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Weed-smoking Montessori nursery worker emotionless when shown injuries she inflicted on babies in her care at £1,900-a-month day care

The Montessori nursery worker who abused babies in her care at the £1,900-a-month day care was seen completely emotionless as she was shown the injuries she had inflicted on them.

Cannabis-smoking Roksana Lecka, 22, was today found guilty today of assaulting 21 toddlers.

Lecka has been convicted of ‘badly harming’ 21 infants at the Riverside Nursery in Twickenham, south-west London, last year.

She admitted seven counts of child cruelty, including kicking a boy in the face and punching a girl in the side, justifying this behaviour by claiming she was sleep deprived from smoking cannabis all night with her boyfriend.

Lecka denied 17 other similar charges but a jury at Kingston Crown Court unanimously found her guilty today.

In CCTV footage of Lecka in custody on July 24, 2024, she is seen devoid of any emotion as officers show her images of the injuries she inflicted on defenceless babies.

The interviewer asks her if she has any idea about the injuries and how they were caused, to which she repeatedly replies: ‘No comment’.

Even when asked how seeing pictures of injured infants made her feel, the nursery worker fiddled with her hair and continued to refused to make a comment.

In another video of her arrest on July 5 last year, taken with a police body cam, Lecka appears calm as officers inform her she is going to be arrested on allegations of her assaulting children.

‘I’ve heard about that, yeah’, she said as she nodded her head and took a big gulp.

Parents wept in the public gallery as the verdicts were read out today, while Lecka was also tearful as she was led away to the cells.

One child was repeatedly kicked in the face by Lecka who even punched a baby after dragging her out of a cot.

Concerned parents first began photographing and reporting unexplained injuries on their children’s tiny bodies as early as March last year.

They watched in horror in court as jurors were shown some of Lecka’s sadistic attacks, including CCTV footage of her kicking the boy repeatedly in the face.

Staff noticed the children had been scratched and bruised and Lecka was suspended on June 28, 2024. 

After watching hours of CCTV and reviewing evidence compiled by parents, Lecka was charged with 24 counts of child cruelty.

She admitted seven of the charges against her but denied a further 17.

Today after nine hours and 53 minutes, jurors convicted her of 14 of the remaining 17 child cruelty counts and acquitted her of three.

She was remanded in custody and will be sentenced at Kingston Crown Court on September 26.

Judge Sarah Plaschkes KC exempted the jury from future service for the next 10 years. 

There were gasps from jurors and weeping parents in the public gallery as horrifying footage of Lecka’s attacks on toddlers, who were left writhing in agony, was shown during her trial.

They saw horrifying CCTV footage of Lecka kicking a boy in the face four times before stepping on his shoulder. The trainers she was wearing were later seized by police. 

In further footage played to the court, Lecka can also be seen pinching the legs, back and underarm of a young girl who is crying from the pain.

There were also clips of her pinching the side of a girl’s face and grabbing her hair.

She is seen vaping in another clip before grabbing a baby out of a crib and pinching and punching the baby.

Lecka was ‘looking around’ at other members of staff to see who was ‘watching these assaults occur’, the court heard.

But the 22-year-old, who moved to Britain from Katowice in southern Poland when she was three, explained away each sickening act of violence with a chilling nonchalance.

She had told the jury: ‘I can’t remember the things I was doing because I was smoking cannabis that was affecting my memory.’ 

Giving evidence in a smart black suit jacket over a black top, her blonde hair tied back in a neat ponytail, she claimed that an alleged pinch to a boy’s stomach was simply a tender hug.

A rough yank on a boy’s hair was a ‘ruffle with my fingers.’

A series of violent jabs to another toddler’s stomach that left his abdomen black and blue were just ‘playful pokes to the side,’ she insisted.

A baby Lecka smacked twice around the face while puffing on her vape was actually only crying because ‘she was distressed having just woken up from a nap’.

And a sickening moment when she threw a girl onto a mat had merely been some ‘rough handling,’ she declared.The former beauty worker changed several pleas to guilty just before her trial begun, having been shown enhanced CCTV that irrefutably illustrated her crimes.

She desperately sought to rationalise her behaviour with a series of pathetic excuses, including that she would get ‘moody’ if she could not smoke her vape at work, did not have enough sleep, was still feeling the effects of cannabis smoked the night before and had been suffering from period cramps.

‘At that time I was really addicted to vapes, I would smoke two little crystal disposables a day,’ she told the court.

‘I was vaping in nursery. Because if I did not smoke I would get agitated and fed up. I couldn’t keep asking to go to the toilet. Any opportunity I would take. I would be really moody and fed up.

‘It would be a couple of puffs and then I’d put it away… I would put it in my bra.’

In the week of her suspension, Lecka claimed she had been ‘over-prioritising’ her boyfriend. ‘I was with my boyfriend every night. I was addicted to him,’ she said.

In her prepared statement, Lecka denied assaulting any children at the Riverside Nursery. 

When asked in court if it was a lie, she said: ‘I was not lying because I was unaware of what I was doing and the things I was doing, I can’t remember the things I was doing because I was smoking cannabis that was affecting my memory.’

She added: ‘The amount of cannabis I was smoking was still affecting me, in that period of time.’

Prosecutor Tracy Ayling told jurors that smoking cannabis and not being able to vape were ‘excuses’.

She added: ‘It is clear her actions are deliberate or at the very least careless, but on most occasions we say deliberate. 

