “maybe, 30 percent or less.”

That is to say it is going to be worse for him than in 2023?

“Oh yes. It is going to be.”

And, generally, Tinubu’s chance of winning in 2027?

“It is going to be the toughest battle he will ever see. It is going to be the toughest.”

The president will do well for himself by listening to this lady. He will also help himself by listening to other real human beings like Colonel Abubakar Dangiwa Umar. You remember Umar’s recent advice to Tinubu? I paste it here for emphasis: “The other day, the Senate President was reported to have predicted that President Bola Tinubu will win the 2027 election with 99.9 percent of the votes! Even allowing for the fact that this Senate President is widely known for his humorous incitement, Mr President will do well to shun such oracles.”

Zainab Galadima says there is a storm coming. We wait to see how it lands and who gets swept away. But, before then, we should remind ourselves that in politics, storms don’t just happen. They are caused by choices, by silence and by complicity.

Remember, the wife snatcher in my opening story could not have his furled mat back until he dropped the wife he stole. So, until sinners who provoked and helped create the storm admit their part; until they stop the blame game, make restitutory propitiations, they (and even the innocent) are not safe from the coming rage of the winds. A storm is coming. I will be safe.

Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Olakulehin, dies at 90

The Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Owolabi Olakulehin, has joined his ancestors.

Tribune Online learnt that the monarch, who ascended the throne in July 2024, died in the early hours of Monday, July 7, 2025, after spending a year on the throne. 

The demise of Oba Olakulehin, born July 5, 1935, is coming barely two days after celebrating his 90th birthday. 

Tribune Online reports that Oba Olakulehin received the staff of office from Oyo State Governor Engr. Seyi Makinde, on July 12, 2024, as the 43rd Olubadan of Ibadanland. 

Oba Olakulehin ascended the throne from the chieftancy rung of Balogun Olubadan, following the demise of Oba (Dr.) Moshood Lekan Balogun, Alli Okunmade II, who died at the age of 81 years on March 14, 2024.

Details later…

Former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Agunwa Anaekwe is dead

One-time Speaker of the House of Representatives, Agunwa Anaekwe, has died.

He died on Saturday at the age of 69.

Writing about Chief Anaekwe in 2021, Eleojo Idachaba, in an article published in Blueprint Newspaper, had this to say:

Chief Agunwa Anaekwe was the speaker of the House of Representatives between 1992 and 1993, during the aborted Third Republic. This was just before the June 12 presidential election was annulled. He managed the affairs of the House through the Interim National Government of Chief Ernest Shonekan before the Late Gen Sani Abacha terminated the life of that republic in November 1993. After that Chief Anaekwe from Anambra state went out of political reckoning for a long time until a few years ago when it was reported that he was said to have joined the All Progressives Congress (APC).

While writing about this ex-lawmaker, Okeke Okeke, a newspaper columnist, said, “Agunwa Anaekwe was elected speaker of the House of Representatives at the youthful age of 36 and in that capacity played a pivotal role in steering the transition process away from the mines laid by reactionary forces. Anaekwe largely succeeded in this mission, surviving as speaker up till November17, 1993 when Abacha brought down democratic structures, despite well-funded campaigns by anti-democratic agents to oust him.

“The National Assembly under him found itself walking a very tight rope. Because the military government headed by Gen. Ibrahim Babangida was hesitant about relinquishing power, it sought to castrate the National Assembly with Decree 52 of 1992. The decree divested the parliament of meaningful legislative powers whilst the junta continued with its manoeuvres around the transition programme. To further put the assembly in a bind, it was persistently starved of funds all through its one year life.

“The financial squeeze was so serious that what would have been the speaker’s second foreign trip in that period was aborted at the last minute. This was an African Parliamentary Conference which was held in Botswana in 1993.

“Rather than be cowed by these deliberate pressures, Agunwa Anaekwe decided to stand on the side of public interest and make the assembly the voice of the people. He therefore opposed the agitation for creation of more local governments at the time which though a legitimate aspiration, was likely to be exploited to further elongate the transition process.”

Just before the 2015 general elections, Chief Anaekwe in an interview said, “I know that under Gen. Muhammadu Buhari as the president, Nigeria would change in the area of corruption. This is because corruption has done a lot of damage in this country for a very long time and the PDP-led government has shown that it does not have the will to fight it. But from his antecedent and determination, I believe that General Buhari has the capacity to fight corruption.

“What Nigeria needs at the moment is a man of discipline in this country because a lot of things have gone wrong. So, he would bring to bear his personal attributes of discipline and honesty to change the situation.”

