Nigeria’s Ambassador to the United States, retired Justice Sylvanus Adiewere Nsofor is dead.
He was aged 85.
He reportedly passed on Thursday evening in a Maryland hospital in the U.S., according to Persecondnews based in the U.S. but published by a Nigerian, Mr Femi Soneye.
He died in active service just as his predecessor, Prof. Adebowale Adefuye who died on August 27, 2015.
In a statement issued by presidential spokesperson, Garba Shehu, on Friday, President Muhammadu Buhari has described the late ambassador as an ”outstanding judge of rare courage”.
Shehu said Buhari had directed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to work with Justice Nsofor’s family on the burial arrangements.
The President also prayed God to comfort all who mourn the departed jurist.
”President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed heartfelt commiserations with the family, friends and associates of Nigeria’s Out-going Ambassador to the United States, Justice Sylvanus Adiewere Nsofor over his demise,” the statement read.
”In a telephone call to Jane, the widow of the retired justice in New York on Friday, the President described Amb. Nsofor as ‘an outstanding judge of rare courage and truth who is not afraid to give justice to whom justice is due.’
“Apparently referring to the 2003 presidential election during which Justice Nsofor delivered a minority judgment as a member of the Election Appeal Panel in favour of Gen. Buhari as candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), the President said the country will miss people with such exemplary pedigree.
“President Buhari, who has directed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to work with Justice Nsofor’s family on the burial arrangements, prayed God to comfort all who mourn the departed jurist and grant his soul eternal rest.”
According to a biography published in allgov.com, by Steve Straehley, David Wallechinsky, Nsofor stepped in the saddle on November 13, 2017.
The biography reads: Sylvanus Adiewere Nsofor, a retired justice from Nigeria’s Court of Appeal, assumed the office of country’s ambassador to the United States on November 13, 2017. It’s Nsofor ’s first ambassadorial posting.
Nsofor was born March 17, 1935, in Oguta, Imo State, Nigeria. He graduated from London’s now-defunct Holborn College of Law in 1962 and added an LL.M from the London School of Economics in 1964.
He began teaching at Holborn College of Law in 1964 and went into private practice the following year. In 1977, he was appointed to the bench in Nigeria and served as a judge of the Imo state High Court. He spent the last 13 years of his career, until mandatory retirement in 2005, as a justice on the Court of Appeal of Nigeria.
In 2003, Nsofor was the dissenting vote in a three-justice panel in a contested presidential race between Muhammadu Buhari, presidential candidate of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), and the incumbent Olusegun Obasanjo, candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
Nsofor wrote that the PDP had engaged in intimidation tactics and violence: “I find that the substantial non-compliance with the mandatory electoral law amounts to no election. I also find that there was violence perpetuated by President Obasanjo…May Nigeria never and never again see a black Saturday like April 19, 2003.”
However, Obasanjo was confirmed as president for a second term despite Nsofor’s objections. Twelve years later, however, Buhari was elected president of Nigeria.
Buhari first appointed Nsofor an ambassador in 2017. His confirmation hearing on March 1, 2017, didn’t go well. He refused to recite the national anthem when asked to by one senator, Gbenga Ashafa, who was concerned with Nsofor’s age and fitness to serve. When it was suggested that, at age 82, Nsofor might be too old to be an ambassador, he replied: “Go and ask Mugabe who is still working.”
Robert Mugabe was forced out as Zimbabwe’s strongman leader in November 2017 at age 93. Nsofor’s nomination was denied. When asked later if he was posted to France how he would deal with 39-year-old French President Emmanuel Macron, Nsofor said, “I will respect him despite his age.”
However, President Buhari renominated Nsofor at the end of March and after a more subdued appearance before the senate, he was confirmed to be an ambassador on June 7.
Nsofor is married and has three children.