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Inside Lagos: Medical Director Bags 1-Yr Jail Terms Over Grievous Harm To The Life Of 16-Year-Old Patient

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Justice Adedayo Akintoye of the Lagos High Court sitting at Tafawa Balewa Square has sentenced a medical doctor, Dr. Ejike Ferdinand Orji, to one year imprisonment for causing grievous harm, negligence and endangering the life of a 16-year-old patient.

Orji, who is the Medical Director of Excel Medical Centre Dolphin Estate, Ikoyi, Lagos, was found guilty on four of the six counts charge,  which are  counts 2, 3, 4, and 6.

However, he was  discharged on counts 1 and 5 respectfully. The convict was initially arraigned alongside his wife Dr (Mrs) Ifeayinwa Grace Orji, but his wife  was discharged and acquitted following an application by the Director of Public Production that the Lagos State government wishes to discontinue the case against her.

Delivering judgement, Justice Akintoye held that the prosecution was able to established the essential ingredients of the offence of breach of duty, care and endangering the life of a 16-year-old patient.

The court further held that the defendant’s action falls below what is reasonably expected of a medical doctor.

Justice Akintoye held: “It my opinion that the Defendant committed a breach of duty as a medical practitioner, when he willfully refused to remove the Plaster of Paris (POP) cast on the patient left leg despite complaints of severe pains which thereby resulted in a compartment syndrome.”

The court stated that the convict applied POP cast on PW 10’ leg using none medical staff, and without carrying out an x-ray to identify the level of injury.

Justice Akintoye further stated that Dr Orji did not obtain consent from the mother of the patient, who was in the hospital as at the time the POP was applied.

The court held: “The Defendant had undertaken to carry out the procedure and give medical treatment to PW 10 (patient), which turned out to be injurious to his health.

“The prosecution has been able to establish essential ingredients of the offences of breach of duty. I find that the prosecution has established essential ingredients in counts 2, 3, 4, and 6. The prosecution has therefore proved their case beyond reasonable doubt.

“Consequently, on counts one and five, the defendant, Dr. Ejike Ferdinand Orji is thereby found not guilty. On count two, three, four and six, I find him guilty and he is accordingly convicted. This is the judgement of the court”

In his plea of allocutus, the Defendant’s lawyer, Ajibola Ariba urged the court to temper justice with mercy, adding that the defendant, being a first offender, has never been convicted for any crime in the past.

He stated that the  defendant was born in 1958, and advanced in age. He urged the court to consider an option of fine.

After his plea for mercy, Justice Akintoye held: “I have listened to your  plea for leniency  on behalf of the defendant, that the defendant is a first time offender. Therefore, the defendant, Dr. Ejike Ferdinand Orji is hereby convicted and sentenced to one year imprisonment each, on counts two, three, four and six.

However, the judge stated that the  sentence will run concurrently.

According to the prosecution, the defendant on July 26, 2018, at their hospital fixed a POP cast too tightly on  a 16-year-old Ezi-Ashi’s leg, which caused him grievous harm.

The victim complained of discomfort and asked that the POP be relaxed, but the defendants allegedly refused, which resulted in the teenager becoming unconscious and he was subsequently rushed to the Reddington Hospital, Victoria Island, Lagos, where he was operated upon.

At the Reddington Hospital, it was discovered that the defendant had sawed off the POP and allegedly damaged the muscles in the lower part of the boy’s leg, foot and toes with wide open sores that were at the initial stage of becoming ‘compartmentalised’.

The prosecutor, Babatunde Sunmonu, said the victim underwent four major surgeries and following his critical condition, two orthopaedic surgeons from the United States of America extracted the dead muscles from the leg, adding that it was a major struggle to save the boy’s life as he had to be flown to the United States for further attention.

He stated that the defendant caused grievous harm on the 16-year-old boy, by fixing a POP cast too tight on his leg without his consent nor that of his parents.

The prosecutor also said that the  convict who was not orthopedic specialists, recklessly administered orthopedic medical treatment to the minor, from his upper thigh to his toes and deliberately refused to remove the said POP when requested to do so.

He said that the defendants deliberately removed the POP in a manner that put the life of the boy at risk.

He added that the defendants unlawfully inflicted wound to the left leg of the complainant “when they lacerated his toes with a saw blade and concealed the act”.

The offence committed is punishable under Sections 230, 245, 251 and 252 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2015.

BIG STORY

BREAKING: Court Grants Yahaya Bello N500m Bail Amid “N110.4bn Fraud” Case

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The Federal Capital Territory High Court in Abuja on Thursday granted the immediate past Kogi State Governor, Yahaya Bello, bail in the sum of N500 million and three sureties.

The trial judge, Justice MaryAnne Anenih, made the pronouncement after hearing the fresh bail application brought before the court following the court’s refusal to grant Bello bail at the previous sitting.

