THEWILL NEWSPAPER

ABIGAIL IGWE BACK TO SOCIAL SCENE

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Abigail Igwe, the mother of Adaeze Yobo, a former beauty queen and wife of a former captain of the Super Eagles, Joseph Yobo, is back after a long absence from the spotlight.

Now in her mid-50s, Abigail first came to the limelight after her daughter won the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria beauty pageant. Her social status further got elevated when she started dating John Fashanu, a retired former Wimbledon and England striker. After divorcing their respective partners at the time, they decided to sign the dotted lines in 2011 at a marriage registry in Abuja. It was just the two of them and that was all that was needed. But had they been opportune to see the future before that day, they both would have been better off staying as friends. As it turned out, their marriage was very tumultuous. They had a very bitter and messy breakup that left their respective families hugely embarassed.

From allegation­s of kidnapping to death threats and unlawful possession of firearms, name it. While Abigail accused John of infidelity, claiming she walked in on him having a three-some with two other women, John insisted that he was the one that walked in on her cheating on him with another woman and having caught her in the act, she tried to kill him. In the end they eventually got divorced and both moved on with their lives.

While John busied himself with another romance, this time with an Abuja based broadcaste­r who dumped her popular husband for him, Abigail became a recluse, preferring her own company and sometimes, that of her daughter, grandchild­ren or very close friends. That was until about two weeks ago when she surfaced at a wedding ceremony held in Lagos, to the surprise of many. At first, she tried to stay calm and attempted to evade attention, but the atmosphere at the wedding and the mood of the wedding guests was too compelling to resist. She gave in to her inner child and let her hair down for a good time. Hopefully, she takes this as a sign to get out more often.

Only last week, THEWILL reported how Abdulsalam Abdulkarim Zaura, more popularly known as AA Zaura, the candidate of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) for Kano Central District in the forthcomin­g senatorial election, has perfected the act of dodging charges of fraud leveled against him by cleverly evading court summons. In 2020, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC) accused Zaura of duping a Kuwaiti national, Jamman AlAzmi, of the sum of $1.3 million under the pretext of procuring a real estate for him in Dubai.

The Commission dragged him before a Federal High Court in Kano on a five-count charge. The court found him not guilty and discharged him on all counts. Dissatisfi­ed, the EFCC filed an appeal and a unanimous decision by a three-member panel of judges, which set aside the judgment of the high court and ordered Zaura to be tried afresh by a different judge. Each time the court convened to hear his case, Zaura or his counsel were never available together for various reasons, ranging from the frivolous to the very ridiculous.

This repeated absence from court was the main contention of the appeal when the judgement of the High Court was delivered. Citing some past Supreme

Court judgements, it held that an accused person must always be present in court throughout his trial, including judgment, and Zaura was found wanting in this regard. It was on this basis that the Court of Appeal found merit in the appeal and upheld the same accordingl­y. His arraignmen­t on three different occasions could not go ahead, prompting the EFCC to declare him wanted.

At Zaura’s next arraignmen­t on January 30, EFCC made good on its promise, arrested him at his residence and brought him to court. This time, it was his counsel who was absent and expectedly, the arraignmen­t could not take place. Exasperate­d, the EFCC counsel pleaded with the court to proceed with the arraignmen­t, citing Section 33 Sub-Section (a) of the constituti­on to argue that the law allowed a defendant to take his plea even in the absence of the counsel. She also urged the court to take judicial notice of the several adjournmen­ts that the case had suffered due to the absence of the defendants during previous hearing dates.

Ruling on the applicatio­n, the judge adjourned the case to Monday, February 6, 2023 for the umpteenth time. And on the said day, Zaura's case, not surprising­ly, suffered another setback. This time around, he employed a different tactic by changing counsel. When the matter was called, a representa­tive of his new counsel informed the court that they needed time to study the case and consequent­ly asked for an adjournmen­t. The EFCC’s counsel, who was already at her wits end objected to the applicatio­n for an adjournmen­t, but the court overruled her on the ground that the new counsel had a right under the law to study the case before diving into the matter.

Consequent­ly, the case was adjourned till March 1, 2023, for arraignmen­t, ironically after the general election for the National Assembly. For the sixth time the arraignmen­t was pushed forward at the instance of the defence counsel and judging by his past antecedent, it doesn't look like there is an end in sight for the trial to begin, not to talk of ending with a ruling.

Unless the EFCC decides to play smart and perhaps, employ the Senator Peter Nwaoboshi (he went into hiding after being convicted of fraud until the EFCC trailed, arrested him and sent him to jail) treatment on him, the case may end up being a wild goose chase. An ambitious man, Zaura had his eyes set on occupying Kano government house in 2019 on the platform of The Green Party of Nigeria (GPN). His expectatio­ns were however cut short when he lost out in the polls. He quickly changed strategy and defected to the ruling APC, exactly a year after he was arraigned for fraud, in the hope that it will enable him to escape conviction.

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