Opinion
Beyond FRSC’s Speed Limiter
On October 1, this year, the Federal road Safety
Corps (FRSC) commenced the enforcement of the speed limiter on commercial vehicles across the country. This, to me, is a welcome development in Nigeria, especially against the backdrop of the fact that over speeding accounts for majority of road accidents in the country.
Speed limiter is a device that limits or regulates the kilometer a vehicle should run per hour. In Nigeria, the speed limit device is calibrated to 95 kilometres per hour. This means that no matter how a driver accelerates, the vehicle would not go beyond the speed limit. This is decent enough considering the recklessness of most Nigerian drivers on the roads.
Although it is a new innovation in Nigeria, the device has been in use in all advanced countries like the United States of America, Britain, France etc for decades. It is one of the reasons why these countries experience reduced rates of accidents on their roads.
Even in Nigeria, studies have shown that companies which installed speed limiters in their vehicles record fewer crashes and even when they are involved in accidents, the severity is usually less. At least, I know of some transport companies such as ABC Transport, God is Good Motors, and even major oil marketers in the country which experience low rates of accidents due to the installation of speed limiters on their vehicles.
There is no gainsaying the fact that majority of road crashes in Nigeria are caused by over speeding. Many people have died as a result of this, while some others have been permanently injured.
According to figures by the FRSC, 10,050 people die yearly in road carnages. Statistically, this translates to 27 deaths on our roads daily and this excludes hundreds of victims who suffer various degrees of injuries and permanent disabilities from such road crashes.
On March 6, this year, for instance, Nigeria lost its Minister of State for Labour and Productivity, Barrister James Ocholi to road accident along the Kaduna – Abuja Expressway, alongside his wife and son.
Just recently too, over 40 lives were lost to road carnages in three crashes in different locations in the country. The three accidents, according to the FRSC, were as a result of over speeding. In fact, 50 percent of road crashes in Nigeria, according to FRSC, are due to over speeding.
However, while it is unarguable that the introduction of speed limiter is long overdue and a good measure to reduce the rate of road carnage in the country, I want to suggest that other causes of accidents on our roads must be addressed. These include bad roads, overloading, poor vehicle maintenance, bad driving habits, bad weather and even fatigue
For instance, it is unthinkable that despite huge budgetary allocations to the federal ministry of works on yearly basis, some of our federal roads are still death traps. It took the Federal Government several years before work started on East-West Road which serves as the major link between the South West, South East and South South. Even at that, the road is yet to be completed.
The Lagos-Ibadan Expressway has been left unattended to for several years, despite its socio-economic importance. Every successive government pays lip service to the road. Other federal roads suffer the same fate if not even worse. Therefore, while we embrace the introduction of the speed limiter in the country, it is also necessary we fix all our roads not only to check the rate of accidents on our highways, but also to ease movements across the country.
Meanwhile, road users should exercise caution when driving on danger spots like potholes ridden portions, dangerous bends and roads that have been eaten up by erosion, among others.
However, I think the FRSC has the responsibilities of ensuring that road users, especially drivers, comply strictly with traffic rules and regulations. I say this because research has shown that majority of road crashes are caused by human errors.
Take for instance, the use of seat belts while driving. In advanced world, the non-use of seat belts constitutes serious offence and attracts serious sanctions. In Nigeria, our law enforcement agencies merely pay lip service to its enforcement. Ditto for the use of worn-out tyres, which accounts for high percentage of road accidents in the country.
It is sad to note that Nigeria has become a dump site for sub-standard and expired tyres, the same way it plays host to other sub-standard and expired products such as drugs and foods.
Again, the condition of many vehicles in the country is pathetic. If the FRSC and the Vehicle Inspection Officers (VIO) can live up to their responsibilities, by ensuring that rickety vehicles that are not in perfect condition are taken off our roads, road crashes caused by badly managed vehicles would reduce to the barest minimum.
What I am saying in a nutshell is that, while the introduction and enforcement of speed limiter on vehicles will go a long way in reducing the rate of road carnages in Nigeria, it is also important we take into cognizance some other factors that can save lives and properties on our roads.
Gbufor is a student of Abia State University, Uturu
Ijeoma Gbufor
Opinion
Judicial Fraud And Land Grabbing

About six years ago, my client, a UK-based Nigerian widow, became the target of an audacious scheme orchestrated by a notorious syndicate of land grabbers operating under the guise of a land owning family in Ikeja, Lagos. Their objective was clear: to dispossess her of her rightful ownership of three plots of land situated behind the former Tasty Fried Chicken building on Opebi Road, Ikeja. In a disturbing abuse of judicial process, these individuals approached a Magistrate Court then at Ikeja Local Airport, and by misrepresentation and fraudulent manipulation, secured a writ of possession against my client. It appeared their strategy was anchored on the assumption that the rightful owner was deceased. However, unknown to them, my client was very much alive, she only passed on last year.