‘There are, of course, some clips where Ms Lecka – as we put it – keeps going back for more.’

Her own evidence was damning of the chaotic environment at Riverside Nursery, part of a prestigious group of educational institutions run by Dukes Education.

Lecka admitted she hadn’t bothered to complete her online safeguarding modules, and staff turnover was so high that workers were constantly training others while on the job.

She said she would frequently take toilet breaks to smoke a vape she kept in her bra, which she was seen on CCTV smoking next to children, and would take cannabis with her boyfriend – sometimes before work.

Despite this she was praised by management as a model employee and recalled: ‘They had experience with people my age or younger who wouldn’t stick to the job or do it properly but [head teacher] Noor one day called me into her office and said I was doing really well, she’s really proud of me.

‘She had even bought me pink roses.

‘She said if I continued to do so well she would sort it for me to do Level 3 childcare courses if it was something I wanted.’

That she was held in such high esteem goes some way to explain why staff were for so long unable to link her to the horrific injuries suffered by children in their care – injuries that for months were explained away to parents as innocuous accidents.

As consultant paediatrician Dr Stephen Rose told the trial, they should have recognised that wounds including bruised earlobes, torsos and thighs must have been caused deliberately.

‘Ears do not get injured or bruised accidentally…if it is a bruise it was caused non-accidentally or deliberately inflicted,’ he said.

‘The side of the torso is relatively protected by the arm, so it is not an area that is bruised accidentally.’

Dr Rose added that marks on a child’s thigh had likely been caused on purpose because toddlers who fall backwards land on their bottoms, not their thighs.

Lecka, who has two younger siblings, was supported throughout the trial by her mother.

The Polish national, who studied beauty at Kingston College and worked as a babysitter, barmaid and at a laser removal clinic before getting her job at the nursery, will be sentenced at a later date.

A spokesman from Riverside Nurseries said: ‘This has been a distressing case, particularly for the children and families directly affected. Our thoughts are first and foremost with those families.

‘Following concerns raised by Riverside Nursery staff, the individual was suspended and ultimately charged with offences against a number of children at the Nursery. Although Roksana Lecka was not convicted on all charges, today’s verdict confirms the seriousness of those concerns.

‘Situations like this are deeply upsetting and represent a profound breach of trust in a professional. We recognise how difficult this has been, in particular for the children and families directly involved.

‘Creating places in which children are happy, safe and able to thrive is our top priority, and we will do everything in our power to protect that.’

Gemma Burns, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said: ‘Lecka repeatedly showed exceptional cruelty in her appalling treatment of these babies.

‘No parent should have to fear leaving their child in the care of professionals, but the sheer scale of her abuse is staggering.

‘The CPS put forward compelling evidence that clearly showed her targeting children when colleagues were either out of the room, or had their backs turned.

‘We also called on experts to prove that the injuries Lecka’s victims sustained were consistent with pinch marks.

‘Lecka was placed in a position of trust and her job required her to provide safety and protection. Instead, she kicked, scratched, and pinched these young children, with this vile abuse of vulnerable victims continuing for many months.’

Lecka will be sentenced on September 26. 

Source: Daily Mail

A Tale of Three International Conference Centres-ICC at The Gambia, Rwanda and Nigeria: Wike’s Speech (“If You Want to Die, I Have Land to Bury You”) As a metaphor of prevalent fiscal irresponsibility by majority of Nigerian public officials

By Dr. Tonye Clinton Jaja

In the year 2021, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) engaged my services to train 22 lawyers of the Ministry of Justice of the Gambia.

The said training was on the use of ICT in Legislative Drafting. The venue of the said training was the International Conference Centre (ICC) of the Gambia.

It is called the Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara International Conference Centre in Bijilo, The Gambia.

It is a state-of-the-art technology-driven international conference centre built by the Government of China. Everything inside was technologically operated.

The hall that we used throughout the three days of training was all digitised from the microphones to the slide projectors and the audio recording devices. It was nothing short of what one sees in any industrialised country of Europe or the Americas.

The catering was five-star, it was so cosy and comfortable that at the end of each day’s training session, we were reluctant to return to our hotel rooms.

The pictures can be seen online at:https://www.oicgambia.org/sdkj-icc

The UNDP that funded this training must have spent nothing less than $30,000 on catering and Hall hire that went as revenue to the Government of The Gambia.

ONCE YOU PAY FOR THE HALL, YOU JUST MOVE IN AND USE THE HALL; YOU DON’T NEED TO HIRE A HALL DECORATOR OR FOOD CATERER!!!

THE AIR-CONDITIONING WAS FULLY FUNCTIONAL,(MORTUARY STANDARD) IN FACT WE HAD TO SWITCH IT OFF BECAUSE IT WAS GETTING TOO COLD!!!

In the year 2023, I travelled to Rwanda as a guest lecturer for the training of lawyers that was held at the International Conference Centre (ICC). Kigali, Rwanda.

Again, this ICC was even bigger than the one in the Gambia and also five-star standard or even more.

Right from the entrance gate, you are greeted with professional staff and inside the halls were exquisite.

The pictures that I snapped inside the hall and sent to family and friends in Nigeria, they thought it was inside a European country.

Again, all the revenue from the rent of the hall for our one-week training went to the coffers of the government of Rwanda.

ONCE YOU PAY FOR THE HALL, YOU JUST MOVE IN AND USE THE HALL; YOU DON’T NEED TO HIRE A HALL DECORATOR OR FOOD CATERER!!!

