Northern Nigerian Breaking News

Crisis hits NBA as court stops 2026 elections

The controversy rocking the leadership of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has taken a new dimension as the Oyo State High Court sitting in Ibadan issued an interim order restraining the association from going ahead with its 2026 National Officers’ Election.

In a ruling delivered on Wednesday, Justice G. A. Opayinka granted an ex parte application restraining members of the Electoral Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association (ECNBA), from parading themselves as officials of the committee or taking any steps in furtherance of the forthcoming election, pending the determination of a motion for interlocutory injunction fixed for March 12.

The judge also restrained the NBA president, Maxi Afam Osigwe (SAN) and other defendants/respondents from taking any steps toward the composition of the ECNBA or from participating in, supervising, influencing, or interfering in any manner with the conduct of the 2026 National Officers’ Election pending the determination of the instant suit.

The suit marked: 1/221/2026 was filed by four legal practitioners: Ibrahim Lawal, Esq., Raymond Oki, Esq., Omotan Olusola Ogunmodede, Esq. and Chief Gabriel Ojo Adekunle Ijalana, Esq.

The applicants/claimants had filed the instant suit against the NBA President and named the Incorporated Trustees of the NBA, Body of Benchers, the Attorney-General of the Federation (In its capacity as Chairman, General Council of the Bar), Aham Ejelam (SAN), Ibrahim Aliyu Nasarawa Esq., Mohammed Nuhu Esq., Uju Okafor Esq. and Ume Maduka Esq. as co-defendants/respondents to the suit.

The applicants/claimants are challenging the legitimacy of the electoral process and the role of the NBA leadership in its composition.

It is important to note that the second judicial intervention in two weeks over Wednesday’s order marks the second judicial intervention into the NBA’s electoral process within two weeks.

Read Also:NBA investigates branch Chairman over appointment of ex-convict as patron

Recall that another judge of the Oyo State High Court in Ibadan had on February 24, 2026, granted an interim injunction in Suit No. I/205/2026 filed by the Incorporated Trustees of Egbe Amofin O’odua.

Subscribe to our newsletter

In that earlier ruling, the court restrained the NBA and its agents from recognising, accepting, or processing the nomination of any candidate other than Egbe Amofin’s consensus candidate for the office of NBA President in the forthcoming 2026 election, pending the determination of an interlocutory application.

The February 24 order effectively put on hold the presidential nomination process outside the consensus arrangement put forward by the Yoruba lawyers’ body, while the March 4 order has now halted the operational machinery of the electoral committee itself.

Together, the two rulings have cast significant uncertainty over the conduct and timeline of the NBA’s 2026 elections.

The litigation comes against the backdrop of a growing controversy involving the NBA President. In recent weeks, senior members of the Bar have publicly raised ethical concerns over alleged undisclosed financial disbursements to certain members of the Association during an official engagement in Maiduguri.

The controversy has triggered sharp divisions within the profession, with some calling for full disclosure and institutional accountability, while others have dismissed the allegations as politically motivated.

Critics have argued that the alleged acceptance and selective distribution of funds, reportedly denominated in foreign currency, contravenes established NBA policy and ethical precedent requiring full disclosure and remittance of gifts received in the course of official engagements.

The controversy further intensified following public remarks attributed to the NBA President concerning the integrity of the judiciary, which some senior lawyers described as sweeping and injudicious.

While the NBA President’s supporters insist that no wrongdoing has been established and that due process must prevail, opponents argue that the cumulative weight of the allegations has undermined confidence in the neutrality of the electoral process, thereby necessitating judicial intervention.

With both the nomination process and the electoral committee’s authority now subject to court orders, the 2026 NBA election timetable faces potential disruption.

Comments are closed.