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‘Nigeria needs urban health wake-up call, as Africa, Asia cities grow faster than health systems can contain’

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NIGERIA’S urban health system is heading for tougher times, as new projections show that urban populations across Africa and Asia will grow by as much as 90 per cent over the next two decades, health policy experts say. 

The experts warn that without urgent reforms, cities such as Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano and Enugu could face deepening health crises.

This warning comes from the (community-led effective urban health systems) CHORUS Urban Health Consortium, a multi-country research group working in Nigeria, Ghana, Bangladesh and Nepal, which says cities are expanding far faster than the health systems meant to serve them.

Speaking from the Nigerian perspective, a professor, Obinna Onwujekwe, Lead of the Health Policy Research Group at the University of Nigeria and Nigeria’s lead for the Consortium, said the situation demands deliberate efforts to build resilient health systems.

“Cities across Africa and Asia are expanding faster than their health systems can contain, prompting urgent discussions about the present and future of urban health,” he said.

He added that the work of the Consortium “emphasises the need for Africa and Asia to build resilient health systems to address the challenges posed by a rapidly growing urban population and significant disease burden.”

To advance these discussions, the Consortium is convening researchers, policymakers and city officials at a major Evidence-to-Policy Forum in Accra on January 29–30, 2026, in partnership with the University of Ghana’s School of Public Health and the International Society for Urban Health. The meeting will focus on how African and Asian cities can build resilient health systems capable of coping with rapid urbanisation and rising disease burdens.

Across Nigeria’s cities and other focal countries, healthcare delivery is often fragmented, with public hospitals, private clinics, pharmacies and informal providers operating side by side with little coordination. This fragmentation according to a professor,  Helen Elsey, Co-Director of the Consortium has contributed to poor maternal and child health outcomes and a growing crisis of non-communicable diseases such as hypertension and diabetes.

She noted that CHORUS research has shown that informal providers, including traditional birth attendants, remain a major source of care for urban residents, particularly the poor.

One of Nigeria’s key breakthroughs from the research on linking informal healthcare providers into formal urban health system in Nigeria, according to Onwujekwe, is the creation of an Urban Health Unit within the Enugu State Ministry of Health, designed to formally link informal providers with government primary healthcare services.

Findings from the five-year urban health research further revealed that a large share of healthcare in urban slums is delivered by informal providers such as patent medicine vendors, traditional birth attendants, many of whom lack the training and oversight to safely manage conditions like hypertension and diabetes, despite serving more clients than formal health facilities. These insights have pushed state authorities to recognise that informal care providers must be integrated into formal health systems if quality and equity are to improve.

Beyond healthcare delivery, CHORUS Urban Health Consortium leaders stress that urban health cannot be separated from wider social and economic conditions. Poor roads, unreliable electricity, unsafe water, air pollution and weak sanitation systems all compound health risks in fast-growing cities.

The Accra forum is expected to showcase lessons from Nigeria alongside experiences from Ghana, Bangladesh and Nepal, where researchers are testing ways to integrate pharmacies and NGO clinics into government health systems to better manage chronic diseases.

Strike: irate FCT workers dismiss court ruling, direct members to ‘sit at home’

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SOME workers under the Joint Union Action Committee (JUAC) in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have reacted defiantly to a court order directing them to suspend their ongoing strike.

Mocking the ruling, the workers said they were no longer on strike but would shun work until their demands are met.

The National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN), sitting in Abuja, on Tuesday, January 27, ordered JUAC to suspend the industrial action that has shut down activities across the FCT.

The ICIR reported on Monday that primary and secondary schools across the nation’s capital were also shut down following a directive by the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) ordering its members to join the strike.

JUAC gave the directive as contained in a communiqué signed by the FCT NUT Chairman, Secretary, and Publicity Secretary, Abdullahi Shafas, Margaret Jethro, and Ibukun Adekeye, respectively. The union said the decision followed a directive by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) instructing all its affiliates in the FCT to comply with the strike.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, the presiding judge, E.D. Subilim, granted an interlocutory injunction filed by the Minister of the FCT, Nyesom Wike, and the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) in suit number NICN/ABJ/17/2026, restraining JUAC and its leadership from continuing the strike pending the determination of the substantive suit.

