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Backstreet abortion: How ‘Egusi Aije’ ruins lives, destroys women’s future in Ogun

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In the quiet corners of Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, a bitter secret is cutting short the lives of both young and aged desperate women.

To the casual observer, ‘Egusi ai je’ is merely a wild, bitter melon crawling across the soil but to others, it has been whispered about in low tones as an ancestral ‘remedy’ for unwanted pregnancies.

It is not a new trend; it is an entrenched ancestral practice, a substance not brewed or swallowed, but inserted into the vagina.

For 35-year-old Ashabi (not real name) a resident in the Abeokuta South local government area of the state, this herbal gamble proved to be a fatal mistake, turning a private crisis into a public tragedy and leaving her family to mourn a life cut short.

The mother of three wasn’t new to it as it had always been her safe haven until the very day it claimed her life.

According to her younger sister who spoke under anonymity, Ashabi left it too long in her, leading to the disruption of her intestines and then her death.

“If it stays long in your body, it can get to your stomach and damage your intestines.

“My elder sister already had three kids and got pregnant so she decided to use it. She has been using it before and it was okay but on that day she did it, It wasn’t perfect.

“After using it, she saw the blood…let’s say 3 hours after insertion but forgot to remove it back.

“Before we could rush her to the hospital so it can be flushed out, it was already too late. The doctor said it had damaged all of her intestines,” she said.

“If anybody wants to use it they have to be careful, it’s very dangerous and it kills especially if one is not careful. I know so many people who use it and it comes out perfect.

“When you insert it, don’t allow it to go too deep because it is very powerful, once you notice blood after insertion you must remove it. Don’t forget it inside,” she added.

A lady simply identified as Kafilat said  that she used it alongside other herbs to remove an ectopic pregnancy, describing the experience as “hell”.

“I have also used it, but I prepared it with other herbs to flush out an ectopic pregnancy. It was hell, I felt like I was going to die when I took the herbs and when the blood was coming out it was very very painful” she grimaced, shaking her head as she recalled the memory.

“It’s very dangerous and isn’t kept around children,” Kafilat added.

Our correspondent on visiting a popular herb seller in the Oke Ilewo area of Abeokuta, learnt that the preparation itself is simple: the wild melon is peeled, pounded with a little amount of water, and molded into small, potent balls.

It is safe, just use a new candle for insertion – Herb seller insists

A herb seller popularly known as Aunty Alagbo dismissed fears, insisting that aside from being affordable, it’s entirely safe and devoid of side effects, provided one follows a specific ritual of insertion.

“It’s not expensive and with just N2,000 I can prepare it for you” she told our correspondent.

It was ready two days after making payment.

“The important thing is to insert it well. Don’t use your bare finger because of infection, use a new candle, the back of the candle is what you will use to push it into your vagina so it can enter very well,” Aunty Alagbo said with ease, suggesting that the depth of the insertion is the key to success.

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“You will insert the two of them,” she instructed, adding: “Insert one first and insert the other immediately after.”

While the sister of the deceased stated that leaving the substance in for too long led to organ disruption, the herb seller argued that the substance should remain in the vagina until the body reacts, a process which according to her could take two to three days.

“After some days, it all depends on the type of body system, but after 2-3 days, you will see blood coming out like menstruation.

“You can also take gin or hot water so it can work fast,” she added.

Unsafe methods leave women bleeding, infertile, or on dialysis – Gynaecologist

Dr. Modupe Adedeji, Consultant Obstetrician & Gynaecologist, Lagos State University Teaching Hospital, warned that ‘Egusi Aije’ and other backstreet abortion methods are dangerous.

Modupe in an interview , asserted that anything inserted into the vagina must be sterile, asserting that the presence of foreign body can lead to infection and that alone is enough to cause contraction, which results in the termination of pregnancy.

“And maybe that is what they are assuming is working, that is making the baby come out. By the time victims get to the hospital, the damage is severe.

“The patient will have a fever. The patient will be bleeding. The temperature will be very high. That is what we call septic abortion.

“Treatment then goes beyond removing products of conception to managing kidney failure, intestinal infection and other complications that follow,” she said.

The women’s health advocate popularly known as Dupsythegynae, argued that some of the complications can be lifelong and even result in death.

