Tag: Nigeria law

  • Nigerian Judiciary Adopts Digital Service for Social Media Influencers

    Nigerian Judiciary Adopts Digital Service for Social Media Influencers

    Reporting by ThisDay (via AllAfrica) indicates a landmark shift in the Nigerian legal system as an Ikeja High Court has officially recognized social media platforms as valid channels for the service of court documents. Justice Akintunde Savage granted leave for high-profile influencers, including “VeryDarkMan” and Kelvin Emmanuel, to be served legal papers via WhatsApp and Instagram in a defamation suit.

    This ruling addresses the long-standing challenge of “unknown physical addresses” for digital creators and public figures who operate primarily online. The court emphasized that as society evolves technologically, the law must adapt to ensure that individuals cannot evade justice by simply not having a traditional office or home address on file.

    Legal experts believe this sets a powerful precedent for future litigation involving the “digital-first” generation. It ensures that the bailiff’s inability to find a defendant physically no longer stalls legal proceedings, provided there is proof that the defendant is active on their verified social media accounts.

    Validation from Daily Post and The Nation confirms the significance of the case. Daily Post noted that “legal practitioners are hailing the move as a ‘digital revolution’ for the judiciary,” while The Nation reported that “the court ordered the bailiff to provide screenshots of the ‘sent’ or ‘delivered’ status as proof of service.”

    Echotitbits take: This is the end of “hiding” for social media trolls and influencers. If you can post a video, you can be served a lawsuit. Watch for this to drastically speed up defamation cases and civil litigation involving the Nigerian diaspora and digital nomads.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/federal-ministry-of-justice-adopts-digital-system-to-boost-efficiency/, February 10, 2026

    Photo credit: Leadership

  • NJC integrity screen drops 34 nominees as judicial recruitment tightens

    NJC integrity screen drops 34 nominees as judicial recruitment tightens

    2025-12-29 09:00:00
    In an update published by Punch, the National Judicial Council reportedly shortlisted 28 nominees for Federal High Court appointments while 34 candidates were said to have failed an integrity test under updated recruitment guidelines.

    The screening reflects an institutional push to reduce the entry of persons of doubtful character into the bench, amid fragile public trust in justice delivery.

    The Guardian also reported that “No fewer than 34 lawyers… have failed the integrity test” and were removed from consideration, noting that petitions featured in the eliminations.

    If sustained, the reforms could shift incentives—making reputational vetting and petition handling as important as technical competence in judicial appointments.

    Punch reported the integrity test filtered out dozens of applicants, while The Guardian wrote, “No fewer than 34 lawyers… have failed the integrity test.”

    Echotitbits take: Integrity screening is welcome, but transparency is key. Watch whether NJC clarifies criteria, petition handling timelines and appeal safeguards so the process doesn’t become opaque or politically weaponised.

    Source: The Punch — https://punchng.com/csp-33-others-fail-judges-integrity-test-njc/ — December 29, 2025
    The Punch 2025-12-29

    Photo Credit: National Judicial Council