The judge ruled that although the matter constituted a trade dispute and satisfied the necessary legal requirements, workers’ right to strike was not absolute. He held that once a trade dispute is referred to the National Industrial Court, workers are barred from embarking on any strike action, and where a strike is already underway, it must be suspended pending the court’s determination.

However, workers protesting at one of the FCTA facilities in Abuja described their response to the ruling as a “stay-at-home” action rather than a suspension of the strike.

“We are no more on strike, but we are in our house. Let them open the gate wide; we are in our house. Tell them Wike has won. Let them open all the gates,” one of the protesters, said.

The worker, who was addressing journalists alongside her colleagues, added that employees would only resume duties after their demands were met.

“When they meet our demands, we will come. We are not struggling with anybody. We are going home to relax and be praying,” she said.

“They have the gun, they have the power and the resources, but the people’s power is more than their own. We are remaining in our houses. We are no more on strike, but we are not resuming work,” the protester added.

Some protesters also chanted “Wike must go” during the demonstration, while insisting the industrial action must continue.

When The ICIR contacted the Public Relations Officer of the Joint Unions Action Committee (JUAC) Holina Adejoh, for an official reaction, she said there was no immediate response to the ruling.

According to her, the leadership of the union is currently meeting with the chairman of the NLC to review the court order and determine the next steps.

Backstory

The ICIR reported that the strike followed a directive issued by JUAC President, Rifkatu Iortyer, and Secretary, Abdullahi Saleh, dated January 8, ordering workers across all cadres to withdraw their services from Monday, January 19, in protest against what they called the government’s continued neglect of their demands.

The union said an earlier ultimatum issued on January 7 had elapsed without meaningful engagement from the authorities.

According to the group, key grievances include the non-payment of outstanding promotion arrears, delays in the conduct and release of promotion exercises, and what they described as the continued extension of service for retired directors and permanent secretaries, a practice they said was blocking career progression for serving officers.

The workers also accused the administration of failing to remit statutory deductions, including pension contributions and National Housing Fund payments, warning that the situation could jeopardise the future welfare of affected staff.

JUAC further expressed dissatisfaction with the outcome of the 2024 promotion examinations, describing the exercise as largely unsuccessful and alleging that a significant number of its members were adversely affected.

On Monday, the striking workers, backed by the NLC, picketed the Nigeria Industrial Court in Abuja.

They also reportedly attempted to block the motorcade of the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, who allegedly escaped through the FCTA’s back gate.

National grid records second collapse in 2026

THERE appears to be no end in sight as the National Electricity Grid on Tuesday recorded its second collapse in 2026, consequently throwing many Nigerian cities into darkness.

A check on the website of the Nigerian Independent System Operator (NISO) showed that all the Discos had no allocated supply as of 11. am, January 27.

As of the time of filing this report, data showed zero megawatts of power supply to the 11 electricity distribution companies in the country.

The grid recorded its first collapse on Friday, January 23, barely weeks after a similar incident on December 29, 2025, which caused widespread power outages across the country.

Grid collapses have largely been attributed to a combination of technical faults, including inadequate maintenance of transmission lines, and fluctuations in generation capacity.

Electricity generation dropped sharply from over 4,500 megawatts to as low as 0 megawatts as of 11 am on Tuesday.

Checks showed that all 23 power generation plants connected to the grid lost output during the incident, resulting in zero power allocation to power distribution companies.

Meanwhile, NISO has yet to respond to the latest grid collapse.

NISO had explained that the first 2026 collapse was associated with the simultaneous tripping of multiple 330kV transmission lines, alongside the disconnection of some grid-connected generating units.

 

Traders protest in Onitsha as security officials enforce Soludo’s market closure order

MANY traders are currently protesting the Onitsha Main Market closure by the Anambra State government.

On Tuesday, January 27, viral videos show the protesters as security officials enforce the market closure order by Governor Charles Chukwuma Soludo.