THE AIR-CONDITIONING WAS FULLY FUNCTIONAL,(MORTUARY STANDARD) IN FACT WE HAD TO SWITCH IT OFF BECAUSE IT WAS GETTING TOO COLD!!!
In the year 2020, I attended an event at the International Conference Centre (ICC), it was the annual PARLIAMENTARY LECTURE organised by the National Institute for Legislative and Democratic Studies (NILDS), Abuja.

A HALL DECORATOR WAS HIRED TO DECORATE THE HALL!!!

THEN A FOOD CATERER WAS ALSO HIRED. IF YOU ARE NOT A VIP, FOOD WOULD NOT BE SERVED TO YOU AT YOUR SEAT.

NO ONE KNOWS WHETHER THE MONEY PAID BY THE INSTITUTE FINALLY GOT TO THE COFFERS OF THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT OF NIGERIA!!!

As if to rub salt into an already festering sore and injury, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) has replied that anyone who is querying why ₦39,000,000 (thirty-nine billion) of public funds was used for renovation: “if you want to die, I have land to bury you”!!!

At least this is a better option, a more merciful method of euthanasia that is better than his previous option: “he said that if you want to die, go and hug an electric transformer”!!!

All these statements are evidence of disdain for the relevant laws about public procurement, fiscal responsibility and freedom of information!!!

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

Blessed is the Hand That Giveth and Taketh: When Nigerian public officials become victims of the same warped public institutions that they benefitted from (cautionary tale and case studies of the FMOJ, Nigerian Police and other tales)

By Dr. Tonye Clinton Jaja

In the year 1990, the late reggae music singer, Lucky Dube sang a song entitled: “BLESSED IS THE HAND THAT GIVETH AND THE HAND THAT TAKETH”!!!

I am adapting that as the title of this write-up.

The summary and moral lesson from the title of the said song and this write-up is that the same hand that creates a skewed, warped system from which benefits are derived, can also be destroyed by the same skewed, warped system that they have created.

Therefore, it is better to uphold the rule of law and adhere to public interests in the discharge of public duty by public officials.

While some of the case studies that I am about to state here are verifiable and in the public domain, others are based on lawyer-client relationships and due to the rule of confidentiality, I am not able to reveal the names and identities.

Journalism is a profession that is supposed to serve the members of the public by providing ACCURATE information.

Unfortunately, some journalists have turned it into a mercantile and transactional venture and a means of publishing defamatory information without giving the other party the opportunity of rebuttal through fair hearing.

It is as if nemesis recently visited a journalist who is now crying that he himself is the victim of similar treatment, of not giving him the opportunity for fair hearing, when it is reported that he was expelled from the Executive Course of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPS). The full story is available here: https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/801047-nigerias-policy-institute-nipss-expels-participant-over-published-articles.html

Alabo Dr. Reuben M. Saturday Jaja is the CEO of a consortium of companies (BFIG) that emerged as winner of the Aluminium Smelter Company of Nigeria (ALSCON) in the year 2004. It was the result of an open, competitive bidding process.

However, since the year 2004, despite Supreme Court judgments in his favour, the different Directors-General of the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) have used different underhanded tactics by rigging the system to refuse to transfer ownership of the said ALSCON to Alabo Dr. Reuben M. Saturday Jaja. The irony is that the same system that these DGs have rigged at the BPE is the same system that has been used to terminate the appointment of these DGs, the latest of which was Alex Okoh. His appointment, which was supposed to be for a tenure of five years, was prematurely terminated in January 2025, even after he is alleged to have coughed up huge sums of “Brown envelope” to secure his seat!!! The full story of ALSCON is available online at: https://www.google.com/amp/s/punchng.com/bpe-disobeying-supreme-court-to-hold-on-to-alscon-jaja/%3famp

A lawyer has just informed me that he is now representing a senior retired police officer for the enforcement of the judgment of the High Court of law. The said lawyer informed me (and I verily believe him) that this same police officer, during his years of active service, was an expert in devising all manner of obstacles against lawyers who won judgments against the Nigerian Police. The now-retired police officer used to demand that such lawyers should obtain a prior consent of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) as an obstacle roadblock.

Now this same police officer is trying to use a lawyer to obtain enforcement of judgment against the Nigerian Police, and the efforts of his lawyer are slowed down and even been frustrated by the very same roadblocks that were erected by the very same police officer during his years of active service!!!

Let me conclude with the real-life story of a former Director of Civil Litigation at the government’s Ministry of Justice.

He immediately suffered high blood pressure upon retirement, when the same Ministry of Justice subjected him to the same investigation and litigation that he was previously subjecting many citizens to (although he is presumed innocent)!!

The investigation and possible prosecution against him triggered a trauma that he faced of losing not just his pension, his freedom and most of all his reputation.

As a veteran who had survived the antics of this former incompetent and weed-smoking AGF, I was invited to provide not just legal representation, strategy and most importantly, psychological counselling to lower the high blood pressure of this former Director!!!

This write-up is a pre-cautionary tale for all public sector lawyers and other officials, the system that you skew today for your own personal benefits could return tomorrow to bite you not only in the ass but in some other sensitive places!!!

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

Court rejects FG’s move to arrest Natasha over defamation charge

The Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday rejected the Federal Government’s request to issue an arrest warrant against the suspended senator representing Kogi Central Senatorial District, Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, following her failure to appear in court for arraignment in an alleged defamation suit.

