22.6 C
New York
Monday, June 22, 2026
spot_img
More

    Latest Posts

    Defamation: Court remands Sowore in Kuje priso

    ‎The Federal High Court in Abuja, on Monday, ordered the immediate remand of human rights activist and African Action Congress (AAC) presidential candidate, Omoyele Sowore, at the Kuje Correctional Centre.

    ‎Sowore will remain in custody until Wednesday, June 24, 2026, when legal proceedings are scheduled to resume, Vanguard reports.

    ‎The detention stems from a two-count cybercrime charge filed by the Department of State Services (DSS), which accuses Sowore of cyberstalking and criminal defamation after he labeled President Bola Tinubu a “criminal” in an August 2025 social media post.

    ‎In August 2025, Sowore posts on X and Facebook, calling President Tinubu a “criminal” over statements made during a trip to Brazil.

    ‎He refuses DSS demands to delete the posts, citing free speech.

    ‎In May 2026, Justice Mohammed Umar rejects Sowore’s application to drop the charges. The judge rules that the DSS established a prima facie case, legally requiring Sowore to open his defense.

    ‎Earlier in June 5, following a judicial directive for daily trial hearings, Sowore’s legal team withdraws from the case.

    ‎Citing the “humiliation” his lawyers faced, Sowore opts to represent himself and files a motion accusing the judge of bias.

    ‎Meanwhile, on June 16, 2026, after Sowore fails to appear for a scheduled defense continuation, the prosecution labels it a “delay tactic”.

    ‎Justice Umar revokes his self-recognition bail and issues a bench warrant for his arrest.

    ‎Vanguard reports that on June 22, 2026 (today), Justice Umar officially dismisses Sowore’s motion seeking his disqualification over alleged bias.
    ‎Following the arrest order, the court orders Sowore to be remanded at Kuje Correctional Centre.

    ‎PUNCH Online reports that the federal government’s case rests on provisions within Section 24 of the amended Cybercrimes Act, 2024.

    ‎The prosecution argues that Sowore’s online rhetoric was knowingly false and intentionally deployed to incite public disorder. Sowore maintains a plea of “not guilty”.

    ‎While the prosecution argued that Sowore’s recent absence from court was a deliberate obstruction, Sowore publicly countered that he had arrived at court for the previous scheduled sitting on June 15, only for the judge to be absent without notice.

    ‎Sowore had filed a formal letter informing the registry of his subsequent travel, which the court ultimately bypassed when issuing the arrest warrant the following day.

    ‎Proceedings are set to pick back up in mid-week as Sowore remains in custody.

    Latest Posts

    spot_imgspot_img

    Don't Miss

    Stay in touch

    To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.