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Institutional trust key to building public confidence … NSITF MD Faleye

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By Saint Mugaga

Managing Director/Chief Executive, Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), Barr. Oluwaseun Faleye has said institutional trust is key to building public confidence in the citizenry.

Speaking at the 2026 Law Week of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Gwagwalada Branch in Abuja, Monday, Barr. Faleye said the future of effective governance in Nigeria depends not only on laws being enacted, but on institutions being strengthened to deliver on their legal obligations.

“For those of us entrusted with public responsibility, service must mean more than occupying office. It must mean using institutions to protect the vulnerable, to uphold fairness, and to leave systems better than we met them.

“For the Bar, it means defending the integrity of law and ensuring that justice remains accessible, principled, and alive.

“For institutions like NSITF, it means ensuring that social protection is not treated as charity. but as a lawful and necessary pillar of national development.

“For the nation, it means recognizing that sustainable progress is impossible where labour is unprotected, where institutions are weak, and where trust is eroded”, he submitted.

Faleye said he believe that one of the most important tasks before us as a nation is to bridge the distance between legal rights and lived realities.

“Our laws must work for the worker. Our institutions must work for the citizen. And our governance culture must work for the public good”.

He said “Across many societies, and certainly within ours, one of the greatest challenges of governance is not merely policy design but public confidence.

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“Citizens want to know that laws will not remain on paper. Workers want to know that statutory protections will function when tested. Employers want clarity, fairness, and predictability.

“And institutions must earn the confidence of all sides through competence, consistency, and credibility. That is why institutional trust is such an important national question”.

Faleye noted that “This gathering is not only a celebration. It is also a moment of reflection. A gathering like this brings together the conscience of the legal profession, the custodians of justice, and men and women whose daily work shapes the relationship between the citizen and the State.

“It reminds us that institutions do not become strong merely because they are created by law. They become strong when they are led with purpose, administered with integrity, and trusted by the people they were established to serve”.

According to the MD, “That is why this recognition is meaningful to me. It is not simply about an individual. It is a recognition of an idea: that public institutions can work; that reform is possible; that service can still be honourable; and that government agencies can be instruments of justice, protection, and human dignity”.

He reiterated that “At the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund, this conviction drives our work every day. The mandate of the NSITF, through the Employees’ Compensation Scheme, is rooted in a simple but powerful principle: that no worker who suffers injury, disease, disability, or death in the course of employment should be left alone to bear that burden. That principle is both legal and moral.

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“It is legal because it is established under the Employees’ Compensation Act. It is moral because it speaks to the kind of society we must build, one in which work is not separated from dignity, and productivity is not detached from protection.

“At NSITF, we understand that trust is not demanded, it is built. It is built claim by claim, process by process, reform by reform, and decision by decision”.

Speaking further, the MD lamented that most times public discourse celebrates enterprise, Investment, growth, and productivity without giving equal attention to the human beings whose labour sustains them.

“But behind every factory, every office, every construction site, every transport system, every public institution, and every service economy are workers who take risks, make sacrifices, and keep the nation moving.

“When such workers are harmed in the course of that service, social justice demands a response. Not sympathy alone. Not rhetoric alone. But a structured, lawful, institutional response. That is the essence of social protection.

He explained that “The law is not only a framework for adjudicating disputes. It is also a civilizational statement of what a society considers acceptable, protected, and just.

“In labour relations, in social insurance, in compensation systems, and in institutional accountability, the law performs one of its noblest functions: it stands between vulnerability and abandonment”.

He stressed that “The legal profession, therefore, occupies a central place in the architecture of social trust. Lawyers help to shape the instruments that define rights and obligations. Judges interpret those rights. Regulators enforce them. Public institutions implement them. But ultimately, the citizen encounters justice not only in the courtroom, but in the lived reality of whether institutions respond fairly, promptly, and transparently”.

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In his welcome address, the Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Gwagwalada Branch, Clever Owhor, said restoring public trust in the nation’s legal system requires a shared responsibility by all stakeholders.

He said “This year, we are united under a theme that is both timely and urgent: ‘Rebuilding Public Trust in the Nigerian Legal System’.

