Soldiers Force Driver to Swim Through Muddy Water After Splashing Water on Them in Enugu

  • A viral video shows the man forced to waddle through a muddy puddle while the soldiers follow behind.

Nigerian soldiers reportedly stopped a driver along Nsukka Road, Enugu, after his vehicle splashed water on them.

A viral video shows the man forced to walk through a muddy puddle while the soldiers follow behind.

Witnesses say the soldiers ordered him into the puddle, sparking debate about their conduct on public roads.

In other news…. arrister Pelumi Olajengbesi has stated that Comfort Emmanson, involved in an altercation with Ibom Air officials, could earn billions if she sues the airline.

He challenged the Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON)’s “no-fly” ban on her, saying AON has no legal authority to impose such restrictions under Nigerian law.

Olajengbesi explained that only the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA) can enforce flight bans. He warned that AON’s action violates Emmanson’s constitutional rights to freedom of movement and fair hearing, raising concerns about growing impunity in Nigeria.

“Nigeria is gradually sliding into impunity, with individuals and associations feeling entitled to make proclamations as if the country were a banana republic.

“The latest example is the Airline Operators of Nigeria (AON) purporting to place a lady involved in a physical fight today on a “No Fly” list. I wish to state categorically that no provision of the Civil Aviation Act, 2022, nor any other extant law in Nigeria, empowers the AON, a mere voluntary trade association, to impose a No Fly ban on any individual.

“Such an action is reckless and an affront to the Nigerian Constitution, particularly the fundamental rights of the affected individual,.

“The only body legally empowered to issue and enforce nationwide flight restrictions is the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), pursuant to Sections 31 and 32 of the Civil Aviation Act, 2022. AON is not a statutory regulator and has no legal mandate to unilaterally abridge the constitutionally guaranteed right to freedom of movement under Section 41 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended),”

“Furthermore, the hasty arraignment and subsequent remand of the lady, without affording her adequate time and facilities to prepare her defence, constitutes an abuse of the judicial process and a blatant violation of her constitutional right to fair hearing as enshrined in Section 36 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

“Such procedural shortcuts erode public confidence in the justice system, weaken the rule of law, and send a dangerous message that Nigeria is gradually encouraging impunity — where institutions and actors operate outside the bounds of legal authority without consequence.

“In every dispute, there are always two sides to the coin. Not even a native doctor can definitively determine who is right or wrong without properly hearing from both parties. Justice must remain the bedrock of our society, anything less is an invitation to lawlessness,” he said.

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