“Some people even end up on dialysis. If the kidneys don’t recover, then you may have to talk about kidney transplant.

“At times, the uterus is so damaged we have to remove it.

“Imagine a young girl at 17, 18, and you’re removing the uterus, if she’s supposed to live 100 years. How do you think she will survive without having children?” She queried.

The Obstetrician lamented that septic abortion accounts for about 10% of maternal deaths in Nigeria, ascribing the cause to stigma and restrictive abortion laws.

“When we say 10% of for example 100 million women, that’s already 10 million. When we talk about the percentage, it looks small.

“But we’re talking about deaths. The young girl is someone’s daughter, her future is supposed to be bright, but then, that life goes.

“At the end of the day, people keep doing these things and hide them. Because if you are caught, you, and the person that is helping you to do it, everybody is a criminal.

“Even though it doesn’t sound right or sounds like it’s not happening, it’s really happening.”

The gynecologist, however, called for better insurance coverage and legal reforms saying, “Let the insurance work. Most importantly, the government should look into that law very well.

“Let’s open up our borders so that those people that really need the services can access safe care. When a woman gets to that point she becomes desperate. It’s the desperation that makes them fall into all these things.”

Maputo Protocol vs. The Nigerian Reality

It was gathered that women do not turn to these toxic wild melons just because they want to, they use them because safe, legal healthcare options are treated like a tight-lipped taboo.

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Sadly, this dangerous black market exists even though Nigeria signed a major international agreement to protect women’s reproductive health rights.

Recall that 22 years ago, the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights adopted the Maputo Protocol.

It made history as the first legally binding international treaty to explicitly guarantee a woman’s right to a safe, legal abortion.

Under Article 14(2)(c), state parties are obligated to permit the medical termination of a pregnancy under specific conditions: in cases of sexual assault, rape, and incest; when the pregnancy poses a risk to the pregnant person’s life or mental health; or in cases of severe fetal abnormalities.

Yet, across Africa, the implementation of these rights remains fractured. Findings have shown that out of the 55 African states, 44 states have ratified the Maputo Protocol, 8 have signed but not ratified and 3 states have neither signed nor ratified.

It was  reports that 12 countries like South Africa, Cape Verde, and Rwanda permit abortion above and beyond the baseline legal thresholds listed in the protocol.

While 11 countries like Ghana, Angola, Burkina Faso, Congo, legalized it precisely within all the conditions outlined by the treaty.

Meanwhile, 16 others, including Nigeria, Algeria, and Cameroon recognized some, but not all, of the protocol’s provisions, leaving the legal boundaries confusing and unclear, while places like Senegal, Congo(Brazzaville), Sierra Leone and Mauritania ban abortion completely, no matter the circumstances.

While Nigeria sits in the “partial access” category, on paper, federal and state laws allow for a pregnancy to be ended to save a mother’s life or under extreme health complications, but out on the streets, these legal exceptions are wrapped in a suffocating silence, leaving the average woman in the dark about what is actually allowed.

Convinced that formal hospitals will judge them or turn them away, vulnerable women are now forced to make desperate choices.

They bypass the healthcare system entirely, turning instead to backstreet herb sellers.

Women right advocate calls for more awareness, prosecution of quacks

Wemimo Adewumi Obiwale, a women’s rights advocate and sexual reproductive health trainer, asserted that women and girls in vulnerable situations who do not want pregnancies will always seek alternatives, often at great risk to their lives.

Wemimo harped on the need for intensified public awareness and campaigns, lamenting that despite adopting the Safe Termination of Pregnancy, STOP, guidelines, many residents in Ogun state remain unaware of the policy, forcing them to resort to dangerous methods.

“Imagine the trend of taking a form of egusi and inserting it into the vagina to procure abortion, which, by experience and by fact, leads to heavy bleeding, could lead to complications, and in cases has even led to death, but they still keep exploring these dangerous methods, because they are not aware that in Ogun state, there is now a safe termination of pregnancy guideline.

“Laws can end up as documents in drawers gathering dust if people do not know about them, if people who should implement are not being monitored, and if there’s no accountability. These laws are about saving the lives of women. It’s a public health emergency because the numbers of women dying from unsafe abortions are high,” she stated.

According to her, women and girls should know the designated health centres where they can access care for complicated or unwanted pregnancies.