Senate’s lawyer warns against Senator Natasha ‘forcing her way into the Senate Chamber on Tuesday’

Notwithstanding the judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja division, which on Friday, faulted the suspension of the Kogi Central Senator, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, and subsequently ordered her recall by the Senate on the basis that her six-month suspension violated the Constitution and also denied her constituents adequate representation, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Paul Daudu, SAN, has called on the lawyers representing Akpoti-Uduaghan to warn her from trying to force her way into the senate chambers on Tuesday.

Law & Society had reported that in a video shared on social media, which started trending on Sunday, Senator Natasha thanked her supporters for standing with her and stated that she will resume legislative duties in the Senate on Tuesday following a court order directing her recall to the Red Chamber.

However, in an open letter to her lawyers addressed to the Principal Partner, J.S. Okutekpa, SAN & Co., the counsel to the senate warned against the move.

Below is the full text of the letter.


SENATOR NATASHA WILL ATTEMPT TO FORCE HER WAY INTO THE SENATE CHAMBER 8TH TUESDAY, 2025.

Letter from counsel to the Senate cautioning her and her lawyers!
~~~~~~~~~~~
PAUL DAUDU, SAN & CO.
Legal Practitioners

5th July 2025

To
The Principal Partner
J.S. Okutekpa, SAN & Co.
Legal Practitioners
Address
Abuja, FCT
Nigeria.

RE: PUBLIC STATEMENTS BY SENATOR NATASHA AKPOTI-UDUAGHAN PURPORTING THE FEDERAL HIGH COURT NULLIFIED HER SUSPENSION – NEED FOR CAUTION PENDING RELEASE OF ENROLLED ORDER

We write as Counsel representing the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in the suit filed by your client, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, before the Federal High Court, Abuja, presided over by Hon. Justice Binta Nyako and determined on the 4th day of July 2025.

It has come to our attention via multiple online platforms and media blogs that a video is currently circulating in which your client, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, is seen addressing her supporters and asserting that, based on the judgment of the Honourable Court, she will resume her legislative duties at the Senate next Tuesday. According to the statements made in the said video, she alleges that the Court, in its judgment, gave an order directing the Senate to recall her from suspension.

As officers of the Court who were present during the delivery of the judgment, we are constrained to set the record straight. The judgment of the Honourable Justice Binta Nyako, while affirming the constitutional authority of the Senate to discipline its members, did not contain any express order setting aside or nullifying the six-month suspension imposed on your client. What the Court delivered in relation to the suspension was an opinion, an obiter dicta, that the six-month suspension may be considered excessive in light of its impact on the constituents’ right to representation. This, however, was not crystallised into any binding or enforceable relief or order.

The assertion now being circulated publicly by your client and some segments of the media, suggesting that the Senate has been ordered to recall her, is not only misleading but capable of generating confusion and tension within the legislative environment. We must all act with caution and responsibility to avoid any escalation that could lead to a breakdown of order or institutional disrespect for the judiciary and the legislature.

We note that as of today’s date, the enrolled order of the judgment is yet to be made available to the parties. Until same is obtained, relied upon, and duly examined, it is prudent that no party takes any step on the assumption of the existence of an order which is not borne out of the actual pronouncement of the Court.

We respectfully urge your good selves, in the spirit of collegiality, professionalism, and for the sake of peace and institutional decorum, to advise your client accordingly and prevail on her to refrain from attempting to resume legislative duties until the enrolled order is released and properly reviewed by all parties. This is not only to avoid contemptuous conduct but to ensure that all actions taken henceforth align strictly with the actual tenor and intendment of the judgment.

We believe this advisory is a responsible and preemptive step to prevent disorder, misinterpretation, and unnecessary constitutional conflict in the National Assembly.

Please accept the assurances of our highest regards.

Yours faithfully,
For: PAUL DAUDU, SAN & CO.

Paul Daudu, SAN
Principal Partner

Are your semantics on steroids?

By Chinua Asuzu

Many users of the language indulge in what I call steroidal semantics: the hypercorrection of idioms, phrases, and forms long blessed by usage. Instead of trusting established English usages, they rebuild them from turgid logic, and end up contorting or distorting them.

Take this example. A romantic partner is a “boyfriend” or “girlfriend,” not “man friend” or “woman friend.” The logic that an adult isn’t a boy or girl misses the point. “Boyfriend” and “girlfriend” are the standard terms, regardless of age. And each is one word. Both are closed compounds.

Another symptom of steroidal semantics is the unnecessary and undesirable apostrophe before shortened names. Don’t write ’Emeka or ’Laolu. These are not contractions, and they don’t need apostrophes. If your full name is Olaolu, you’re Laolu. If your full name is Chukwuemeka or Nnaemeka, you’re Emeka. Leave the apostrophe out unless you’re making a stylistic statement, like the poet e.e. cummings.