Eyewitnesses also confirmed that traders were seen staging a protest walk from the Main Market down to Upper Iweka axis of Onitsha municipal and chanting solidarity songs with the lyrics, ‘Say No to Monday Market’.

However, they were not allowed access to their respective shops by armed security officers who were on the ground to enforce the government’s directive.

Soludo had ordered the market closure for a week on Monday, January 26, following the observance of the Monday sit-at-home by the traders.

Traders who spoke with The ICIR urged the government and the market leadership to find a common ground to avoid further disruption of economic activities and other possible chaotic situations.

Some of them said they did not have any incentives or insurance from the government, yet they are subjected to a forced market closure directive.

“As traders, we have sustained ourselves for years without government incentives. The government doesn’t even give us loans for business. During COVID, when governments elsewhere gave palliatives, Anambra traders received nothing. We bore the burden alone. Yet, the government continues to collect taxes, stallage fees and levies from us. Today, the government that cannot do anything for traders is now using all security apparatus to enforce sit-at-home,” a businessman and importer at the market, Ezennia Ifekudu, told The ICIR.

Ifekudu stressed that the same government that claimed it was losing N8 billion from Monday trading revenues in the state was justifying a week market closure.

“This is a private business, not civil service. Traders are not paid by the government; we survive from our own sweat,” he added.

An importer and dealer in specialised ladies’ wear, Morgan Okoye, told The ICIR that the governor’s directive had disrupted business flow.

“I have some of my clients who came in from Lagos since Saturday and are currently lodged at Hotels in Asaba. They have already incurred more debts because of the unplanned market closure,” he said.

Public affairs analysts are also speaking up and urging the government to engage the market leaders in managing the chaos in the market.

“Soludo may not understand the gravity of his actions and their consequences. The earlier he summons an emergency meeting with the market leaders, security personnel and stakeholders, the better, before this escalates to unprecedented bad reactions. The use of force may not be the best option for this kind of situation,” said a public affairs analyst, Christopher Ihejirikwe.

The governor ordered the closure of the market for one week as a warning to traders and businessmen who defied the government’s order to stop the enforcement of sit-at-home directives on Mondays.

The governor expressed regret on Monday, when he visited the market, and warned that the state was losing much revenue to the sit-at-home ritual.

“The government cannot stand by while a few individuals willfully undermine public safety and disregard official directives meant to restore normalcy. This is plain economic sabotage,” he said.

The Commissioner of Information in the state, Law Mefor, corroborated the government’s stand, noting that “The government loses N8 billion revenue weekly to the sit-at-home order.”

Notably, the Onitsha Main Market is one of the largest markets in the South-East and has trading and business links to some West African traders.

The closure comes amid long-standing economic losses linked to the sit-at-home order in the region.

The ICIR reports that Anambra generated N52.69 billion (N43,689,648,058.74) as internally generated revenue (IGR) for 2024. This placed the state 17th out of 37 states, including the Federal Capital Territory.

Also, a report by The ICIR in January 2023 showed that micro businesses in Anambra, Enugu, Ebonyi, Imo, and Abia lost an average of ₦4.618 trillion ($10.495 billion) in one year due to sit-at-home.

 

Dangote Refinery hikes petrol price by N100 after yuletide

DANGOTE Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals has increased its petrol gantry price to N799 per litre, while MRS retail outlets will now sell at N839, up from N739 per litre.

The company, in a statement, reaffirmed its commitment to market stability and uninterrupted nationwide supply of the product.

The refinery clarified that the Christmas price slash was a deliberate and temporary price support intervention to cushion Nigerians household spending.

According to the $20 billion refinery plant, its gantry price of petrol is now sold at N799 per litre, while the retail price is N839 per litre, up from N699 and N739 per litre sold since December last year.

The Chief Executive Officer of the refinery, David Bird, stated that the refinery continued to supply the domestic market with approximately 50 million litres of petrol daily, with nationwide evacuation and distribution operating normally.