“Today, we must confront an uncomfortable reality: Many Nigerians are increasingly losing confidence in the legal system.

“Concerns about delays in justice delivery, perceived lack of transparency, ethical challenges, and barriers to access to justice have combined to create a widening gap between the legal system and the public”.

Continuing, the chairman noted that “But we must ask ourselves: What is a legal system without the trust of the people? What is justice if it is not believed Rebuilding trust is not the responsibility of one institution alone. It is a collective duty.

“The Bench must continue to uphold independence, integrity, and courage in the dispensation of justice. The Bar must recommit to ethics, professionalism, and fearless advocacy. Government institutions and regulators must embrace transparency and accountability.

“Civil society and the media must continue to hold institutions accountable while promoting civic awareness.
And importantly, young lawyers must rise as a new generation of ethical leaders committed to reform”.

According to him, “Trust is not demanded—it is earned. And it is earned through consistent, visible, and measurable actions”.

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2007: Abuja Court Dismisses Suit Against ex- President Jonathan

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–Plaintiff Fined N20m

By Son Tertsea, Abuja

A Federal High Court in Abuja presided over byJustice Peter Lifu today dismissed a suit filed by a lawyer, Johnmary Jideobi, seeking to stop former President Goodluck Jonathan from contesting the 2027 presidential election.

Justice Lifu while delivering the Judgement also awarded a N20 million fine against Jideobi in favour of the ex-president.

The further awarded a 1 million fine against the plaintiff in favour of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF).

He held that Jideobi lacked the legal right to have instituted the suit, having not suffered any loss from his perceived Jonathan’s intention to vie for the next year’s poll.

The judge added that a Federal High Court in Yenagoa and an Appeal Court had already held that Jonathan was eligible to run, and he was bound by the decision of the appellate court.

The judge then described the lawyer’s suit as “an abuse of court process”.

Jideobi’s motion seeking the judge’s withdrawal from the case for being frivoloud was equally dismissed.

Before this judgment, Lifu had awarded a N1 million fine against Jideobi in favour of the ex president for lack of due diligence in the prosecution of the matter.

Jideobi had sued Jonathan, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), and AGF as the 1st to 3rd defendants, respectively.

The former president Jonathan first assumed power in 2010 after the death of ex-President Musa Yar’Adua. The Bayelsa-born politician served as vice president under Yar’Adua.

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A year later, he contested and won the 2011 presidential election. But in 2015, Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC) defeated him, the first time an incumbent had lost a presidential election since the return of democracy in 1999.

Since then, there have been calls on him to run in the 2027 polls even though the former president has moved away from partisan politics since his exit.

Following calls for him to join the race, Jonathan told youths under the Coalition for Goodluck Jonathan that he would consult before deciding on the matter.

“Yes, you are asking me to come and contest the next elections,” the former president told the group when members visited him in Abuja.

“The presidential race is not a computer game, but I’ve heard you, and I’ll consult widely.”

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Kogi State Takes Anti-Internet Fraud War to Schools

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The ravaging effects of cybercrime on society have convinced Kogi State Government for the mounting of Anti-Internet Fraud Campaign Clubs in schools and tertiary institutions across the state. The effort is to combat cybercrime and promote ethical values among youths.

Governor Usman Ododo made the call during the official flag-off of the Kogi Anti-Internet Fraud Campaign at the Government House, Lokoja, represented by the Secretary to the State Government, Mrs. Folashade Arike.

He emphasised the need for parents, schools, religious institutions, and community leaders to support government efforts in tackling internet fraud, warning that poor moral upbringing and the quest for quick wealth were damaging societal values.

“The system is going bad, and it is in our hands to correct it,” while advocating the creation of anti-fraud clubs in schools to promote awareness among students.

Earlier, the Convener of the campaign and Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Fraud and Internet Matters, Oluseyi Eleta, said the initiative was designed to protect the image and future of Kogi State.

Intelligence and talent become dangerous when not guided by integrity, he said, urging youths to use the digital space for innovation, entrepreneurship, and investment rather than cybercrime.

CP Nathaniel Diton, while speaking for ICPC, identified pressure, opportunity, and rationalisation as major factors encouraging fraudulent behaviour.