The presiding judge, Justice Muhammed Umar, delivered this ruling after the federal government’s counsel, David Kaswe, informed the court that the charge had been served on her lawyer earlier that morning in the courtroom.

Justice Umar stated that, as the senator had not previously been served with the charge or a hearing notice, it was inconceivable for her to have appeared in court.

On this basis, he refused the prosecution’s application for a bench warrant.

The Federal Government’s counsel, however, argued that Akpoti-Uduaghan should have been aware of her arraignment since her legal counsel had been served.

The judge, in response, dismissed this argument, stating that serving the charge on her legal counsel was not sufficient to presume the senator’s awareness of the arraignment.

Following the court’s ruling, the prosecution applied for substituted service of the charge through her counsel, Johnson Usman.

The application was granted, and the court subsequently scheduled her arraignment for June 30.

The charge was filed by the Director of Public Prosecutions of the Federation, Mohammed Abubakar, on behalf of the Federal Government.

In the criminal charge which names Senator Akpoti-Uduagahn as the sole defendant, the FG accused her of making defamatory statements during a live television broadcast.

The charge, which names Senate President Godswill Akpabio and former Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello as the nominal complainants, alleges that Akpoti-Uduaghan accused Bello of conspiring with Akpabio to orchestrate her assassination outside Abuja and framing it as a mob or local attack.

According to the Federal Government, these allegations were made during a live broadcast on Channels Television’s Politics Today on April 3, 2025.

The FG argues that Akpoti-Uduaghan knowingly or recklessly made these imputations, fully aware that they could harm the reputation of the individuals involved.

She is alleged to have said, “Let’s ask the Senate President, why in the first instance did he withdraw my security, if not to make me vulnerable to attacks? He then emphasised that I should be killed, but I should be killed in Kogi. What is important to me is to stay alive, because dead men tell no tales. Who is going to get justice for me?”

The charge also cites her statements during the programme, “That you, Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, on or about the 3rd day of April 2025, during the same Politics Today programme on Channels Television in Abuja, Federal Capital Territory, made the following imputation concerning Yahaya Adoza Bello, former Governor of Kogi State.

“It was part of the meeting, the discussions that Akpabio had with Yahaya Bello that night, to eliminate me. When he met with him, he then emphasised that I should be killed, but I should be killed in Kogi.’
You knew or had reason to believe that such imputations would harm the reputation of Yahaya Adoza Bello, former Governor of Kogi State.”

The senator is also accused of making defamatory statements about Senate President Akpabio during a telephone conversation with Sandra C. Duru in Abuja on 27 March 2025.

The Federal Government contends that Akpoti-Uduaghan knew or ought to have known that this claim would harm the reputation of Akpabio.

Also, the Senate President, Bello, and four others have been listed as witnesses for the trial.

PUNCH

Sick nation debate: APC vs ADC

By Lasisi Olagunju

MODERATOR: We take this space for ‘The Sick Nation Debate’, a town hall exchange between two political tendencies recommending themselves to our sick nation. Today’s edition is between the ruling APC and a budding coalition which, for now, uses the ADC label. We start in alphabetical order.

APC: Alphabetical order? No. A good debate should be between equals, or at least between near mates. Ambition Disguised as Change (ADC) is a perfect example of an oddity, a horror movie in rehearsal. ADC looks new, but acts odd and old, arrogant. It has no pedigree in morality. It is a sheep; it has no head to lock horns with my ram.

ADC: I think we should start this with some measure of decorum. But you can’t give what you don’t have. You have just announced yourself as a cocky cocktail of disaster. A drug called APC was banned in 1983 or thereabouts for being injurious to our health. I remember you as an alliance of purveyors of death: APC Elerin—three-in-one. Imagine a drug that advertised itself as a painkiller, it turned out that it was actually a kidney killer. Its full name was Aspirin-Phenacetin-Caffeine. Now, that is the name you are throwing about with pride as a slogan of expired hope. You should be known for what you are: Ailments, Pains and Catastrophe (APC).

APC: On 29 October, 2006, a passenger plane crashed near Abuja. One hundred and four people were on board the Boeing 737-200 which was travelling to Sokoto. There were seven survivors. Alhaji Muhammadu Maccido, the then Sultan of Sokoto, was among the dead. You know the name of the airline involved in the unfortunate crash? ADC. Again, a foremost professor of political science named Claude Ake, was killed in an air crash on November 7, 1996 in Lagos. You want to know the culprit airline? ADC. I can go on and on. So, each time you pronounce your name, those are the incidents Nigerians remember. May we not board a plane destined for a crash. May it not happen again.

ADC: You share no name with an airline but you have hijacked and crashed the country. In ten quick years, APC has worked Nigeria into the mortuary. My current mission is to take our country back from you, a band of buccaneers who have abducted the country and its destiny. I wonder why you are not ashamed that your record of destruction is phenomenal. Everywhere you touch, disaster drops.

APC: Your coalition is DOA—dead on arrival. Yes, there are challenges today. But, you know Bertolt Brecht?

ADC: Yes. German playwright and poet; 1898-1956. What about him?

APC: Brecht once asked a question and answered it himself: “In the dark times / Will there also be singing? / Yes, there will be singing / About the dark times.”

