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BREAKING: Court Orders Police To Unseal Disputed Lekki Property

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Justice Othman Musa of a Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court sitting in Maitama has ordered the Nigeria Police to unseal a disputed property located in the Lekki area of Lagos.

Justice Musa ordered the Assistant Inspector General of Police, Zone 2, Lagos State, to forthwith unseal the property in dispute, which the court had sealed via en exparte order granted in the case.

Officers of the court had in December 2025 sealed up the property located at Lekki Peninsula Scheme, Lagos, following an exparte order granted by Justice Musa.

The sealed up property houses various business entities which have been operating from the premises for several years.

The exparte order was granted in a fundamental rights enforcement suit numbered FCT/HC/CV/4636/2025, instituted by Mr. Henry Ugonna Orabuchi against the Nigeria Police Force and others.

The plaintiff (Orabuchi) had alleged that his fundamental rights as guaranteed under sections 34, 35, 36, 37, 41, and 44 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), and articles 9 and 14 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act, have been breached.

He claimed that he purchased 3,000 square meters of reclaimed land situated at the back of Plot No A Block 12, Lekki Peninsula Scheme, Lagos State from the Landlord, Mr. Emecheta Elvis Eze, which has nothing to do with the premises where the business entities are located.

The plaintiff filed the suit to shield him from honouring the invitation of the Nigeria Police Force, following a petition against him by Prof. Mike Ozekhome, SAN, (lawyer to Mr. Emecheta) over alleged criminal trespass, damage to property and threat to life.

In the fundamental rights suit filed by the law office of Chikaosolu Ojukwu, SAN, on behalf of the plaintiff, it was argued that the police invitation infringes on Orabuchi’s fundamental rights and is aimed at compelling him into relinquishing his lawful proprietary and contractual rights over the 3,000 square meters of reclaimed land behind the sealed up property.

In his exparte application, Ojukwu urged the court to grant an exparte order to seal up the Lagos property.

On November 24, 2025, the court granted an order to seal and secure the entire property, including the reclaimed land at the back of the property measuring 3,000 square meters. The judge also ordered the immediate stoppage of all construction works, activities, actions or steps on the said property while ensuring that no person, authority or entity is permitted access to or entry upon the property pending the hearing and determination of the substantive suit pending before the court.

However, at the last hearing in the matter, after counsel had made their submissions, Justice Musa held that the Applicant is entitled to the rights to personal liberty, freedom of movement, and property interests as guaranteed under sections 35, 41, and 44(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended), and articles 9 and 14 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act.

Vacating the earlier exparte order, the court held, “It is hereby declared that the 1st Respondent, whether acting through the 2nd Respondent, any other officer under its command and control, including the 3rd and 4th Respondents, or any section, unit or department however described, cannot, under the guise of an investigation, invite, arrest, detain, or otherwise harass the Applicant, whether on its own volition or at the prompting or instigation of the 5th Respondent or an. other person, in respect of the contract of sale dated 25th January 2023 between the 5th Respondent and the Applicant, the dispute being purely civil and contractual in nature.

“As I have earlier mentioned in this judgment, when this matter came up on 26/02/2026, Learned Senior Counsel for the 5th Respondent, Chief Arthur Obi Okafor, SAN, drew the attention of the Court to Motion No. M/16911/2025 seeking to set aside the interim order of this Court made on 24/11/2025 and, with the agreement of the parties, the said application was to abide by the judgment of this Court.

“Having now delivered judgment in this matter, the said motion is, by operation of law, deemed to have been determined and subsumed by this judgement. The interim order of this Court made on 24/11/2025 has, upon the final determination of this suit, spent its force and ceased to have any operative effect; nevertheless, for the avoidance of any doubt, the said order is hereby expressly set aside.

“Consequently, the 1st to 4th Respondents are hereby ordered either by themselves or the Assistant Inspector General of Police, Zone 2, Lagos State to forthwith unseal the property in dispute preserved to avoid its destruction. This is the judgment of this Court.”

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Nollywood Actress Kehinde Bankole Seeks Action From FRN Over Kidnapping

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Award-winning Nollywood actress Kehinde Bankole has issued a direct demand to the Federal Government, the Office of the National Security Advisor, and the country’s intelligence agencies to immediately deploy “full wrath and force” to end the escalating wave of kidnappings in the country.

In a social media post on Wednesday, the actress voiced the growing exhaustion of everyday Nigerians, declaring that the public is tired of “condolence speeches” and demands immediate, tactical results to save the lives of citizens.

“It is no longer about why it is happening; it is now simply about lives! Lives are being lost! This should not be our new normal, children running for their lives in 2026! Oh God,” she wrote.

In her post, Bankole tackled a political defence that rising insecurity and kidnappings are being sponsored by opposition elements or saboteurs seeking to de-market the current administration.

Rather than using “sabotage” as an excuse, Bankole argued that such theories should compel the state’s security apparatus to act with even greater aggression.

