Judiciary
UK Court Clears Alison-Madueke Of Bribery Charges
The first woman president of OPEC and Nigeria’s former oil minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, was cleared of bribery charges in a UK trial Wednesday, her defence lawyers said in a statement.
“Diezani Alison-Madueke was cleared of six charges of bribery at Southwark Crown Court on 17 June 2026, after a five-month trial,” defence lawyer Jonathan Laidlaw said in a press release.
The trial was brought by the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA), which targets serious organised and international crime, after a years-long investigation concerning alleged offences between 2011 and 2015.
Laidlaw told the jury at the London court in January that there was a “gross delay” in the charges being brought, resulting in “a great deal of material which would have established her innocence” being denied.
She had been accused of accepting “financial or other advantages” from individuals linked to two energy companies that had secured contracts with Nigeria’s state-owned petroleum corporation when she was the country’s oil minister.
Alison-Madueke had also been accused by prosecutors of enjoying a “life of luxury” funded by those interested in the lucrative oil and gas contracts.
Her lifestyle was described as involving chauffeur-driven cars, a private jet flight to Nigeria, and refurbishment work and staff costs at several London properties.
Her defence maintained that records proving her innocence had “disappeared” and that she could no longer access papers at home in Nigeria as British police had retained her passport since her first arrest 11 years ago.
Judiciary
Court Declares Adenike Ajayi Sole Lawful Widow of Late Dr. Tosin Ajayi, Rejects Helen Prest’s Marriage Claim
A Lagos State High Court sitting in Ikeja has declared Mrs. Adenike Oluwayemisi Ajayi the sole lawful widow of the late founder and Chief Executive Officer of First Foundation Hospital, Dr. Tosin Ajayi, bringing to an end a protracted legal battle over the deceased’s marital status and estate.
In a judgment delivered on Wednesday, Justice Oluwayoyin Odusanya granted all the reliefs sought by Mrs. Ajayi and her children, while dismissing the claims of former beauty queen Helen Prest that she was also a spouse of the late medical practitioner.
The dispute, which commenced in 2021 following Dr. Ajayi’s death on April 26, 2020, arose from competing claims over the deceased’s estate and the status of his surviving spouse.
The proceedings lasted nearly five years before the court delivered its verdict.
Justice Odusanya held that Mrs. Ajayi remained legally married to Dr. Ajayi until his death and that their monogamous marriage was never dissolved.
The court rejected arguments that the couple’s prolonged separation amounted to a termination of their marriage.
According to the judge, separation, regardless of its duration, does not automatically dissolve a legally valid marriage.
The court agreed with the submissions of counsel to the claimants, Kunle Adegoke, SAN, that the marriage between Dr. and Mrs. Ajayi subsisted throughout the lifetime of the deceased.
A major issue in the case was Helen Prest’s claim that she had contracted a Kalabari customary marriage with Dr. Ajayi.
However, the court found that she failed to provide credible evidence to support the assertion.
Justice Odusanya described the customary marriage claim as an afterthought, noting that Prest had adopted inconsistent positions in previous legal proceedings.
The court observed that in earlier suits, she had variously described herself as a common-law partner and, at another time, as being in a civil-law union with the deceased.
The judge further held that Prest was unable to establish essential elements of the alleged customary marriage, including the date and venue of the ceremony.
The court also noted the absence of documentary or photographic evidence to support her claim.
In addition, the court held that the alleged customary marriage would, in any event, have been invalid because evidence before the court showed that Prest was still legally married to her former husband, Mr. Davies, at the time she claimed to have married Dr. Ajayi.
Consequently, the court dismissed her claim to spousal status and affirmed Mrs. Ajayi as the only legally recognised spouse of the deceased.
Justice Odusanya also upheld Mrs. Ajayi’s entitlement to one-third of Dr. Ajayi’s personal estate and ruled that she is the only spouse entitled to apply for letters of administration over the estate.
The judgment effectively resolves the dispute at the High Court level and reinforces the legal principle that separation alone does not terminate a valid marriage in the absence of a formal dissolution.
With the ruling, Mrs. Ajayi and her children secured all the reliefs sought in the suit, while Helen Prest’s claims to recognition as a spouse of the late hospital founder were rejected in their entirety.
Judiciary
Alleged ₦110.4bn Kogi Fraud: Witness Tells Court He Paid 50–60 Percent of Tax Consultancy Commission to Kogi Revenue Officials
Judiciary
Court Dismisses Yahaya Bello’s Bid to Quash ₦110bn Fraud Charge, Orders Trial to Continue
The High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, presided over by Justice Maryann Anenih, has dismissed an application filed by former Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Adoza Bello, seeking to strike out the charge brought against him in Charge No. FCT/CR/778/2024: FRN v. Yahaya Adoza Bello & 2 Ors.
Bello, through his lead counsel, J.B. Daudu, SAN, and a team of senior advocates, urged the court to strike out the 16-count charge on the grounds that the court lacked territorial jurisdiction to entertain the matter.
He also argued that the charge constituted an abuse of court process due to the pendency of a related case, Charge No. FHC/ABJ/CR/98/2024, before the Federal High Court.
Opposing the application, counsel to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, argued that the application was misconceived and designed to unnecessarily delay the proceedings.
Pinheiro contended that the offences contained in the charge were based on provisions of the Penal Code and were, therefore, properly triable before the High Court of the FCT.
He further argued that the properties allegedly acquired with the proceeds of the offences, which form the basis of the charge, are located in Abuja, thereby conferring territorial jurisdiction on the court.
On the allegation of abuse of court process, EFCC counsel submitted that the charges before the two courts relate to different offences.
According to him, the case before the FCT High Court concerns allegations of criminal breach of trust and conspiracy under the Penal Code, while the case before the Federal High Court relates to alleged money laundering offences under the Money Laundering Act.
He further argued that the parties involved in the two cases are not the same, noting that Bello is the sole defendant in the Federal High Court case, whereas he is being prosecuted alongside two co-defendants in the FCT High Court matter.
In a ruling delivered on June 16, 2026, Justice Anenih agreed with the submissions of the EFCC and held that the court possesses the requisite jurisdiction to entertain the charge and that the proceedings do not constitute an abuse of court process.
The court subsequently dismissed Bello’s application.
A similar application filed by the third defendant was also dismissed for lacking merit.
Following the ruling, the court directed that the trial should continue, with the prosecution proceeding to call its 16th witness (PW16), who was present in court and ready to testify.
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