ADC: We are already singing about your darkness. You are death hanging a stethoscope. With APC, every dose is a bout of deadly side effects. You came very popular in 2015 but everyone who embraced you with the innocence of patriotism has landed in a dialysis clinic. There was a celebration of democracy last week. You heard what your man, the president told Nigerians who told him that things are bad? “I am not here to make you happy” was the message of hope from your Renewed Hope exponent. Your party came popular ten years ago. And in those ten years you have shown the world what it means to be a popular poison. A textbook definition of dictator. There was Idi Amin, there was Bokassa, there were Hitler and Mussolini. They all waltzed in into the world’s infirmary popular like the drug of death, APC. What ended the romance? Regret. From the desert to the coast, APC has made the sick sicker.

APC: But we started this journey together, ask Atiku, ask El-Rufai and Amaechi.

ADC: Just don’t go there. Now we know that you are a capsule of band A bandits. We did what we had to do in 2015 because it was the best at that point. Imagine you joining hands to build a hospital only to finish and discover that what you have is a shrine for suffering; a nursery for pain. That is the reason we abandoned the curious combination called APC and opted to have this without the deadly ‘P’ element. The ‘D’ in our name represents deliverance. We will give health and deliver our people from your evil.

APC: The ‘D’ in ADC actually represents disaster. “Barbarous invaders” is what Zulu king, Shaka, called dissidents like you. And he said more: “A wild collection of desperadoes do not compose a nation/ However numerous their numbers.”

ADC: Since you know how to quote from Mazisi Kunene’s ‘Emperor Shaka the Great’, you should also add this line from that epic: “The greatness of a people lies in the richness of their lives.” With your wicked policies, you’ve ruined the world and damaged the heavens. We are coming to detoxify the polity.

APC: The best chef in world’s history is the mouth; its vegetable soup is the champion. You are simply jealous that I do to perfection everything you can’t collectively handle: headaches, body aches, heartbreaks. I tackle them. All. I deliver immediate results.

ADC: Our ancestors warn that “If you give bad food to your stomach, it will drum for you to dance.” You are that bad food in our stomach and we are flushing you out. You cure nothing. You deliver pain and death. Slowly and arrogantly, you wreck vital organs. Like Phenacetin, the ‘P’ in the banned drug, you flaunt economic and security Armageddon as trophy. Horror is who you are.

APC: What you are doing is what Sun Tzu, author of ‘The Art of War’, said 2,500 years ago: “the noise before defeat.” ADC is a plane with lots of announcements, no flight. Any person who entrusts their life journey to you will end up stranded, disappointed and depressed. What you have on the label is not what you really are. You are the killer pill that must not be in our regimen.

ADC: I am convinced now more than ever that you should be banned like your namesake, the bad drug. You are actively leading the nation into bankruptcy and you shamelessly do peacock preening. I heard the president talking about his record of achievements. Like the lizard that jumped down the Iroko tree, he is praising himself, marking his own script. Who does that? Did he see Nigerian beggars deported from Ghana? Nigerians go to Ghana to do street begging. Haba!

APC: Dear ADC, begging did not start with us or with this president. You’ve been around for a long time, taxiing the tarmac endlessly. You are like your other name, Aide-de-Camp, an orderly with royal ambitions. I advise that you stop wasting your time and money. If you become broke, we won’t open the vaults for you. The best you can ever get is to be a miserable attendant, a courtier, the ragged guy holding PDP’s umbrella. You know placebo?

ADC: Is it not better to be placebo than be poison? You are poison, we are panacea. You remain an expired brand, snobbish, haughty and petty; you kill. Daily, you work hard at transforming headache into paralysis. Agony Promoting Confederation (APC) is your full name; the other one I call Permanent Defection Platform (PDP). You claim to be cures but you are no drug, you are an epidemic. I am the light of the nation; I am coming as a breath of fresh air.

APC: You are a chattering bird, you can never build a nest. I am sure, ADC, that if you do not crash the state, you will excel in flight cancellations and flight delays. May Nigeria not suffer you.

ADC: PDP’s carelessness and bad behaviour dragged us into APC’s darkness. Now, APC is drugging us into coma. Yet, you say you are the best option. What you want is a trauma cycle but we won’t allow you. Whatever it will take, we don’t care, we are stopping you and your arrogance. You can say whatever you like. ‘The End’ is the end of cinema. That end for you is the next election. If the calabash won’t let us open it gently, we will smash it. We will match you grit for grit, intrigue for intrigue; madness for madness.

APC: May madness not be our portion. Our people are not suicidal. They know that you, in particular, you are too desperate to give health. You can say whatever you like. This country was critically ill before I was introduced into its treatment in 2015. Today, the patient is stabilised and singing our praise. The president was in Katsina some weeks ago. You know the verdict of the people? Mounted on billboards were great words of thanks. He was in Lagos for Sallah. You saw how big men, including the elderly prostrated to have a handshake with the president. The people say we are doing what they expect us to do. When the righteous rule, the people rejoice. Nigerians have never been happier than they are. Even the Financial Times of London said so: “Nigeria is in better shape than at any time in the past decade.” When a patient says “No Complaint”, what else is there for the doctor to do other than to keep the drug that cured them? Go to the far north, the dominant slogan there this moment is “Ba Korafi”, it means “no complaint.”