He stressed that the refinery’s design flexibility allowed it to process a wide range of crude and intermediate feedstocks, enabling continued fuel supply during planned maintenance activities.

According to him, this capability ensures that the domestic supply remains stable and uninterrupted.

Dangote Refinery had recently resorted to gasoline imports to boost its capacity amid its Residual Fluid Catalytic Cracker (A type of secondary conversion process that makes heavy oil lighter) downtime.

As of Monday night, retail filling stations, including Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, dispense petrol between N805 and N830 per litre.

However, Dangote’s price hike may trigger a petrol price increase across the country’s downstream sector.

The president of the refinery, Aliko Dangote, had in December last year said that its N739 per litre retail fuel price would persist nationwide to edge out importers.

Petroleum Retail Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) had kicked against Dangote’s market influence on petroleum pricing, noting that it was disrupting importers who had imported at a higher cost to close demand gaps in the petroleum downstream market.

APC gains 29th governor as Abba Yusuf joins ruling party

KANO State Governor, Abba Kabir Yusuf, has officially joined to the All Progressives Congress (APC), becoming the 29th serving governor under President Bola Tinubu’s ruling party. 

The announcement came on Monday, January 26, three days after he resigned from the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP).

Yusuf formally communicated his resignation on Friday, January 23, citing internal crises, leadership disputes, and ongoing legal battles within NNPP which he said had destabilised the party at both state and national levels. 

In his resignation letter to the NNPP Chairman of Diso-Chiranchi Ward, Gwale Local Government Area, the governor expressed gratitude for the platform and support he received since joining NNPP in 2022, but said unresolved disputes left him with no choice but to resign.

Yusuf was elected governor under the NNPP in 2022. His tenure was recently marked by internal party conflicts and leadership disputes, which he cited as reasons for his resignation. 

Following Yusuf’s resignation, multiple NNPP lawmakers and officials in Kano State reportedly also left the party, including 22 members of the State House of Assembly, eight federal lawmakers, and 44 local government chairmen.

The lawmakers announced their defection during a plenary session on Monday, January 26.

This, many have argued, would cause a major collapse of the party’s structure in the state.

The ICIR reports that Yusuf’s defection is part of a wider pattern of governors and lawmakers leaving opposition parties, particularly the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) and NNPP, to join the ruling APC ahead of the 2027 general elections. 

Recent months have seen similar high-profile defections, including Rivers Governor Siminalayi Fubara, Plateau Governor Caleb Mutfwang Bayelsa Governor Douye Diri, and Akwa Ibom Governor Udom Eno, who all cited political alignment with the federal government as a key motivation.

Current governorship standings (January 2026)

Party Number of Governors
APC 29
PDP 4
APGA 1
Labour Party 1
Accord 1

 

The addition of Yusuf as the 29th APC governor strengthens the party’s influence in northern Nigeria, consolidating its reach in a region that is often regarded during election. 

Several online commentators suggested that the wave of defections is likely to influence both state and national politics, giving APC a strategic advantage in key regions ahead of the next polls.

The ICIR reports that there have also been concerns among political analysts that the shrinking number of opposition governors could result in a de facto one-party state in the country, as the APC steadily consolidates power under the Tinubu’s leadership.

Military finally admits coup attempt against Tinubu after initial denials

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THE Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN) has finally confirmed that some of the 16 officers previously arrested over ‘indiscipline and service breaches’ were implicated in plotting to overthrow the government of President Bola Tinubu.

A statement signed by the Director of Defence Information Samaila Uba, on Monday, January 26, stated that the officers would face formal trial before a military judicial panel following its investigation, which it said was conducted according to established military procedures. It also said the probe examined all circumstances surrounding the officers’ conduct.

“It would be recalled that the Defence Headquarters issued a press statement in October 2025 regarding the arrest of sixteen officers over acts of indiscipline and breaches of service regulations. The Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN) wishes to inform the general public that investigations into the matter have been concluded, and the report forwarded to appropriate superior authority in line with extant regulations.

