20/11/2025
💔⚖️ Nnamdi Kanu’s Judgment: When Emotion Meets the Constitution, the Truth Becomes Clear
Today’s judgment on Mazi Nnamdi Kanu has shaken millions of Nigerians — not just emotionally, but constitutionally. And the truth must be spoken clearly: a court cannot give justice where proper jurisdiction does not exist.
Many people are angry, confused, and heartbroken. And rightfully so. Because what happened today wasn’t just about one man — it was about the soul of the Nigerian justice system.
How can we talk about justice
when the very foundation of the case is still under constitutional question?
How can a judge claim authority
when the Constitution itself has not granted that authority in clear terms?
⚠️ The Constitution Is Not a Decoration
The Nigerian Constitution is the highest law in the land.
It is not a suggestion.
It is not optional.
It is not something a court can interpret based on convenience or political atmosphere.
When issues like:
illegal rendition,
human rights violations,
pending appeals on jurisdiction,
and self-determination rights
are still unresolved, no trial court should rush into giving a final judgment.
That is not justice — it is legal overreach.
🔥 A Nation Cannot Move Forward by Breaking Its Own Rules
What happened today has left many Nigerians feeling betrayed.
Not because they all agree with Kanu’s ideology,
but because they believe justice must be rooted in law, not emotion or political influence.
If we allow courts to selectively ignore constitutional processes today,
what message are we sending for tomorrow?
That constitutional rights only apply to some?
That the rules can be bent depending on who is in the dock?
💡 This Is Bigger Than Kanu
This is a question every Nigerian must ask:
If the law can be stretched this far for him,
who will it snap back on tomorrow?
This moment is not for silence.
It is not for pretending everything is fine.
It is for demanding that Nigeria respects her own Constitution —
fully, consistently, and without exception.
✊🏾 Justice Must Not Only Be Done — It Must Be Done LEGALLY
A judgment without proper jurisdiction
is not justice.
It is simply a ruling delivered on shaky ground.
Nigeria deserves better.
Nigerians deserve better.
And the Constitution deserves to be treated with the seriousness it commands.