The condition shows up too in hyphenated-name capitalization. It’s incorrect to lowercase the second element of a hyphenated name. Write Justice Bola Okikiolu-Ighile, not Okikiolu-ighile. Both halves of the name take capitals.

Grammatical errors also reveal this overcorrection. Say “two plus two equals four,” not “two plus two equal four.” The subject of the sentence is not “two and two,” but the math formula “2+2.” The formula is singular, so the verb should be too. Plus signals a mathematical operation, and the operation—not the individual numbers—is the subject.

Writers and lawyers caught in steroidal semantics forget that usage sometimes outweighs or overwhelms logic. “Birth anniversary” and “birthday anniversary” are unnecessary, clunky alternatives to the simple and correct “birthday.” They’re semantics on steroids. Consult any good dictionary. “Birthday” means both the day of one’s birth and the anniversary of one’s birth.

Finally, beware of phrases like “typo error” or “typo-error.” “Typo” already means “typographical error.” So just say “typo”.

If in doubt, check the dictionary. Trust me: it won’t bite. It might even cure your steroidal semantics.

Reports +Audio: How Auchi Poly lecturer was caught pants down in nursing mother’s bedroom

Three angles have emerged over the story and the video of the Federal Polytechnic, Auchi, lecturer, stripped naked and filmed in the bedroom of a nursing mother, that is making the rounds on social media.

More angles could still crystallise.

Two angles have been extensively published. One is that the alleged sex-for-mark scandal was intertwined with adultery. Then there was the cultism angle. These two angles have circulated widely.

The third angle is the post-event narrative of the woman allegedly at the centre of the saga: Her story, in a voice-recorded clip sent to THE CONCLAVE via WhatsApp, centred on a deliberate plot orchestrated by her and her husband to set the lecturer up for constantly harassing her sexually.

The angle that first trended on social media was that the lecturer’s sexcapade burst open while he was having her way with the woman, who was initially reported to be a student of the Federal Polytechnic, Auchi.

Click here to continue reading.

Elon Musk forms political party to bring down Trump — and gives it a MAGA-friendly name

Elon Musk is starting his own political party.

On Saturday, July 5, the Tesla founder and former adviser to President Donald Trump announced on X that he has formed the America Party. The announcement came one day after Musk, 54, posted a poll on the platform with the message, “Independence Day is the perfect time to ask if you want independence from the two-party (some would say uniparty) system! Should we create the America Party?”

The poll — which garnered more than 1.2 million votes — resulted in 65.4% of respondents voting “yes.”

He followed up with another X post on Saturday announcing the launch of the America Party.

“By a factor of 2 to 1, you want a new political party and you shall have it!” he wrote. “When it comes to bankrupting our country with waste & graft, we live in a one-party system, not a democracy. Today, the America Party is formed to give you back your freedom.”

Click here to continue reading.

For Once Wike is Correct: The Skeletons in Malami’s Closet are Enough to Fill Two Cemeteries-Time for EFCC to prosecute the NDDC forensic audit that Malami swept under the carpet

By Dr. Tonye Clinton Jaja

In the year 2021, I was nominated and awarded the Gani Fawehinmi Award of Person of Integrity.

The award is funded by the McArthur Foundation but administered by the Human and Environmental Development Agenda (HEDA).

The award was in recognition of my efforts to expose and cleanse the corruption and embezzlement of public funds by a top official of a certain federal government agency wherein I was the Chairman of the Governing Board.

It was during this period that I worked under the Abubakar Malami, SAN as he was the supervising Minister of the said federal government agency.

Based on one-on-one interactions with him, what His Excellency Nyesom Ezenwo Wike (NEW) has just said about Malami is 100% correct!!!

Throughout his period of eight years as Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Malami would be best remembered for the large number of reports of embezzlements that he covered up, swept under the carpet!!! It became his trademark, he was the go-to-public official whenever anyone wanted the skeleton in their cupboard to be hidden!!!

The number of Skeletons in MALAMI’s Closet Are Enough to Fill Two large-sized cemeteries!!!

I challenge the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to commence prosecution of the said Malami and see whether Nigerians would not come forward with a plethora of documentary evidence against the said Malami!!

During his interview on Channels TV dated 4th July 2025, Wike pointedly stated as follows:

“According to Wike, the forensic audit report, commissioned under the previous administration to probe massive financial mismanagement within the NDDC, has been suppressed to shield powerful individuals.

He pointed fingers at former Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, alleging that Malami buried the report to protect those implicated.

“Who killed the audit report? It was Malami, the Attorney General then,” Wike said. “If President Tinubu really wants to help Nigerians, let him release the forensic audit of the NDDC. If what I am saying is not in that document, I will resign as Minister of FCT. I don’t worship office.” This is reported online at:
https://www.google.com/amp/s/pmnewsnigeria.com/2025/07/04/wike-accuses-amaechis-wife-of-n48bn-nddc-fraud-in-explosive-interview/%3famp=1