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“So the Ogun State government has done very well, but now they need to do a lot more awareness campaigns.

“Let women and girls know the designated centers they can go to when they have complicated pregnancies or unwanted pregnancies. It’s time to accelerate work, advocacy, and move into the communities, roll up the sleeves, work to save lives,” she said.

The rights advocate also called for the training, engagement and collaboration with traditional medicine practitioners and herb sellers, stating that they remain highly trusted in local communities and many residents still patronize them.

Meanwhile, Adewumi argued that quacks, when found, should be prosecuted, asserting that accountability is key to stopping harmful practices that put women’s lives at risk.

“We need to engage them (trado-medical practitioners) and monitor them. It’s not enough to teach them, there’s also a need to discipline them.

“We need to expose the quacks. The ones killing women and girls. We need to make an example of them for others to learn from,” she advocated.

Ogun to begin crackdown on unregistered practitioners, quacks

In an interview , the Executive Secretary for the Alternate Medicine Board in Ogun State (OGAMB), Dr Ayodeji Erinle, disclosed that efforts are ongoing to crackdown unregistered and quack traditional medicine practitioners operating underground across the state.

He admitted that many untrained individuals are currently posing as herbal practitioners, explaining that the move will sanitize the alternative medicine sector and protect residents from unsafe herbal practices.

According to him, a task force would soon be deployed to apprehend and prosecute those involved in illegal practices.

Erinle noted that the board is also intensifying efforts to register and monitor trained traditional medical practitioners, explaining that registration would only be granted after proper verification of training and competence.

According to him, the registration drive will enable OGAMB to track practitioners, verify claims, and take action when complaints arise.

“What the board is doing is to register the herb sellers. We expect them to be registered and before registering them we ensure that they are well trained in their own local and proper training and then monitor them.

“But of course, there are so many of them that are actually fake or have not been trained properly. They are just doing what they know and those that are well trained are actually not happy with their activities.

“So, what we are doing now is to encourage those that are trained to come, let’s know them, we know some of them but we want to know more of them. Let them be registered and then, we would now go after those that are not registered and those who do all kinds of illegal practices.

“Very soon a task force will come out to ensure that the quacks are stopped. The full force of the law will come heavily on those that refuse to register,” he warned.

Meanwhile, Erinle noted that the board also conducts sensitisation programmes across the state to educate women and youths on the dangers of patronising quacks, and informs the public about approved standards and channels for safe practice.

“If you are sure of yourself and know what you are doing, come and register under the board. We would check you out and certify you,” he added.

Source: Dailypost.ng

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UK backs reforms as Abbas, Bamidele list safeguards for State Police

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The United Kingdom on Wednesday threw its weight behind Nigeria’s ongoing efforts to establish state police, describing the National Assembly’s security reform initiative as a major step towards building a more accountable, responsive and community-focused policing system,

Similarly, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas and the Senate Leader, Opeyemi Bamidele, assured Nigerians that the proposed constitutional amendment contains strong safeguards to prevent abuse by governors and other powerful interests.

The endorsement came at the National Security Roundtable held as part of the 2026 National Assembly Open Week in Abuja, where lawmakers, security chiefs, governors, ministers and development partners converged to deliberate on legislative reforms aimed at addressing Nigeria’s worsening security challenges.

The roundtable, supported by the United Kingdom Government-funded Strengthening Peace and Resilience in Nigeria Programme, focused on state policing, security sector reforms, inter-agency collaboration, institutional accountability and the legislative framework required to strengthen Nigeria’s security architecture.

The discussions come at a critical period for the country as the National Assembly considers what many observers have described as one of the most far-reaching constitutional amendments since the return to democratic rule in 1999.

The proposal to establish a state police has dominated national discourse for more than two decades, with supporters arguing that decentralising policing would improve intelligence gathering and response to local security threats, while opponents have consistently warned that governors could deploy state-controlled police against political opponents.

The debate has gained renewed momentum under President Bola Tinubu following the transmission of an executive bill seeking to amend the Constitution to allow states to establish their own police services.

The proposal is widely seen as part of broader efforts to tackle persistent insecurity across the country, including banditry, kidnapping, terrorism, violent farmer-herder clashes and attacks on rural communities.