MODERATOR: Thank you, our promise makers. And thank you esteemed listeners…

ADC: Mr. Moderator, you can’t stop this at this point. APC cannot roam freely the 419 way, relabelling expired hope as renewed hope and going away with it. It deserves a response…

MODERATOR: I am sorry, we have to go now. We’ve come to the end of the maiden edition of The Sick Nation Debate. We hope to keep the conversation alive and going. We will meet again. When? Well…

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

Death of a Queen

By Lasisi Olagunju

“There is a kind of price for life,” says Charles A. Curran, and that price, he says, “moves in the direction of death.” Death blows no trumpet but we all know it is coming. It is the unalterable final part of the process of life. Some of us spend our entire life worrying about death; some simply ignore it; some mortally fear it; some calmly look forward to it. Whichever you and I choose, the final portion is that we all have to die one way or the other. It is destiny at work. 

In the afternoon of Thursday last week, I was with the Orangun of Oke Ila, Oba Adedokun Abolarin, who lost his wife, Olori Solape Christianah Abolarin, exactly one week today. She was 51 years old. 

I knew her; she was my wife’s friend and colleague in the civil service of Osun State. Her death has made us poorer here. If anyone had asked the dead what she thought was next in her life, she would probably have said she looked forward to becoming a permanent secretary. Her diligence at work was preparing her for the top job. For her, death was too far-fetched to consider. She had so much ahead and a lot in her plate to attend to. But she died. We all mourn her untimely passage.

“We care, God cures” is a bold inscription on the wall of a popular hospital in Ibadan. A very sensible thing for every person and physician to say is in that message. No matter the degree of care, people die, some young, some old. Probe certain ailments; for women, for instance, probe fibroids: “The exact cause is unknown” is what comes up.

Modern medicine and its prophets get confounded now and then despite humanity’s progress across centuries. That is why, since the beginning of creation, women’s anatomy and freak deaths appear together, constantly holding hands. German physician, Eucharius Roesslin (1470-1526), told his readers in 1513 that “very many (are) the perils, dangers, and throngs which chance to women…” Read about him and why he wrote his ‘Der Rosengarten’ (The Rose Garden), later translated to ‘The Birth of Mankind’.

The death of our king’s wife reminds the mindful of a hugely cerebral editor, columnist and Queen of Letters, MEE (May Ellen Ezekiel). Married to Richard Mofe Damijo, MEE died after a fibroid surgery on 23 March 1996 in the best hospital of her day in Lagos. She was aged 40. The uterine course (and cause) of her transition was identical with this exit in Osun State. The stabbing pains of the whys, till eternity, rack the brain.

Amidst a torrent of personal grief and familial lamentations, Oba Abolarin reeled out the pearls of his companionship with the departed Olori: “Many of the things people praise in me, she was the architect. Everyone who was my person was accepted by her as her person. She was mother to all the boys and girls in our college. She made our home cosy for orphans. She was from Igbeti in Oyo State, she married me and became completely Oke Ila and Osun State …” The king’s men and women in attendance nodded in agreement.

The grieving oba went on and on punctuating prayers from visitors and friends with tales of the great bond he shared with the departed. Hearing him and looking at the histrionics that accompanied what he was saying reminded me of a passage on intimacy, death, and grief: “…with a person’s death and our experiences of grief comes…the clearest view of what that person and relationship have meant to us in life” (Brian tie Vries in ‘Grief: Intimacy’s Reflection’).

When a loved one dies, everyone periodically pauses and queries their efforts. We’ve all lost persons whose death left us to wonder if we did enough to keep them around. I ask myself till tomorrow if I put in everything I should to keep my parents alive despite their very old age. With the deceased’s immediate younger sister beside him retelling, amid sobs, the last-moment stories, I heard Oba Abolarin asking himself repeatedly what he ought to do which he did not do. “I am a finicky person, so what happened?” He asked no one in particular.

Those who experienced it would swear that a spouse’s death is a life-altering experience. They say it is a tough one. I read in Phyllis R. Silverman’s ‘Widowhood and Preventive Intervention’ that during courtship, people commonly rehearse for marriage, but “no similar rituals prepare the individual for the inevitable termination of the marriage when one of the partners will die.”

Between this husband and his late wife is a 12-year-old prince, Tadeniawo. And I heard Kabiyesi asking how he was going to cope going forward: “I am close to 70. How is a 70-year-old man going to take care of a 12-year-old, all alone? The boy was very close to his mum.” The oba said; then he went on and on even as he struggled to put on the visage of courage.

He has to be strong; he is an oba, husband of the whole town. One of the covenants he had with those who had been on the throne before him is that his hardwood must never shed tears. Ako igi kò gbodò s’oje. He has handled it so well so far. We keep praying for him.

“Death, thou shalt die” comes as a verdict from seventeenth-century English poet, John Donne. In that Holy Sonnet, Donne asks ‘Death’ not to be proud because “One short sleep past, we wake eternally,/ And death shall be no more…”

May Olori Abolarin’s soul rest in perfect peace. May God look after her husband and child and all her other loved ones.

Victims recount how Lakurawa terrorists slit children’s necks like animals in fresh Benue attacks, as Tinubu orders governor to lead reconciliation meetings

The killings in Benue State by gunmen suspected to be herdsmen militia have continued unabated, with over 200 persons killed yesterday in Yelwata, Guma Local Government Area of the state.

This is even as President Bola Tinubu has directed Governor Hyacinth Alia, “to act as a statesman and immediately lead the process of dialogue and reconciliation that will bring peace to Benue.”

A high-ranking officer in the army also revealed that two soldiers were killed in a separate attack same Sunday morning in Guma LGA.

Speaking to newsmen on the phone in Makurdi, a community leader in Yelwata and former acting Chairman of Benue SUBEB, Matthew Mnyan, said: “It started last night (Saturday) at about 11 pm when Fulani terrorists came from the Western part of Yelwata and started shooting.