“The comprehensive investigation process, conducted in accordance with established military procedures, has carefully examined all circumstances surrounding the conduct of the affected personnel. The findings have identified a number of the officers with allegations of plotting to overthrow the government which is inconsistent with the ethics, values and professional standards required of members of the AFN,” the statement read.

While some officers were found with cases to answer, others were cleared of wrongdoing.

The AFN said the arraignment would proceed under the Armed Forces Act and other relevant service regulations, to ensure fairness and due process.

“The AFN reiterates that measures being taken are purely disciplinary and part of ongoing institutional mechanisms to preserve order, discipline and operational effectiveness within the ranks,” it added.

The official admittance came after months of public speculation and denials of the aborted putsch by the military. Sahara Reporters, an online news medium, had on Saturday, October 18, claimed that 16 officers arrested and detained by the Nigerian Armed Forces planned to topple Tinubu’s government.

Another report by Premium Times also claimed that top intelligence sources provided insights into how the coup was to be hatched before the officers plotting it were apprehended.

The reports also alleged that key government officials, including Tinubu, Vice President Kashim Shettima, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, and House Speaker Tajudeen Abbas, were targeted for assassination.

The development reportedly created tension within the government, prompting the Presidency to cancel the National Independence Day parade usually held on October 1.

At the time, the Defence Headquarters denied the claims, stating that the arrests were part of routine disciplinary measures linked to career stagnation and repeated failures in promotion examinations, and not politically motivated.

NUT shuts FCT primary, secondary schools. orders teachers to join workers’ strike

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PUBLIC primary and secondary schools across the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) are expected to shut down immediately following a directive by the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) ordering its members to join the ongoing strike by the FCTA workers.

The Joint Union Action Congress (JUAC) gave the directive as contained in a communiqué signed by the FCT NUT Chairman, Secretary, and Publicity Secretary, Abdullahi Shafas, Margaret Jethro, and Ibukun Adekeye, respectively.

The union said the decision followed a directive by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) instructing all its affiliates in the FCT to comply with the strike.

“All teachers in FCT primary and secondary schools are to stay away from classrooms starting Monday,” part of the communiqué read.

“In pursuit of justice and to demonstrate our collective resolve, we must stand together. A people united can never be defeated,” the union said.

The NUT added that it would continue to engage with relevant authorities until all outstanding issues affecting teachers are resolved, urging members to remain disciplined during the strike.

The ICIR reported that the strike followed a directive issued by JUAC President, Rifkatu Iortyer, and Secretary, Abdullahi Saleh, dated January 8, ordering workers across all cadres to withdraw their services from Monday, January 19, in protest against what they called the government’s continued neglect of their demands.

The union said an earlier ultimatum issued on January 7 had elapsed without meaningful engagement from the authorities.

According to the JUAC, key grievances include the non-payment of outstanding promotion arrears, delays in the conduct and release of promotion exercises, and what they described as the continued extension of service for retired directors and permanent secretaries, a practice they said was blocking career progression for serving officers.

The workers also accused the administration of failing to remit statutory deductions, including pension contributions and National Housing Fund payments, warning that the situation could jeopardise the future welfare of affected staff.

JUAC further expressed dissatisfaction with the outcome of the 2024 promotion examinations, describing the exercise as largely unsuccessful and alleging that a significant number of its members were adversely affected.

It condemned the handling of the 2024 promotion examinations, describing the exercise as deeply flawed and largely unsuccessful.

On Monday, the striking workers, backed by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), picketed the Nigeria Industrial Court in Abuja.

They also reportedly attempted to block the motorcade of the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, who allegedly escaped through the FCTA’s back gate.

Sit-at-home: Soludo shuts down Onitsha Market

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ANAMBRA State Governor Chukwuma Soludo has ordered the closure of the Onitsha Main Market for one week after traders allegedly failed to open their shops on Monday, despite the state government’s directive to end the sit-at-home.

The governor gave the order during a visit to the market on Monday, January 26, where he met many shops locked.

The ICIR reports that state government had ordered traders to resume their business on Mondays as against the sit-at-home ritual.

However, during his visit to the market on Monday, the governor expressed concerns over the continued closure, saying the closure of businesses was hurting the state’s economy.