In a statement issued ahead of the roundtable, the British High Commission said the engagement was expected to shape legislative reforms, particularly the ongoing constitutional amendment process on the establishment of a state police.

The Head of Development Cooperation at the British High Commission, Cynthia Rowe, stressed that meaningful security reforms must be anchored in institutions that are accountable to citizens and capable of responding effectively to emerging threats.

He said, “Sustainable security requires strong, accountable institutions that are responsive to the needs of the people.

“The UK Government remains committed to supporting Nigeria’s legislative frameworks to ensure that security interventions are transparent, well-resourced, and firmly rooted in respect for human rights.

“This roundtable is a commendable step towards codifying reforms that will protect vulnerable communities and foster long-term stability.”

The British High Commission noted that the meeting brought together key actors in Nigeria’s security sector, including the National Security Adviser, the Chief of Defence Staff, the Inspector-General of Police and the Ministers of Defence, Interior and Police Affairs, alongside relevant committees of the National Assembly responsible for security oversight.

Governors from Kaduna, Katsina, Plateau and Benue, the four focal states under the SPRiNG Programme, as well as those of Kwara, Zamfara, Niger and Borno, also participated in the engagement to provide perspectives on the evolving security situation in their states.

According to the organisers, the objective was to assess the country’s current security landscape and identify legislative and budgetary measures capable of strengthening security institutions while supporting the proposed state police framework.

Speaking on the significance of the initiative, the Team Leader of the SPRiNG Programme, Ukoha Ukiwo, said experience from the programme’s peacebuilding interventions had demonstrated that lasting security reforms require a solid legal foundation.

“Our work across our state compacts has continually highlighted that operational peacebuilding must be backed by robust legal frameworks. The focus of this roundtable on state policing, security funding, and accountability is incredibly timely.

“By bridging the gap between grassroots realities and legislative action, we can ensure that informal and formal security architectures work cohesively to build formidable resilience in communities across Nigeria,” he stated.

The organisers added that discussions at the roundtable also centred on responses to banditry, kidnapping and farmer-herder conflicts, while exploring how technology, intelligence sharing, community engagement and improved inter-agency collaboration could enhance Nigeria’s response to emerging security threats.

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The meeting is expected to produce a communiqué outlining priority reforms and recommendations to guide the implementation of state policing and other legislative initiatives aimed at strengthening public safety.

Also speaking at the event, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas, assured Nigerians that the proposed constitutional amendment would contain sufficient safeguards to prevent state police from becoming instruments of political intimidation.

Abbas described the proposal as one of the most consequential constitutional reforms currently before the National Assembly, noting that it marked the first time a sitting President had formally transmitted an executive bill seeking to establish state police.

He commended President Tinubu for taking what he described as a historic step after decades of national debate on the issue.

“For the first time in our history, a sitting president has made state police a central part of national reform. He has done so not with words alone, but with a bill that now sits before the House of Representatives.”

Continuing, Abbas acknowledged widespread concerns that governors could exploit state police for partisan purposes but insisted that the proposed legislation deliberately incorporates constitutional safeguards to prevent such abuse.

“I understand the concern that many people bring to this discussion, and it is a reasonable one. It is the fear that state police could become the private army of a governor or a political godfather,” he said.

According to the Speaker, Nigeria’s growing population and increasingly complex security environment had exposed the limitations of a centrally controlled policing system.

He argued that a country of more than 200 million people could no longer rely solely on a single national police force to tackle increasingly localised security threats, citing banditry, kidnapping, violent farmer-herder clashes and attacks on schools as examples of crimes requiring local knowledge and faster response.

“A country as large and as varied as ours cannot be policed forever by one central Force run from the capital.

“More than 200 million people live across our forests, our farmlands, and our borders, and a single force cannot know every community or watch every road,” he added.

Abbas explained that under the proposed constitutional amendment, the Nigeria Police Force would be renamed the Federal Police Service, while states willing to establish their own police organisations would be empowered to do so through laws passed by their respective Houses of Assembly.

He stressed that no state police service would become operational until it satisfied national minimum standards to be prescribed by the National Assembly.

The Federal Police, he said, would continue to retain exclusive responsibility for terrorism, border security, federal offences and policing the Federal Capital Territory.