“So the police men and young people that were there tried to engage them. Suddenly, another group came from the eastern part of the community, and they overran those trying to resist them.

They killed people, poured petrol on the stalls in the market, and burnt them.

“In those stalls, we had people who moved from places like Branch Udei and people displaced from nearby villages, who sleep in the stalls because of the nearness of the police and soldiers there. And we learnt no soldier came out to defend the people.

“As of now, from the names being put together and families that were burnt and killed, the death toll is running to over 200 now. They killed and burnt people in the houses. They will pour petrol and burn the whole place where people are sleeping. We have families of 12 or 15 people, men with their two wives, children, and every one of them were burnt. It is a terrible sight.

“I have asked them to search for the families and put the names together because some have been burnt to ashes. Those that were rushed to hospital were up to 46 so far. I learnt that about 20 died, and we are still putting the reports together.

“This was an unprovoked attack. It was just planned. For over one week, we received reports from Nasarawa State that the terrorists planned to attack Yelwata, Ukohol, Ortese, Yogbo, and Daudu. So they are moving to attacks these places simultaneously.

“Fortunately, the ones at Daudu were dislodged yesterday while five soldiers were killed sadly. I think one of them was of the rank of a captain.

“We learnt they were more than 200 where they camped close to Daudu. This is heartbreaking. Everybody is aware that the people want to take over Benue state. There are no two ways about it. They only want to grab the land.

“If you go to the east side of Yelwata, Fulanis have taken over the land and given it to some of their people to farm on. And they do not want anybody to go there. So, this is a planned issue that is being executed. It was a coordinated and well-organized attack, which is why some came from the eastern part and some from the western part to execute the attack to make sure they bring the place down.

“Women, children, and toddlers were murdered in cold blood. Children had their necks slit and killed like animals.

“We had wanted to move all the corpses to the road, but I recalled that there was a time we did that, and three persons were killed by security personnel,” he added.

In his own account, the President of the Association of United Farmers Benue Valley (AUFBV), Chief Dennis Gbongbon, said the incident took place at about 2.00am. yesterday.

He narrated that the attackers stormed the area when the people were in deep sleep and set houses ablaze, burning families and their properties inside.

According to him, the majority of the victims were Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who ran from the neighbouring Nasarawa State to take refuge in the area.

The visibly shaken farmer said: “Today about 2am, we had a very disturbing security threat to Tiv farmers in Yelwata community of Guma LGA. Suspected Lakurawa bandits and alleged herders killed over 62 IDPs and farmers and burnt houses with families beyond imagination.

“The dead toll shall rise as search and rescue mission is on. Many were burnt in stores where they were sleeping. I am right here on the ground. 85 per cent victims are IDPs that ran from Antsa, Dooka, kadarko, and Giza areas and are taking refuge at various stores in Yelwata market and resident. Many have been hospitalized.

The IDPs are still farmers. They are IDPs in Yelwata. Hence, they only ran to take refuge. While it is important to separate them, it would help to understand the deteriorating situation the farmers are confronted with. Even having been driven away their homes to IDP camp, terror still followed them unabated.”

The Special Adviser to Governor Hyacinth Alia on Security and Internal Affairs, Chief Joseph Har, has confirmed the attacks. He said: “I can’t give an exact account of it because I’m not there physically, but I’m aware that this ugly thing happened yesterday in Yelwata and at the back of Daudu. They are two different attacks. I can’t say the exact number because I don’t have the details.”

When contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), DSP Udeme Edet, also confirmed the incident, saying it happened yesterday morning.

Meanwhile, President Tibubu also “charged the governor of Benue State with convening reconciliation meetings and dialogue among the warring parties to end the incessant bloodshed and bring lasting peace and harmonious coexistence between farmers, herders, and communities.”

Most of this report was culled from the Sunday Sun.

Benue Killings: “Act as a statesman and immediately lead dialogue and reconciliation that will bring peace to Benue,” Tinubu to Governor Alia

As herdsmen continue their onslaught against communities in Benue state, with children and infants unspared, President Bola Tinubu has directed Governor Hyacinth Alia, “to act as a statesman and immediately lead the process of dialogue and reconciliation that will bring peace to Benue.”

He also “charged the governor of Benue State with convening reconciliation meetings and dialogue among the warring parties to end the incessant bloodshed and bring lasting peace and harmonious coexistence between farmers, herders, and communities.”

The president in a statement issued on Sunday by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, also instructed security chiefs to implement his earlier directive to bring lasting peace and security to Benue State.

Tinubu further described “the killings and bloodletting as inhuman and anti-progress.”

The full text of the statement reads:

BENUE CRISIS: PRESIDENT TINUBU DIRECTS SECURITY CHIEFS TO IMPLEMENT EARLIER DIRECTIVE, TASKS GOVERNOR ALIA ON RECONCILIATION

President Bola Tinubu has directed security chiefs to implement his earlier directive to bring lasting peace and security to Benue State.

President Tinubu renewed his order in the wake of the latest round of reprisal attacks that led to the death of many people.

On the president’s directive, intelligence chiefs, the police and the military have arrived in the state to direct security operations and restore sanity.

President Tinubu has equally charged the governor of Benue State with convening reconciliation meetings and dialogue among the warring parties to end the incessant bloodshed and bring lasting peace and harmonious coexistence between farmers, herders, and communities.