Soludo said, “The government cannot stand by while a few individuals willfully undermine public safety and disregard official directives meant to restore normalcy. This is plain economic sabotage.”

He warned that the closure could be extended if traders did not comply. According to him, “You either decide that you are going to trade here or you go elsewhere. I am very serious about this.”

Security operatives were deployed to enforce the shutdown, and the market gates were sealed.

The Onitsha Main Market is one of the largest markets in the South-East and plays a key role in trade across the region. Any disruption affects traders, transporters, and suppliers who depend on daily business activities.

The shutdown comes amid long-standing economic losses linked to the sit-at-home order in the South-East.

The ICIR reports that Anambra generated ₦42.69 billion (₦42,689,648,058.74), as Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) for 2024. This placed the state at 17th out of 37 states, including the Federal Capital Territory.

Many argued that the continued disruption of business activities, especially on Mondays, has affected revenue generation.

Also, a report by The ICIR in January 2024 showed that micro businesses in Anambra, Enugu, Ebonyi, Imo, and Abia lost an average of ₦4.618 trillion ($10.495 billion) in one year due to sit-at-home.

The investigation found that estimated revenues of micro businesses in the five states were added together and multiplied by 52 weeks, representing the number of Mondays in a year. The analysis used data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) 2021 survey reports.

Another ICIR-funded report published by Dataphyte showed that micro businesses in the South-East lost ₦5.375 trillion ($12.215 billion) after wasting 71 Mondays between August 9, 2021 and December 19, 2022.

In the same vein, a report by The Guardian newspaper noted that sit-at-home observances every Monday since August 9, 2021 have cost the South-East an estimated ₦7.6 trillion in lost productivity, potential investments, and losses of lives and property.

Nigeria’s crisis of judicial pensions is not about the law of Karma

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By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

“The term of office of judges, their independence, security, adequate remuneration, conditions of service, pensions and the age of retirement shall be adequately secured by law.” Principle 11, United Nations Basic Principles on the Independence of the Judiciary, (1985)

Babajide Candide-Johnson became a judge of the High Court of Lagos State at 45. The son of the third Chief Judge of Lagos State, he is polyglot, fluent in several languages; including French. When his judicial tenure came to an end on 27 June 2021, 20 years after he became a judge, Babajide Candide-Johnson was the head of the family court in the High Court of Lagos State.

At his retirement, the Chief Judge of Lagos State, Kazeem Alogba, described Babajide Candide-Johnson as “a brilliant, hardworking, meticulous and fearless judge, an intellectual who delivered judgments without fear or favour.”

Those words describe a model judge. Yet, nine months later, in March 2022, he was back in court, this time to sue the government of Lagos State, whom he had served without blemish in judicial office for two decades, for “his pension, severance gratuity, and other entitlements.”

The government of Lagos State initially demurred, disingenuously arguing that responsibility for judicial pensions under the Pension Right of Lagos State Judicial Officers Law of 2015, lay with the state Judicial Service Commission. The state government later saved itself from a public unraveling of an embarrassing position and the parties agreed to an amicable settlement.

In 2022 alone, at least five other former judges of the High Court of Lagos also sued the state government over the same issue.

The year before the retirement of Babajide Candide-Johnson in Lagos, 22 retired judges of the High Court of Abia, the self-described “God’s own State” in south-east Nigeria, had similarly sued before the National Industrial Court of Nigeria, (NICN), claiming to have been shafted by a succession of three governors going back nearly a decade and a half, who claimed mandates from God to ruin the state. It appears that in response to the case, the then state government “reportedly promised to pay N10 million to the retired judges every month, but only did so for one month.”

Three years after this case began, it was still stuck in the NICN, with little progress. Meanwhile, five of the retired judges had died in penury while waiting for the case to rescue them. In May 2023, Abia State installed a newly elected governor. Two months later, he and the retired judges reached an agreement to clear the back-log of 16 years of judicial pensions liability.