The Speaker further explained that Commissioners of Police would be appointed based on the recommendation of the National Police Council and confirmed by state legislatures.

He added that such commissioners could only be removed by a two-thirds majority of the relevant House of Assembly for just cause.

Abbas also disclosed that the proposed amendment empowers the federal police to intervene where a state police service collapses or is unlawfully deployed, but only under clearly defined constitutional conditions, with legislative notification and judicial oversight.

“If a state police breaks down, or falls into the wrong hands, or turns against the very people it should protect, the Constitution allows the federal police to step in,” he added.

The Speaker advocated a phased implementation of state policing, warning against allowing all 36 states to establish police services simultaneously without adequate institutional preparation.

“We should move step by step, state by state, learning as Germany and Canada learned, rather than switching on 36 new forces on the same day,” he counselled.

He also emphasised the importance of sustainable funding, warning that states should not establish police services they lack the financial capacity to maintain.

“We must settle the question of money from the very beginning, so that no state creates a police force it cannot pay, and no unpaid officer becomes a threat to the citizen he has sworn to protect,” he added.

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Drawing lessons from federal systems such as Germany, Canada, India and the United States, Abbas argued that decentralised policing can only succeed where there are uniform national standards, effective intelligence sharing and robust accountability mechanisms.

He further advocated legislation to establish a national criminal and biometric database, strengthen intelligence sharing among security agencies, improve border security and enhance the welfare, training and equipment of security personnel.

Reaffirming the House of Representatives’ commitment to the reform process, Abbas said lawmakers would ensure that the legislation strikes the right balance between strengthening internal security and safeguarding democratic institutions.

“Let us build a police service that protects the citizen in the smallest village as faithfully as it protects the powerful in our cities.

“That is the country we owe our people, and it is the country the House of Representatives is determined to help build,” he said.

Also on Wednesday, the Leader of the Senate and Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on the Review of the 1999 Constitution, Bamidele, provided further insight into the constitutional safeguards being considered by the National Assembly to shield state police services from undue political influence.

In a statement issued by his Directorate of Media and Public Affairs, Bamidele acknowledged that many of the concerns raised by Nigerians over state policing were legitimate and rooted in the country’s constitutional history.

“Nearly all public concerns on the state police proposal are well founded and obviously cannot be swept under the carpet considering their weight and enormity.”

According to him, much of the apprehension stems from Nigeria’s experience during the First Republic, when the 1960 and 1963 Constitutions empowered regional governments to establish police forces that were sometimes accused of serving partisan interests.

He said the National Assembly was, therefore, developing a comprehensive framework of constitutional safeguards that would strengthen institutional independence, enforce professional discipline and guarantee financial autonomy for state police services.

Bamidele disclosed that one of the key proposals under consideration is to make funding for state police services a first-line charge, similar to the constitutional funding arrangement currently enjoyed by the judiciary.

“That is why we called it a first line charge. In other words, the Commissioner of Police and State Police Service Commission must have a guaranteed source of funds provided for in the 1999 Constitution in a way that the police chief will not be subject to the whims and caprices of a state governor,” he said.

He argued that guaranteeing financial independence would prevent governors from starving state police services of funds whenever disagreements arise between elected officials and security agencies.

“Part of the critical issue we must resolve, even in amending the 1999 Constitution, is to guarantee the financial independence of state police services.

“In other words, it should not be at the discretion of a governor of a state entirely whether he wants to fund state police service or not.

“If a state police service is not responding well to the directives of a governor, he may choose not to fund it. We must prevent such a situation.

“We are, therefore, under the obligation to make provision for a certain percentage of a state budget specifically for the operations of state police services. Access to funds must be clearly spelt out,” he noted.

Bamidele said the proposed financial safeguards were intended not only to prevent political interference but also to shield state police services from manipulation by wealthy individuals, criminal syndicates and other vested interests.

While acknowledging that many critics of state policing had focused largely on the possibility of governors abusing the system, the Senate Leader argued that inadequate funding could expose the new security outfits to even wider forms of influence.

He said, “Business class can also abuse it. Some other organisations, even criminals or cabals, can abuse the state police service because it is a question of ‘he who pays the piper dictates the tune.

“If a state police service is not well funded by any means, we have a situation where it may as well be a highway to nowhere. That is one thing all of us must prevent.”

