Nigeria’s Justice Minister has ordered an investigation into a hospital’s role in the death of a prominent author’s son. The young man died in custody. Details remain murky. But the implication is clear: British medical ethics are being questioned.
Justice Minister Abubakar Malami issued the directive last night. It followed the death of Chibueze Ojukwu, son of novelist Chimamanda Ojukwu. He was 27. Arrested on fraud charges, he died at a private hospital in Abuja after complaining of chest pains. CCTV footage shows guards preventing doctors from entering his room. The hospital says it followed protocol. The family says it was a cover-up.
Malami’s statement was blunt. “We will not tolerate medical negligence in our correctional institutions,” he said. The probe will examine if hospital staff acted under pressure. It will also review the treatment of detainees with British ties. Ojukwu held dual Nigerian-British citizenship. He studied in London. His mother is a vocal critic of the UK’s foreign policy.
Downing Street is watching closely. The Foreign Office has offered consular assistance. But officially, they are keeping a low profile. Sources at the Ministry of Justice in London admit they are “concerned but not panicked.” The PM’s spokesman said: “We respect the Nigerian judicial process. But we expect full transparency.”
Yet this is not just a tragedy. It is a political grenade. Conservative backbenchers are already briefing against the Foreign Office’s approach. They want a tougher line. Labour sees an opportunity to attack the government’s human rights record. The Nigerian diaspora in the UK is mobilising. Protests are planned outside the Nigerian High Commission.
Here is the real game. London needs Abuja’s cooperation on migration and counter-terrorism. A public row would damage that. But the PM is under pressure from his own MPs. They accuse him of being soft on corrupt regimes. The Labour leader has called for an independent investigation. He wants the UK to suspend police training in Nigeria until the matter is resolved.
Inside Whitehall, the mood is brittle. One official told me: “We are stuck. If we push too hard, we jeopardise vital treaties. If we do nothing, we look weak.” The Justice Minister’s probe is a lifeline. It allows both sides to save face, for now. But if the hospital is found complicit, the UK will have to act. It would be a diplomatic disaster.
The hospital in question is a private facility used by the Nigerian elite. It has ties to the UK’s National Health Service through training partnerships. Those links are now under scrutiny. A former NHS trust director now works there. He has been silent. The British Medical Association has issued a statement calling for “clarity and accountability.”
So here we are. A young man dead. A mother grieving. Two governments caught in a tense pas de deux. The outcome hangs on a hospital probe that neither side fully controls. Expect leaks. Expect briefings. Expect this story to run and run.
Eleanor Rigby, Political Bureau Chief.