Following this fraudulent judgment, the land grabbers, aided by a lawyer with an infamous reputation in the Ikeja axis for such sharp practices, took swift and forceful possession of the land. They began advertising the property to prospective buyers, offering each plot for several millions of naira. Upon being alerted by my client’s tenants, I conducted a search and discovered that the defendants had surreptitiously instituted the action using one of their own as the purported adverse party, who did not contest possession. Realising the magnitude of the fraud, I promptly secured my client’s Certificate of Occupancy and filed an application for joinder and a motion to set aside the judgment, backed by robust documentary evidence and affidavits deposing to the true facts.
The defendants, in a desperate and laughable defence, relied on a purported judgment allegedly delivered in the 1920s, claiming global ownership of lands stretching from Ikeja to Agege. When pressed to produce a survey plan or other definitive means of delineating the land covered by such a judgment, they failed woefully. The supposed plan was neither attached nor frontloaded.Fortunately, the presiding Magistrate, a sharp, fearless, and principled judicial officer saw through the deception and set aside the judgment accordingly.
What followed was a calculated legal standoff. After some days passed, I anticipated that the defendants would file a notice of appeal along with a motion for stay of execution, I acted strategically: by 8:00 a.m. of that day, possession had been recovered, effectively foreclosing their efforts to frustrate justice. They served their notice of appeal and motion for stay by 9:00am as I had anticipated.
Predictably, they resorted to harassment by filing a spurious petition at the Lagos State Police Command, alleging trespass. When that failed, they escalated the matter to the Assistant Inspector General of Police at Zone 2, Onikan. However, following a comprehensive review of all court documents and the title records, the Assistant Commissioner of Police, an officer of commendable integrity, sternly warned the fraudulent parties and their counsel never to return with such frivolous claims. He also threatened legal consequences for presenting forged or misleading documents. Regrettably, such land-grabbing tactics are far from isolated. I am presently handling another similar matter at the High Court of Lagos State, Ikeja Judicial Division. In this case, a property owner based in Jos, who has been in undisturbed possession of his land since before the Nigerian Civil War, was excluded from a suit for possession. The Plaintiffs falsely claimed adverse possession and obtained judgment using a family member as a nominal defendant. This is a land that had been returned to the owner (my client) by the Lagos State Government post-war, after a temporary wartime acquisition.
That matter is ongoing, and we remain confident that justice will again prevail. These cases serve as stark reminders of how certain individuals exploit procedural loopholes, such as substituted service and fictitious defendants, to perpetrate judicial fraud. It is common practice for notices of service to be pasted at the premises at odd hours, quickly photographed, and removed before anyone notices, thereby fabricating compliance with due process. This modus operandi, if not checked, undermines the integrity of our justice system. It may very well explain the plight Mr. Peter Obi’s brother, whose reported dispossession, despite a valid Certificate of Occupancy and long-standing possession, calls for judicial scrutiny and legal redress. While the wheels of justice may turn slowly, they remain capable of grinding exceedingly fine, provided legal practitioners act with diligence, and judicial officers remain vigilant and impartial.
There is a compelling need to amend our procedural rules regarding the use of unnamed or unknown persons as defendants in land litigation. Courts, both at High Court and Magistrate level – should be mandated to conduct locus in quo inspections where defendants are purportedly unknown or where substituted service is claimed. Such reforms will deter fraudulent practices and restore public confidence in the judiciary.In conclusion, let it be reaffirmed: the Nigerian legal system, though imperfect, is still a formidable instrument for the protection of property rights when wielded with integrity, precision, and tenacity.
Ubani, is a legal practitioner and public affairs analyst, Legal Advisor of Assemblies of God, Nigeria.
By: Monday Onyekachi Ubani
Opinion
Why Not Ban Alcohol Sachets?

As the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), contemplates banning the production, distribution and consumption of sachet alcoholic beverages across Nigeria, the move has raised mixed reactions among Nigerians and interest groups. According to NAFDAC the proliferation of sachet alcoholic beverages has been linked to abusive usage resulting in increased health complications, and drunk driving that causes road accidents. The Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) corroborates some of NAFDAC’s claims. FRSC records show that the 10,617 road accidents recorded in 2023 were due mostly to over speeding and drunk driving.