Around the country, retired judges are increasingly resorting to judicial proceedings to call attention to a crippling and chronic crisis of judicial pensions for judges who retired before June 2023. In Ondo State, retired judges sued in April 2016 for similar issues. Their peers in Imo, Ogun, and Oyo have as well.

For long, the constitution provided for how to compute judicial pensions but not necessarily for how to finance or administer it effectively. Effective from June 2023, a new constitutional amendment transferred to the National Judicial Council (NJC), responsibility for the administration of judicial pensions. This has not, however, alleviated or addressed the crisis of judicial pension obligations arising from before then and may, indeed, have surfaced new problems of its own.

In Kogi, eight retired judges of the state High Court have recently served notice on the state government of their intention to return to court as litigants to enforce their pension rights. They include a former Chief Judge of the State John Bayo Olowosegun; a former President, Customary Court of Appeal, Hon. Justice Yunusa Musa; and a former senior judge, Professor Andrew Alaba-Ajileye.

The NJC has to accept some responsibility for the historical liabilities. It has been an indifferent and perfunctory advocate for retired judges. On his way out of office as then chairman of the NJC and Chief Justice of Nigeria and after much handwringing, Olukayode Ariwoola, in January 2023 finally tabled the issue before the Council at its 100th meeting.

In a statement at the end of the meeting, the Council described as “worrisome, the situation whereby many judicial officers of the states are being owed their retirement benefits, including severance pay/gratuity and pensions”, and warned that this undermined the rule of law without clearly saying how so.

Even worse, the Council failed to disclose which states were involved, for how long or by how much. Instead, the NJC directed state chief judges from across the country to report on compliance with this resolution without indicating what it had previously done to compute the quantum of liabilities involved.

On the whole, the NJC lost an opportunity to show that it cared about the subject matter; that it had indeed bothered to do its homework; or that this was an issue on which it desired to enlist any support or reinforcement for the affected retired judges. Since then, the Council does not appear to have seriously monitored or re-engaged with this issue.

The consequences of the chronic accumulation of pension debts in the public service are quite corrosive of both morale of existing personnel and effectiveness of service delivery. Serving officers just need to behold that situation in order to appreciate the urgency of the need to take their own destinies into their own hands while they still have the opportunity to do so.

The judiciary presents a somewhat special case because the average age of intake into the bench of the superior courts of record is higher than in any other branch of pensionable service in Nigeria. The consequences of the deliberate neglect to fulfill pension obligations can, therefore, be quite dire. In states, like Taraba in the north-east, for instance, many judges who retired before 2023 have died waiting endlessly for their pensions and terminal benefits.

The uncertainties about judicial benefits have also created other problems of their own, with crooks cashing in on the vulnerabilities of retired judges. In March 2024, the NJC went public with the complaint that “fraudsters had been bombarding retired judges with phone calls demanding various sums of money to help them fast-track the payment of their retirement benefits.” It vowed that the Council “would never demand money from any judicial officer to fast-track the payment of his retirement benefits.” The jury, at best, is still out on this.

The problem remains that this crisis of judicial pensions and terminal benefits fosters a system of perverse incentives conducive to bartering judicial outcomes for material benefit.

Some may view as uncharitable a strand of public opinion that suggests that there is a law of Karma at work and that the destitution of retired judges in this way is the natural consequence of a deepening crisis of judicial integrity and politicisation of the judiciary. Others have gone as far as to accuse judges indiscriminately of feeding upfront while in service the political lion with the menu of their pensions.

Even if the conduct of some judges in service could conceivably deserve the attentions of a hypothetical Karma, there remain many judges who do their best not to fall into that category. Such points of view should, however, demonstrate for all involved the urgency of addressing this issue with finality.

For the judiciary, it is existential at both personal and institutional levels. For the citizens and court users, it is the only way to guarantee the possibility of minimal credibility to the work of the courts. For the country, it should ensure that the promise of an independent judiciary stands a chance of not disintegrating into a constitutional hoax. The distinction between judges who retired before June 2023 and those retiring thereafter is artificial and unnecessary. The NJC can work constructively with government at the federal and state levels to close it.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu