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Chimamanda and Euracare Face off:
When a high-profile case involves the heartbreaking loss of a child, public emotion understandably and rightfully skyrockets. No one can look at this tragedy and not feel the crushing weight of a family’s grief. As a father who has also lost a child to medical negligence in 2021, I can totally relate to the pains and concerns surrounding this unfortunate death. But as an objective observer looking closely at the legal standoff on the death of Nkanu, there is a vital angle we must talk about: the danger of abandoning proper legal procedures in search of justice, simply because we are angry and griefing.
The death of little Nkanu is a wound that cuts deep. Every parent feels it. Chimamanda and her family are entitled to clear answers, accountability where due, and the peace to mourn. Grave allegations of negligence in a medical setting deserve the fullest, fairest scrutiny our system can provide. Public anger is understandable. A child’s death in a hospital demands explanations. But justice is not the same as catharsis. It is not the satisfaction of the loudest voices or the quickest punishment. Justice has form: evidence tested, both sides heard, decisions reached through established channels that can withstand scrutiny.
Euracare has reportedly approached the Court concerning the coronial inquest. Whether one supports or opposes that application, the judicial process exists precisely for moments like this to check power, resolve disputes according to law, and create a record. Bypassing or pressuring that process because “the people are angry” does not serve justice.
Lagos State authorities have a legitimate role in protecting public health and demanding standards from healthcare providers. Their investigations and regulatory steps matter. Yet they, like everyone else, remain bound by the same legal framework. Court orders and procedural requirements are not optional hurdles to be cleared when emotion runs high.
We must also face uncomfortable procedural realities. The inquest has not ended but has encountered evidentiary complications, including those arising from post-death arrangements. These are not minor technicalities; they affect what can be proved and how. When we allow anger to dismiss such issues, we risk building any “justice” on shaky ground that collapses later.
Regulatory bodies have already taken steps, including suspensions pending further determination. Civil remedies remain open. These are the proper, tested avenues for accountability. They produce outcomes that can actually reform practice and compensate families unlike viral pressure that often delivers spectacle without sustainable change.
The temptation in moments of collective grief is to say: ignore the court, shut it all down now, let public sentiment dictate the pace and outcome. It feels righteous. But history shows that abandoning process in the name of justice usually weakens the very protections the vulnerable need most. Principles that bend under emotion rarely hold when it matters.
What we should insist on is justice that is seen to have been done, not merely felt. A process that fairly establishes facts, holds wrongdoers responsible through lawful means, and improves standards for every Nigerian child who enters a hospital. That kind of justice honours the dead and protects the living. Emotional shortcuts rarely achieve either.
Chimamanda’s pain is real. Her demand for truth is legitimate. The best way to support both is to defend the integrity of the mechanisms that deliver credible answers even when doing so feels slow or unsatisfying in the heat of the moment.
True justice is not clouded by sentiment. It is clarified by it into disciplined, enduring action. Let this moment strengthen our collective commitment to due process, not erode it.
As late Justice Oputa (JSC) once said: Justice is a 3 way traffic: the victim, the accused, and the society.
Lionel Messi’s run to the final:
- Cape Verde
- Canada
- Colombia
Cristiano Ronaldo’s run to the final:
- England
- Spain
- France
Pretty much sums up their careers.
Please say it loud and clear for people at the back.
May I also add that it’s completely fine for a woman to accept to want to be 2nd, 3rd and 4th wife? Such women deserve the same respect like others. We should stop branding them as husband snatchers, home breakers and all sorts. They have done absolutely nothing wrong to choose to follow a permissible path.
Accord everyone their deserving respect and everybody is good.
If Messi succeeds in winning this world cup back to back while being the best player and highest goalscorer, no player dead, alive or unborn will ever surpass him.
He will become completely immortalized and untouchable.
We must learn to appreciate greatness when we see it.
@arojinle1 Unrelated.
Arojinle, what do you think about what this guy said in this video sir? Should this kind of knowledge be shared openly like this?
When you live in a home that you don’t contribute anything to financially, you are fed, clothed and protected. You are nothing but a squatter.
So yes, any woman who falls into this category is a squatter.
You can check the dictionary for the meaning of a squatter.