It is noteworthy that the availability of alcohol in less than 200ml PET bottles and in sachets, makes alcohol quickly consumable even during work hours. Without standardised packaging and regulatory labelling compliances, most of these sachet products are unregistered, come with questionable contents and form the bulk of illicit alcohol. Though lesser in volume, their high alcohol concentrations makes them highly intoxicating. Their ready availability at motor-parks, increase over-indulgence by commercial drivers, most of whom thereafter mount the wheels on low mental alertness.
Alcohol is known to reduce mental acuity and consciousness of the mind. Endowing its addicts with elixir feelings that momentarily blur reality, the alcohol effect additionally boosts self-rating and confidence, placing addicts on realms of happy possibilities where almost every dream is attainable, even if unrealistically. By the time the effect wanes addicts are known to be sad to face stark reality, which is why most are prone to retaking repeated doses to shoot themselves back to the fantasy world. Such fantasy is also the reason many youths and adults would rather invest daily in game-betting gambles than invest in micro innovations that guarantee real economic advancements.
The dawn of neo-medicinal alcohol being marketed in sachets as herbal remedies for organ cleansing, aphrodisiacs, anti- malarial and diabetes cures, is drawing increasing patronage from gullible Nigerians, even as these claims remain medically questionable. Following the rising patronage, all shades of manufacturing quackery are currently cashing-out from the market. Because of the harmful health effects of quack products, it is no wonder that sicknesses relating to organ-damage and male impotency are on the increase. Apart from drunk-driving and the health risks posed by over-indulgence in alcohols, the precious time wasted by addicts in unproductive day-dreams, which should have been deployed to meaningful economic ventures, is also a concern. In times of economic difficulties, as presently facing many Nigerians, there is need for mental clarity to enable one articulate ways out of hardships.
These outcomes may have informed NAFDAC’s decision to pursue banning easily consumable volumes of alcohol. If the ban becomes successful, those who like alcoholic drinks would still enjoy them by taking bigger packs which are low in concentration. Bigger bottles are likely to be consumed at leisure times after work due to their sizes. At that point, most consumers must have spent a productive day, yet have time to enjoy some booze. NAFDAC’s decision to ban unhealthy, anti-productive alcohol packs should therefore be encouraged. It is however, unfortunate that even as NAFDAC had set a long-term goal to achieve the ban, from as far back as 2018, through the then Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Folorunsho Adewole, and had engaged manufacturers on a five-year phase-out plan, the ban has failed to materialise. This is despite the signing of a five-year moratorium document between the Distillers and Blenders Association of Nigeria (DIBAN) and the Association of Food and Beverage & Tobacco Employers (AFBTE) on one hand, and the Ministry of Health, NAFDAC and the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (ECCPC), on the other.
Recall that same year, the minister had out-rightly banned over-the counter use of codeine syrups following a BBC documentary on the consequences of its abusive use in Nigeria. NAFDAC’s inability to check the indiscriminate use of sachet alcohol years after the expiration of the signed moratorium highlights how vested interests may stifle good institutional objectives. It becomes worrisome when the pressure on NAFDAC to shelve the ban on harmful alcohol is coming through a hallowed institution, like the House of Representatives. NAFDAC had swiftly introduced the ban on February 1, 2024 after the expiration of the five-year moratorium. But no sooner had the House come upon it to lift the ban. At the moment, the ban stands temporarily lifted till December 2025 even as lobbies intensify.
For the house to claim that “the ban was ill-timed because of the current economic conditions, staggering unemployment, soaring inflation and high rate of poverty,” it raises many questions about the rationale of members of the house, considering the correlation between alcohol addiction and the inability to exit poverty. Members of the legislature should be from the finest minds who go for the sublime. Why would members of the House choose to endorse a situation that is currently ensnaring many into addiction and anti-social behaviours, than safeguard societal sanity? Even as members of the house argue that sachet alcohol sales is sustaining some micro businesses, the anti-social behaviour and health risks engendered by such sales out-weigh any derivable economic benefits.
Opponents of the ban who support the house may also argue that the ban targets low-income earners who patronise sachet products due to affordability, and may further point out that substitutes of other herbal/alcoholic concoctions being marketed as health remedies are available through unregulated markets. Bowing to such arguments would mean that NAFDAC should choose a defeatist position, wherein it has been overwhelmed at discharging its core mandate of safeguarding the health of the nation. As NAFDAC mediates through legislative challenges and lobby groups, members of the executive should bear on the assembly to allow the institution pursue its core goals. Not doing so would be to build a nation of drunkards, where lunatics roam the streets.
By: Joseph Nwankwor