Court Orders Remand of Ex-Wife of Ooni of Ife, Radio CEO, and Principal Over Ibadan Tragedy
A Chief Magistrate’s Court 1 sitting in Iyaganku, Ibadan, Oyo State, on Tuesday ordered the remand of the ex-wife of the Ooni of Ife, Naomi Silekunola; Chief Executive Officer of Agidigbo FM, Oriyomi Hamzat; and the Principal of Islamic High School, Basorun, Abdullahi Fasasi, at the Agodi Correctional Centre. This decision came after the trio appeared in court over a tragic stampede that occurred during a children’s Christmas funfair in Ibadan, which claimed the lives of 35 children.
The presiding Chief Magistrate, Olabisi Ogunkanmi, adjourned the case until January 13, 2025, implying that the defendants will spend the Christmas and New Year period in custody. The court proceedings followed the arrest of the three individuals last week in connection with the tragic incident at Islamic High School, Basorun, Ibadan, where six other individuals also sustained varying degrees of injuries.
The police presented the case file, marked as C/2024: Commissioner of Police Versus Naomi Silekunola (31 years), Oriyomi Hamzat (51 years), and Abdullahi Fasasi (56 years), to the court. The presiding magistrate ordered that the defendants remain in custody pending legal advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) of the Oyo State Ministry of Justice.
The police initially detained several suspects in connection with the stampede. However, five individuals—Genesisi Christopher (24 years), Tanimowo Moruf (52 years), Anisoloja Olabode (42 years), Idowu Ibrahim (35 years), and Abiola Oluwatimileyin (25 years)—were released on Monday night from the state Criminal Investigations Department, Iyaganku, Ibadan.
The charges against Silekunola, Hamzat, and Fasasi include conspiracy, acceleration of death, negligent acts causing harm, and failure to provide adequate security and medical facilities. The trio appeared in court in person during the Tuesday proceedings.
Counsel for the school principal, Waheed Olajide, raised the issue of jurisdiction, arguing that the magistrate’s court lacked the authority to adjudicate the offences. He requested that the defendants not be arraigned in the court. Olajide stated that there was no evidence before the court to prove the alleged offences and urged the magistrate to return the suspects to police custody rather than sending them to a correctional facility.
Hamzat’s lawyer, Ridwan Adekunle, highlighted a previous agreement with the Officer-in-Charge Legal that Hamzat would remain in police custody due to his health condition. Reports indicated that Hamzat had been arrested on his hospital bed, where he was receiving treatment following the tragic incident.
Chief Magistrate Ogunkanmi, in her ruling, emphasized her discretion to remand the suspects at the correctional centre. She noted that the police should have considered the defendants’ health conditions before presenting them in court. The magistrate stated, “The police, who brought the suspects to the court, ought to have factored in their health conditions and the circumstances that informed the case itself before bringing them to court and having brought them, I have the responsibility of putting them in a correctional centre, pending the time legal advice would come out from the DPP.”
Ogunkanmi further urged the DPP to expedite the legal advice process to determine whether the suspects would face formal charges. The next court date was set for January 13, 2025.
The court premises witnessed a heavy security presence to manage supporters of Hamzat, who had gathered to express their dissatisfaction with the proceedings. The supporters protested visibly as the police escorted the defendants from the court premises.