She wrote, “Even if the kidnappings are a smear campaign on the government, it should be all the more reason for the Office of the National Security Advisor, along with the Presidency, to tackle insecurity with full wrath and force.
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“Find a way! No bigger political campaign. Tactically flush out their “saboteurs” if that exists. That should be the focus now. They must make the National Intelligence Agency, the DSS, the Ministry of Defence, and security agencies work! Because enough is enough! The people are tired of condolence speeches and need only bigger action, “ she said.

The actress stated that the political class must move beyond codolence speeches to provide solutions.

“Our cry is for something decisive to be done and to be done fast. They must put everyone to work! They must tactfully fish out who is causing this and find a way. All hands have to be forced to be on deck! The people need only results, no more condolence speeches,” she wrote.

Bankole’s outcry comes amid heightened nationwide anxiety following the recent mass abduction of at least 25 school children and seven teachers in Ogbomoso, Oyo State, which also resulted in the brutal murder of a mathematics teacher in captivity.

Her post also adds to an increasing number of calls from celebrities speaking out against insecurity and banditry.

PUNCH Online reports that actress Opeyemi Aiyeola recently made an appeal to politically connected celebrities and traditional rulers to lobby the presidency for urgent action against kidnappings and banditry.

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JUST-IN: NAPTIP Seeks Stronger Teacher Education To Curb Human Trafficking

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The Director-General of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons, Binta Bello, has stressed the need for sustained education and capacity building for teachers as part of efforts to combat human trafficking in Nigeria.

Bello said preventing human trafficking through education and sensitisation remained more effective than addressing its consequences after victims had already been trafficked.

Represented by the Director of Training and Manpower Development at NAPTIP, Ebele Ulasi, the DG spoke on Tuesday in Abeokuta during the opening of a two-day capacity-building workshop for 150 selected secondary school teachers across Ogun State.

The training, themed “Mainstreaming Trafficking in Persons Content Into The Revised National Curriculum,” was organised to expose teachers to the integration of anti-human trafficking education into the basic and secondary school curriculum.

The workshop forms part of the School Anti-Trafficking Education and Empowerment Project funded by the Netherlands government and implemented by the International Centre for Migration Policies Development in collaboration with NAPTIP and the Ogun State Government.

Bello described teachers as critical stakeholders in the fight against human trafficking, particularly at the grassroots level.

She said the training was designed to equip teachers with updated knowledge and skills on trafficking in persons content recently infused into Nigeria’s revised basic education curriculum.

“This workshop is designed to empower subject teachers to effectively deliver trafficking-related content to pupils and students because education remains one of the most powerful tools to prevent human trafficking.

“Trafficking in persons continues to rank among the most serious human rights violations in Nigeria and globally, with children accounting for more than 55 per cent of identified victims.

“And many of these victims are school-age children who should be safe in learning environments but are instead targeted and exploited by traffickers.

“That is why we believe that leveraging on education to create massive awareness among these young ones, to arm them with right information,” she said.

The DG recalled that NAPTIP’s collaboration with the education sector began with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with the Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council in July 2014.
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She added that the second phase of curriculum enhancement was completed in 2025 to update and expand trafficking-related content to reflect emerging trends.

“Life is a continuous learning process, and that is why we are here today—to update your knowledge on everything concerning human trafficking, so that you, as teachers, can cascade this knowledge down to our children in schools.

“By teaching trafficking-in-persons themes across selected subjects in both primary and secondary schools, we aim to catch our children young and empower them early enough to protect themselves and others.

“With your help, schools can become early warning platforms and safe havens for vulnerable children,” she said.

She also commended the media for supporting public awareness campaigns against trafficking.

In his remarks, the Ogun State Commissioner for Education, Prof Abayomi Arigbabu, urged teachers to play active roles in protecting children from trafficking and other forms of exploitation by fully integrating trafficking-in-persons education into classroom teaching.

Represented by the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, Mrs Tosin Oloko, Arigbabu described the initiative as a strategic intervention aimed at protecting children through education.

“Today’s gathering represents a bold and strategic step towards protecting the dignity, future, and destiny of our children through education.

“In a rapidly changing world where young people are increasingly exposed to deception, exploitation, abuse, and human trafficking, the role of teachers has become more critical than ever,” Oloko said.

Also speaking, the Project Manager with ICMPD, Mrs Rhoda Dia-Johnson, said the training was designed to equip teachers with appropriate teaching methods for delivering trafficking-in-persons content recently infused into the curriculum.

She added that participants were expected to return to their schools as anti-trafficking advocates and extend the training to other teachers across the state.

Officials of ICMPD, Mr Samuel Okorojie and Mr Favour Simeon, also stressed the need to properly equip teachers with knowledge and skills to educate and protect learners against trafficking-related risks, noting that human trafficking continued to spread across communities.

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