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He assured Nigerians that the National Assembly remained committed to creating a state police service that would be accountable to the people, adding that concerns raised by stakeholders would be reflected in the ongoing constitutional amendment process.

Bamidele stressed that addressing the issue of funding was critical to the success of the proposed reform, warning that poorly funded police services would struggle to discharge their constitutional responsibilities effectively.

He explained that the objective of the constitutional amendment was to move policing from the Exclusive Legislative List, where it is currently vested solely in the Federal Government, to the Concurrent Legislative List, thereby empowering states to establish their own police services through legislation.

According to him, the amendment seeks to create a framework that balances operational independence with constitutional oversight while ensuring that state police services remain professionally managed and financially sustainable.

The Senate Leader maintained that the ongoing constitutional review presents an opportunity to address longstanding structural weaknesses in Nigeria’s internal security architecture, particularly as insecurity continues to evolve across different parts of the country.

The renewed push for state police follows years of growing concern over the capacity of the Nigeria Police Force to effectively respond to increasingly localised security threats in a federation of more than 200 million people.

In recent years, Nigeria has witnessed persistent attacks by bandits in the North-West, terrorist activities in parts of the North-East, widespread kidnappings for ransom, violent farmer-herder clashes across the North-Central and increasing communal conflicts in several states.

Security experts, governors, traditional rulers and civil society organisations have repeatedly argued that decentralising policing would improve intelligence gathering, strengthen community engagement and enable faster responses to emergencies because officers recruited from local communities are often more familiar with the terrain, language and social dynamics of their areas of operation.

However, the proposal has remained one of the country’s most contentious constitutional issues since the return to democratic rule in 1999.

Opponents have consistently warned that granting states control over police formations could expose security institutions to political interference, particularly during elections, recalling allegations of abuse associated with regional police structures during the First Republic.

Those concerns have featured prominently in previous constitutional amendment exercises, preventing successive administrations from securing the political consensus required to establish a state police despite repeated calls for decentralisation.

Tinubu’s decision to transmit an executive bill seeking the creation of state police has, however, placed the issue at the centre of the current constitutional review process, marking the first formal attempt by a sitting President to initiate such an amendment through an executive proposal.

Wednesday’s National Security Roundtable formed part of activities marking the 2026 National Assembly Open Week, an annual engagement designed to deepen public participation in legislative activities and promote dialogue on major national policy issues.

Beyond state policing, participants examined broader security sector reforms, including institutional accountability, security funding, intelligence sharing, technology-driven policing and improved collaboration among security agencies.

Discussions also focused on legislative and budgetary measures considered necessary to strengthen Nigeria’s security institutions and improve responses to banditry, kidnapping, farmer-herder conflicts and other emerging threats.

The organisers said the meeting would culminate in a communiqué outlining priority reforms and recommendations to guide the implementation of state policing and other legislative initiatives aimed at strengthening public safety.

The Strengthening Peace and Resilience in Nigeria Programme, which supported the event, is a United Kingdom-funded initiative that promotes conflict prevention, peacebuilding and institutional resilience in selected states through stronger community security structures, improved governance and collaboration between formal and informal security institutions.

With the House of Representatives and the Senate Constitution Review Committees expected to continue work on the executive bill in the coming months, the debate over state police is set to intensify as lawmakers seek to balance demands for decentralised policing with safeguards designed to protect democratic governance, institutional independence and the rule of law.

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Court orders FG takeover of 48 properties linked to Malami

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The Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the final forfeiture of 48 properties linked to a former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN), to the Federal Government.

Justice Joyce Abdulmalik, in a judgment delivered in Abuja on Wednesday, held that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had established the reasonable suspicion required by law to justify the forfeiture of the assets.

The judge ruled that Malami, his family members and companies linked to the properties failed to dislodge the commission’s allegation that the assets were acquired with proceeds of unlawful activities.

Before delivering the substantive judgment, Justice Abdulmalik dismissed several applications, motions on notice, and applications to show cause filed by the respondents, describing them as “wanting in merit.”

She held that the issue before the court was not the ownership of the properties but the legitimacy of the funds used to acquire them.

“The issue before the court is not who owns the property, but how legitimate the funds used to acquire the properties are,” the judge said.