To conclude, the Chairman of HEDA, who served as the WHISTLE-BLOWER that uncovered the fraud surrounding the Malabu Oil Well scandal revealed to me that one of the most credible sources of Intel or information about corruption and embezzlement of public funds is to listen to when two former or current top government officials begin to fight against each other!!!

It is happening right now, the fight between Wike and Amaechi has exposed details about the forensic audit report of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC). A report that would have otherwise been swept under the carpet and neatly buried as one of the many skeletons in MALAMI’s Closet!!!

Grab your popcorn, this particular unfolding drama promises to be swell, if the EFCC would allow us watch!!!

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

MultiChoice fined ₦766m for data privacy violations by NDPC

The Nigeria Data Protection Commission has fined MultiChoice Nigeria ₦766,242,500 for breaching the Nigeria Data Protection Act.

NDPC is a public institution that processes data in furtherance of its mandate as Nigeria’s data protection authority and relies on recognised lawful bases for data processing such as consent, legal obligation, and contract.

The commission’s Head of Legal, Enforcement and Regulations, Mr Babatunde Bamigboye, disclosed this in a statement issued on Sunday in Abuja.

According to Bamigboye, the fine followed an investigation launched in the second quarter of 2024 into suspected violations of subscribers’ privacy rights and the unlawful cross-border transfer of Nigerians’ data.

“NDPC found, among other things, that MultiChoice violated the data privacy rights of its subscribers and individuals associated with them who are not necessarily subscribers.

“The commission also discovered that MultiChoice engaged in the illegal cross-border transfer of personal data belonging to Nigerian data subjects.

“The depth of data processing by Multichoice is patently intrusive, unfair, unnecessary, and disproportionate.

“This is a grave affront to the fundamental right to privacy as enshrined in section 37 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” Bamigboye said.

According to him, Nigeria is entitled to protect its citizens and data sovereignty under both international and extant municipal laws, as these have far-reaching implications for the rule of law, national security, and economic growth.

Bamigboye added that in the process of the investigation, in line with the NDPA standard remediation procedure, the commission directed Multichoice to carry out appropriate remedial measures.

“However, the commission found the measures undertaken by Multichoice in this regard unsatisfactory.

“For want of cooperation, the commission has directed Multichoice to pay N766,242,500 for violating the Nigeria Data Protection Act,” he added.

The NDPC’s National Commissioner, Vincent Olatunji, was also quoted as directing that all channels through which Multichoice collects the personal data of Nigerian citizens be investigated for non-compliance.

According to him, any outlet that processes personal data in violation of the NDPA is liable to a penalty under the Act.

NDPC is a public institution that processes data in furtherance of its mandate as Nigeria’s Data Protection Authority and relies on recognised lawful bases for data processing such as consent, legal obligation, and contract.

Natasha set to resume in Senate Tuesday

Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, the suspended senator representing Kogi Central, has stated that she will resume legislative duties in the Senate on Tuesday following a court order directing her recall to the Red Chamber.

The lawmaker disclosed this in a video shared on social media, which started trending on Sunday. She thanked her supporters for standing with her.

“I thank you for your support. I am glad we are victorious today.

“We shall resume in the Senate on Tuesday by the grace of God,” she said.

Her comment followed Friday’s judgment by a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja, which declared her six-month suspension from the Senate as unconstitutional, excessive, and a violation of her constituents’ rights to representation.

Justice Binta Nyako, who presided over the matter, ruled that the suspension lacked constitutional backing and ordered the immediate reinstatement of Akpoti-Uduaghan.

The court, however, also found the senator guilty of contempt for a Facebook post described as a satirical apology addressed to Senate President Godswill Akpabio.

The court held that the post violated an interim injunction issued on March 4, 2025, which barred parties from making public or social media comments on the ongoing suit challenging her suspension.

Justice Nyako imposed a ₦5 million fine on the senator for the post, which was deemed to have breached the court’s order.

Akpoti-Uduaghan was suspended by the Senate in March after a controversial plenary session that turned rowdy over disagreements about seating arrangements in the chamber.

Days later, the controversy deepened when she accused Senate President Akpabio of sexual harassment during a live television interview

In her ruling, Justice Nyako emphasised that the extended suspension of the senator was not only procedurally flawed but also deprived the people of Kogi Central of their constitutional right to representation.

She stated that lawmakers are required by the constitution to attend at least 181 sitting days in a legislative year and warned that long suspensions without due process undermine democratic governance.

The court also criticised the Senate’s disciplinary processes, urging the National Assembly to review its internal rules to conform with constitutional principles and ensure a fair hearing.

TIPS