In a lecture entitled, “Internet Fraud and the Nigerian Youth: The Way Forward,” Diton urged youths to embrace ethical means of livelihood and warned against defending corruption based on ethnic or social sentiments.

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Kogi State Commissioner for Information and Communications, Kingsley Fanwo, advised against seeing the state based on the activities of a few internet fraudsters, saying Kogi people as intelligent, dynamic, and hospitable.

Fanwo blamed some parents for indirectly encouraging internet fraud by accepting expensive gifts from unemployed children without questioning the source of the money.

The commissioner added that the state government was developing innovation hubs to help youths channel their digital skills into legitimate ventures.

He donated ₦100,000 to Great Onize Suleiman of GYB Model School for her brilliant performance at the occasion.

On their part, the Commissioner for Science, Technology and Innovation, Mrs. Helen Adebirimibe, and the Commissioner for Housing and Urban Development, Taiye Abanika, called on parents to make sacrifices for the future of their children while encouraging youths to make productive use of the internet.

GYB Model School and Faith Academy students presented papers which exposed the dangers of internet fraud on individuals, families, and society.

Government officials, students, security agencies, and education stakeholders, present were united in the call for stronger moral values and collective action against cybercrime for a better Kogi State.

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Calls for Justice Groe Over Death of 17-Year-old in Makurdi as Activist Alleges Polive Cover-up

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Police say suspect died after gunfire exchange; family demands independent probe

By Felix Umande, Makurdi

Outrage is mounting in Benue State over the death of 17-year-old Atser Sesugh, with civil society voices demanding a transparent and independent investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Benue-based activist and humanitarian, Ukan Kurugh has accused the Benue State Police Command of attempting to manipulate the narrative and protect powerful interests.

In a statement circulated online, Kurugh alleged that the teenager was killed “in broad daylight” before witnesses, and said the family was being subjected to further pain through what he called “careless lies” and “shameless attempts to twist the truth.”

“A young boy died, a mother is crying herself to sleep. A family has been thrown into permanent pain yet your priority is propaganda instead of justice,” Kurugh said, directing criticism at the Police Public Relations Officer, Dsp. Udeme Edet.

He further alleged that the police were trying to shield influential figures while ordinary citizens suffer, adding that “no official statement can suppress the voice of innocent blood.”

The controversy follows a press release issued by the Benue State Police Command detailing its version of events.

According to the command, on 28th April 2026, operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Makurdi, arrested three suspects—James Onuh, Atser Sesugh, and Solomon Aondoakura Orhena—in connection with alleged fraud and cybercrime. The suspects reportedly escaped from lawful custody at the EFCC Makurdi facility on 4th May 2026.

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The police said credible intelligence led EFCC operatives to a hideout behind Mechanic Village, Kanshio, Makurdi, on 23rd May 2026 at about 1500hrs. On arrival, operatives encountered a group of armed young men suspected to be cultists who opened fire. During the exchange of gunfire, EFCC operatives said they later found Sesugh lying in a pool of blood by the roadside.

The suspect was taken to the Police Cottage Hospital Makurdi, where he was confirmed dead. His body has since been deposited at the Benue State University Teaching Hospital mortuary for preservation and autopsy.

The Commissioner of Police has directed the Deputy Commissioner of Police, Criminal Investigation Department, to investigate the circumstances of the death. Efforts are also ongoing to apprehend the other fleeing suspects.

While the police have assured the public of a thorough investigation and reiterated commitment to the rule of law, Kurugh and other residents have called for an independent probe, arguing that public trust requires transparency beyond internal police inquiries.

Kurugh warned that “all evil has an expiry date and time,” urging authorities to prioritize truth and accountability over narrative control.

Meanwhile, there is another account from Gberindyer, a settlement in Makurdi, which is that, Sesugh and a friend had escaped from EFCC custody after a raid and were later traced to the area. Eyewitnesses allege further that when EFCC operatives arrived, Sesugh attempted to flee but was shot in the leg, he fell before being allegedly shot in the chest again. As a result, residents demanded that his body would not be taken away. However, EFCC operatives took the body and since then the family had no access to it.

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