She added that the respondents had “not dislodged the reasonable suspicion that the property was acquired by unlawful activities.”

Relying on Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act, Justice Abdulmalik granted the EFCC’s application for final forfeiture.

The court, however, discharged the interim forfeiture order in respect of some of the properties.

The anti-graft agency had, in January, instituted civil forfeiture proceedings seeking the permanent forfeiture of 57 properties valued at N212.8bn, alleging that they were proceeds of unlawful activities linked to the former AGF.

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On January 16, vacation judge, Justice Emeka Nwite, granted an interim forfeiture order over the properties and directed the EFCC to publish the order in a national newspaper to enable interested persons to appear before the court and show cause why the assets should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.

The properties are located in Abuja, Kano, Kebbi and Kaduna states.

Following the publication, Malami, his wife, Nana Hadiza Malami, his son, Abdulaziz Abubakar Malami, and several companies linked to the assets challenged the interim forfeiture order.

They argued that the properties were lawfully acquired and contended that the EFCC failed to establish any nexus between the assets and alleged unlawful activities.

The respondents further maintained that the commission relied on speculation rather than credible evidence and neither proved that the properties were proceeds of crime nor identified any specific criminal offence from which they were allegedly derived.

After the court resumed from its annual vacation, the case was reassigned to Justice Abdulmalik for hearing and determination.

At the hearing, counsel for the EFCC argued that investigations showed the properties were acquired with proceeds of unlawful activities and held in the names of individuals and companies acting as fronts for Malami.

The commission also submitted that under the law governing civil forfeiture proceedings, it only needed to establish reasonable suspicion and not prove the case beyond a reasonable doubt.

After parties adopted their final written addresses in May, the court reserved judgment.

The judgment, initially fixed for July 6, was deferred twice before Justice Abdulmalik finally delivered the ruling on Wednesday.

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EFCC unveils properties

A statement by the EFCC spokesman, Dele Oyewale, later listed the forfeited properties as Rayhaan University in Kebbi State, including its permanent, temporary and third campuses, the vice chancellor’s residence and Rayhaan Radio located along Sani Abacha Bypass Road, Birnin Kebbi.

Other assets forfeited were Rayhaan Agro Allied Factory with its factory buildings, machinery, mosque, staff quarters and Bustan Building; Azbir Arena comprising Azbir Hotel, printing press, gallery, gardens, clothing outlet, pharmacy and supermarket; Al-Afiya Energy tanker garage; Rayhaan Security House; an uncompleted two-storey plaza in Birnin Kebbi; Amasdul Oil and Gas filling station; Zeennoor Hotel in Kano with 131 rooms; Zeennoor Mosque; and the old Zeennoor Hotel building.

The court also ordered the forfeiture of several high-value properties in Abuja, Kano and Kebbi, including luxury residential buildings, hotels, commercial plazas, warehouses, petroleum stations, farmlands and estates.

The EFCC said that with Wednesday’s ruling, ownership of the 48 properties has been transferred to the Federal Government.

Malami is currently on trial for an alleged N8.7bn fraud alongside his wife and son.

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Six killed as gas truck explodes at Kogi Army checkpoint

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No fewer than six people were killed on Tuesday night after a gas-laden truck exploded at an Army checkpoint along the Abuja-Lokoja Federal Highway in Kogi State.

The explosion reportedly occurred within the jurisdiction of the Chikara Division, triggering an emergency response by police officers, personnel of the Motor Traffic Division, and officials of the Federal Road Safety Corps.

An eyewitness told our correspondent that the truck, which was conveying gas cylinders, exploded as it approached the Army checkpoint, igniting a massive fire that spread to other vehicles.

“The driver of the gas truck and his motor boy were burnt to death. The fire also engulfed three other trucks, killing their drivers and motor boys. In all, six people lost their lives in the incident,” the eyewitness said.

The affected trucks, bearing registration numbers from Jigawa State, Lagos State and the Federal Capital Territory, were destroyed in the inferno.

The victims’ remains were evacuated to the General Hospital, Abaji, while the burnt vehicles were cleared from the highway to restore the free flow of traffic.

Efforts to obtain official confirmation from the Kogi State Police Command were unsuccessful, as the Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Salisu Oyiza Afusat, did not respond to calls and text messages seeking comment as of the time of filing this report.

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