Bello, alongside two others, Umar Oricha and Abdulsalami Hudu, are facing trial on 16 counts brought against them by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, concerning criminal breach of trust and money laundering amounting to N110.4 billion.

However, the court granted bail to the second and third defendants in the sum of N300 million with two sureties, along with other conditions.

Outlining the conditions for Bello’s bail, the judge stated that the sureties must be responsible citizens who are landowners in any of the listed areas in Abuja – Maitama, Guzape, Apo, Wuse 2, or Asokoro.

She ordered that the sureties must deposit the documents of the property with the court’s registrar, along with two recent passport photographs.

Justice Anenih also ordered that Bello must deposit two copies of his recent passport photograph, alongside a photocopy of a means of identification, which could either be an International Passport or National Identity card, after presenting the original to the court’s registrar.

She ruled, “The first defendant must not travel without the permission of this court, and he shall remain in the Kuje Correctional Facility until the bail conditions are met.”

Recall that on December 10, the court had rejected Bello’s bail request, citing procedural irregularities in the filing of the application.

Justice Anenih, while delivering the ruling, explained that the application was premature and filed before Bello was present in court or custody.

The court noted that the bail application, dated November 22, 2024, was submitted before Bello’s arraignment, which took place on November 27, 2024, days after he was taken into custody on November 26, 2024.

She said, “Having not been filed when the first defendant was either in custody or before the court, this instant application is incompetent.”

“Consequently, the application, having been filed prematurely, is hereby refused.”

 

More to come…

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BIG STORY

‘N110bn Fraud’: Court To Hear Yahaya Bello’s Fresh Bail Application Today

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A Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court will today hear the bail application filed by Yahaya Bello, former governor of Kogi.

Bello and his co-defendants, Umar Shoaib Oricha and Abdulsalami Hudu, were arraigned on November 27 before the FCT court on a 16-count charge related to alleged money laundering amounting to N110 billion.

On December 10, Maryann Anenih, the trial judge, adjourned the case to January 29 and 30, and February 25 and 27, after refusing to grant bail to the former governor.

The trial judge declined Bello’s bail request on the grounds that the application was filed prematurely.

Anenih stated that the bail application was submitted before the ex-governor was taken into custody.

The judge emphasized that the provisions of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2025 stipulate that bail applications could be tendered once a defendant has been arrested, detained, arraigned, or brought before the court.

Although Bello was arrested by operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on November 26 and arraigned the following day, his bail application was filed on November 22, four days before his arrest.

Bello’s legal team, led by Joseph Daudu, has filed a new bail application, and the court has agreed to hear the application on December 19.

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BIG STORY

Buhari Didn’t Remove Petrol Subsidy Because He’s Friend Of The Poor — Femi Adesina

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Femi Adesina, spokesperson to former President Muhammadu Buhari, said his principal did not remove the petrol subsidy because he cared about its implications on “ordinary” Nigerians.

In a tribute to commemorate Buhari’s 82nd birthday on Tuesday, Adesina said the decisions of the former president were based on his love for “poor and underprivileged” Nigerians.

Adesina mentioned that the Buhari-led administration was aware that the country was spending huge resources on the petrol subsidy.

The former presidential spokesperson described Buhari as “ore mekunu,” a Yoruba phrase that means friend of the poor.

Adesina recalled that during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown, Buhari instructed Zainab Ahmed, the former Minister of Finance, to ensure the timely payment of workers’ salaries and pensions.

He added that Buhari understood the challenges workers faced during the pandemic and was determined to avoid the additional burden of unpaid salaries.

“The Big Elephant in the room. Removal of fuel subsidy. Did you think the Government didn’t know that the money guzzling monster had to be slain? It knew,” Adesina wrote.

“But who ensured that subsidies remained as long as they did? Buhari. And why? The people, the ordinary people. His argument was always simple:

“When oil sold for at least 100 dollars per barrel in the international market, rising even to as high as 140 dollars per barrel, what did the ordinary people gain? Nothing! So why should they be the ones to bear the brunt when oil prices fall?”

“By the time the administration ended, all, including the three main presidential candidates, were resolved that oil subsidies had to be removed.

“It was not unlikely that President Buhari shared the same conviction. But something that would throw society into a tailspin? He didn’t want to do it—for the sake of the ordinary people.

“Ordinary people gravitate towards Buhari, like bees to the honeycomb. That was why he always had a basket of millions of waiting votes, even before the first ballot was cast.

“He clobbered the ruling People’s Democratic Party in 2015, and won with even larger votes in 2019, despite all attempts to denigrate and demarket him. When you love the ordinary people, they love you in return, and stand with you through thick and thin.

“Now almost two years into retirement, get to Buhari’s house today. And you see the people milling around, just wanting to get a glimpse of the man.

“As he turns 82 on December 17, 2024, I salute the Ore Mekunu, a friend of the poor, who still draws the people like a magnet, even in retirement.”

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