Describing the killings and bloodletting as inhuman and anti-progress, President Tinubu called on political leaders and community leaders in conflict areas to stop fuelling the crisis through unguarded utterances and statements that could further inflame tensions.

They should also rein in those who go out to cause provocations and ignite reprisal attacks.

“The latest news of wanton killings in Benue State is very depressing. We must not allow this bloodletting to continue unabated. Enough is now enough.

“I have directed the security agencies to act decisively and arrest perpetrators of these evil acts on all sides of the conflict and prosecute them.

“Political and community leaders in Benue State must act responsibly and avoid inflammatory utterances that could further increase tensions and killings.

“This is the time for Governor Alia to act as a statesman and immediately lead the process of dialogue and reconciliation that will bring peace to Benue. Our people must live in peace, and it is possible when leaders across the divides work together in harmony and differences are identified and addressed with fairness, openness and justice.”

Bayo Onanuga
Special Adviser to the President
(Information & Strategy)
June 15, 2025

Re: Senate Mulls Over Increasing Number of Supreme Court Justices: Ikeazor Akaraiwe, SAN, says “Not the solution”

  1. The Supreme Court is a policy court which should not be saddled with every manner of cause. Any litigant who has had a bite at the cherry in two courts (High Court and Appeals) ought generally to be satisfied.
  2. Going to the Supreme Court ought to be by judicial review, in my view.
  3. The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) hears cases only by certiorari (judicial review), and it first of all determines whether the case would add anything to jurisprudence (in which case, it would grant leave to hear the appeal or it was filed to restate the obvious. By the way, the United States of America, with many more lawyers and court cases than Nigeria, has a 9 Judge Member Supreme Court!
  4. A personal example of how the right of appeal is abused in Nigeria may suffice. Many years ago, we got judgment in our favour at the three levels of High Court to Supreme Court in an employment matter in which a commercial bank employee sued asking for reinstatement after dismissal from his job!
  5. As any rookie lawyer would tell you, the only employee who can ask for reinstatement successfully is one whose employment enjoys statutory flavour.
  6. Employment with “statutory flavour” means the employment relationship is governed by laws or statutes rather than just the terms of a contract. This provides special legal protection to the employee, requiring any actions like disciplinary measures or termination to follow the prescribed statutory procedures. In essence, it elevates the employment relationship beyond a simple master-servant arrangement, giving the employee greater security and protection.
  7. For example, Central Bank is a creation of statute. And so an ex-employee of CBN may go to court to press for his job back after dismissal, citing breaches of the statutory provisions pertaining to his employment.
  8. In this case, the employer was a commercial bank, and the employment did not enjoy statutory flavour.
  9. Learned counsel for the appellant in the cause I am talking about, knowing the true state of the law appealed the judgment right up to the Supreme Court, knowing that he was sure to lose, as he did not canvas any reason why the Supreme Court should adapt the principle of employment with statutory flavour to a commercial bank non-creation of statute.
  10. This case lasted years and was a thorough abuse of the right to appeal.
  11. What sort of system tolerates this kind of frivolous, time-wasting litigation, and then creates a 30-person Supreme Court?
  12. Solution: Do not increase the number of justices at the Supreme Court RATHER Cut down on the number of cases which go right to the Supreme Court. This will require a constitutional amendment, specifically of S. 233 (2).

Senate mulls over increasing number of Supreme Court justices

The Nigerian Senate is deliberating on a bill to increase the number of justices on the Supreme Court from 21 to 30, in a bid to address the mounting backlog of cases and improve the delivery of justice.

Senator Osita Izunaso, representing Imo West, disclosed the proposal during a press briefing in Abuja to mark his second year in the 10th National Assembly. He noted that although the Supreme Court recently attained its constitutional quota of 21 justices, following the appointment of 11 new members in 2023, the current number is still insufficient to meet the growing demands on the court.

“Even with the full complement of 21 justices, the Supreme Court is overwhelmed,” Izunaso said. “The volume of cases reaching the court daily is alarming. Some litigants are being given hearing dates as far ahead as 2027 and 2028.”

The senator explained that increasing the number of justices would enable the court to sit in more panels, thereby accelerating case hearings. “Supreme Court justices typically sit in panels of five, or seven for constitutional matters. If we have 30 justices, it allows the formation of at least five panels simultaneously. That way, more cases can be handled at a faster pace,” he said.

Izunaso also advocated for reforms to limit the types of cases that reach the apex court. He questioned why relatively minor cases, such as land disputes or tenancy issues, are allowed to escalate to the highest judicial level.

“Why should a land matter in my village end up in the Supreme Court?” he asked. “Many of these issues should start from the customary court and end at the high court. The apex court should be reserved for cases of national or constitutional importance — terrorism, homicide, grand corruption.”

He cited examples of tenancy and family disputes reaching the Supreme Court, describing the trend as a systemic failure that clogs the judiciary and delays justice in more pressing matters. He recounted a case that had been resolved by the families of deceased litigants but was still listed for a Supreme Court hearing in 2026.

While rejecting the notion of establishing regional supreme courts, Izunaso stressed the importance of a single, centralized apex court to maintain the unity and sanctity of Nigeria’s judicial system. “What we need is better filtration at a lower level, not more supreme courts,” he said.Naija fashion trends

The senator also noted that the red chamber is considering a bill for the creation of Anim State in the South-East geopolitical zone, which has passed second reading and is currently under review by the Senate Committee on Constitution Review.

TIPS