Oby Ezekwesili, former education minister, and an international human rights attorney, Chidi Odinkalu, have both withdrawn their participation from the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) event scheduled for Sokoto State.
The duo decided so in protest to the gruesome murder of Deborah Samuel, a Christian female student at Shehu Shagari College of Education in Wamako.
Mrs Ezekwesili, who announced her decision in a statement released on her Twitter page, chastised the NBA for remaining silent on Ms Samuel’s murder.
She said the association owed citizens unjustly killed by religious extremists the judicial activism of enforcing justice.
“I have decided to withdraw my Speaking commitment to @NigBarAssoc for its event holding in Sokoto. I was billed to speak from abroad via Zoom but even now will no longer do so. NBA should seize this moment to reflect on how relevant its actions are in a troubled democracy,” she said.
On his part, Mr Odinkalu criticised Monday Ubani, the NBA’s chairman of the public interest and development law section, for his reaction to Ms Samuel’s gruesome murder.
He described a portion of Mr Ubani’s statement as gratuitously insulting, claiming that the statement was more concerned with saving the conference than with valorising human life and responsible government.
Both Mr Odinkalu and the former education minister were billed to speak at a NBA event billed to take place in Sokoto between May 22 and 26.
Prior to the development, Ms Ezekwesili was expected to join INEC Chairman Mahmood Yakubu, Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike, Chairman Mahmood Yakubu, Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike,Governor Babagana Zulum, and Ralph Nwosu on a panel to discuss democratic evolution and nation building in Nigeria.
Her decision to leave the panel was informed by NBA president Olumide Akpata’s failure to condemn and prosecute Ms Samuel’s killers within 24 hours of the incident.
The former minister called on Mr Akpata to take actions against the killers.
On Thursday, Amnesty International condemned the horrific death of Ms Samuel, demanding immediate justice for the deceased.
Peoples Gazette had reported that Ms Samuel had complained over how religious broadcast messages were shared on her department’s WhatsApp page.
“Holy ghost fire, nothing would happen to me. Is it by force you guys keep sending these religious messages in our group? Our group wasn’t created for that, but rather as a notice for when there’s a test, assignment, examinations, etc. Not these nonsense religious posts,” Ms Samuels had said in a voice note on her department’s WhatsApp group, heard by The Gazette.