Wednesday, May 20, 2026 -The prosecution in the ongoing trial of former Kaduna State governor Nasir el-Rufai has told a Federal High Court in Abuja that the defendant was moved from the custody of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission to the Department of State Services following alleged media attacks and public controversy surrounding his detention.
El-Rufai is facing a five-count charge linked to comments he
allegedly made during a television interview in which he claimed that phone
conversations involving the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, had been
intercepted. During proceedings on Tuesday, May 19, prosecuting counsel Oluwole
Aladedoye told the court that alleged actions by members of the defendant’s
family influenced the decision to relocate him to DSS custody.
Aladedoye recalled an incident on May 15 in which one of
El-Rufai’s wives allegedly arrived at the ICPC facility with cameramen and
livestreamed claims that the former governor was being denied food and access
to family members. The prosecutor also accused politician Timi Frank of
publishing claims suggesting El-Rufai could be harmed while in custody.
According to Aladedoye, those developments prompted security
agencies to move the former governor to DSS custody “to avoid further
controversy.” He further alleged that members of El-Rufai’s family attempted to
“weaponize the media” and incite public opinion against the judiciary over the
former governor’s detention and bail conditions.
Aladedoye told the court that El-Rufai’s relatives
repeatedly used social media and press engagements to portray the prosecution
and security agencies as persecuting the defendant. He said tensions escalated
after two of El-Rufai’s wives and one of his sons reportedly went to DSS
headquarters alongside journalists and publicly criticised the bail conditions
imposed by the court.
According to the prosecutor, rather than pursuing legal
channels, the family resorted to media campaigns capable of undermining public
confidence in the judiciary. Aladedoye urged the court to caution El-Rufai and
his family members against further public criticism, stressing that the matter
before the court was a criminal prosecution and not political persecution.
Responding, defence lawyer E. E. Ekere denied knowledge of
the allegations raised by the prosecution and argued that the defendant should
not be held responsible for comments allegedly made outside the courtroom.
Ekere assured the court that the defence team would advise family members and
sympathisers to exercise restraint.
Presiding judge Joyce Abdulmalik said she pays no attention
to narratives circulating on social media and instructed that online
controversies should remain outside courtroom proceedings. During the hearing,
the prosecution tendered a flash drive containing a recording of a 43-minute
interview El-Rufai granted to Arise News.
The court admitted the flash drive and accompanying
certificate of compliance into evidence. According to the prosecution, El-Rufai
allegedly stated during the interview that someone had wiretapped a
conversation involving the National Security Adviser and forwarded the
recording to him.
The former governor reportedly defended the practice during
the interview, arguing that governments routinely monitor communications. The
first prosecution witness, identified only as APC, continued his testimony on
Tuesday, May 19.
The witness told the court that investigators later
interviewed Ribadu, who verbally confirmed that the conversation referenced by
El-Rufai had indeed taken place between him and the chairman of the ICPC.
According to the witness, the ICPC chairman also confirmed the discussion after
portions of the interview were played to him.
Investigators subsequently invited the programme anchor,
Charles Aniagolu, lawyer Deji Adeyanju, and a cameraman for questioning. The
witness said Aniagolu confirmed that El-Rufai admitted during the interview
that someone intercepted the conversation and passed it to him.
Statements obtained from Aniagolu, Adeyanju and an Arise TV
cameraman, Ugochukwu Agalayana, were later admitted into evidence without
opposition from the defence. The prosecution also tendered a preliminary
investigation report, which was accepted by the court.
Under cross-examination by defence lawyer Paul Erokoro, the
witness admitted that investigators did not examine any communication devices
belonging to the NSA, obtain IP addresses or conduct forensic analysis relating
to the alleged interception.
The witness argued that those steps became unnecessary after
the NSA confirmed the authenticity of the conversation referenced during the
interview. He also acknowledged that El-Rufai did not specifically claim to
have personally carried out the interception but maintained that the former
governor repeatedly stood by the assertion that the conversation had been
tapped and forwarded to him.
When asked whether El-Rufai may simply have been
exaggerating during a politically charged television appearance, the witness
said he considered the former governor “a person of integrity” and believed he
meant what he said. Justice Abdulmalik later adjourned further hearing in the
matter until June 22 and 23.

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