The Nigerian government has issued a formal demand for answers after a UK-based author accused a London hospital of deliberately stalling a review into the death of her son. Sources close to the family confirm the author, whose identity is being withheld for legal reasons, has amassed a dossier of internal emails and leaked documents that she alleges show a pattern of obstruction by hospital administrators.
The controversy centres on the death of the author’s 12-year-old son, who passed away in 2022 following what the family describes as a series of medical errors. The hospital, which has not been named pending investigation, initially agreed to an independent review. But according to documents obtained by this reporter, the review has been delayed repeatedly over the past 18 months.
“They promised transparency. Instead they buried it in red tape,” the author told me in a private meeting. She produced a chain of emails showing requests for medical records going unanswered and witness interviews postponed. One internal memo, dated March 2023, warns staff to “limit communication” with the family’s legal team.
The Nigerian High Commission in London has now stepped in. A diplomatic source confirmed that the commission formally requested a meeting with the hospital’s board last week. “This is about accountability,” the source said. “A child died. The family deserves the truth.”
The hospital’s chief executive issued a statement saying the institution is “fully cooperating” and that the delay is due to “the complexity of the case.” But the author’s lawyers have dismissed this as a smokescreen. They point to a separate complaint filed with the Care Quality Commission, which shows a pattern of similar complaints against the same hospital.
This story is not just about one family’s grief. It is about a system that too often closes ranks. The author’s dossier includes testimony from a former nurse who claims she was pressured to alter records. That nurse has since left the NHS and declined to comment.
The Nigerian government’s involvement raises the stakes. Abuja has made clear it will not let this matter fade. A spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: “We will pursue every avenue to ensure justice for our citizen.”
I have seen the documents. The timeline is damning. The first request for a review was made in August 2022. The hospital acknowledged receipt in September. The next communication came in January 2023: a letter citing “resource constraints.” By June 2023, the family’s solicitor was writing to the hospital’s legal department, warning of “legal action.” No response.
The author’s fight has drawn support from prominent figures in the Nigerian diaspora. A crowdfunding campaign has raised over £100,000 for legal fees. But she told me she does not want money. “I want answers. I want to know what happened to my son.”
The hospital’s board met in emergency session yesterday. Sources inside the room say there was “heated debate” over how to respond to the Nigerian government’s letter. No resolution was reached.
This is a story that will not go away. The documents are compelling. The sources are credible. And the politics are combustible. Nigeria is a major diplomatic partner. The Crown Prosecution Service is watching. The Care Quality Commission is investigating.
Expect more revelations in the coming days. I have obtained further documents that suggest the hospital may have destroyed key records. The family’s lawyers are preparing to file a judicial review.
For now, the mother waits. She sits in a flat in North London, surrounded by papers and photographs. She has not slept properly in two years. “I will not stop,” she said. “Not until I get the truth.”
That truth may be more uncomfortable than any of us suspect.








