A former minister. A valid arrest warrant. A court that cannot make her appear. And a question that technology should have answered by now.
The continued failure to arraign former Minister Sadiya Umar Farouq, despite an active bench warrant and a declaration by the EFCC that she is a wanted person, has raised uncomfortable questions about Nigeria’s digital justice infrastructure. In an era where smartphones can track locations in real time, where international travel generates digital footprints, and where financial transactions leave traceable records, how does a prominent, wanted individual remain at large for months?
The Technology Gap in Nigerian Justice
Nigeria’s judiciary and law enforcement agencies have made significant progress in some areas of digital adoption. The EFCC uses financial intelligence tools to trace transactions. Courts have begun experimenting with remote hearings. The National Identity Management Commission has expanded the national ID system. However, the integration of these systems into a coherent fugitive tracking capability remains limited.
Countries with more advanced digital justice infrastructure — the United Kingdom, the United States, and increasingly some African peers like Rwanda and Kenya — have systems that allow law enforcement to flag wanted individuals at points of entry, freeze travel documents, and issue Interpol notices with relative speed. In Nigeria, these mechanisms exist but are not consistently applied.
What Farouq’s Case Reveals
Farouq is reportedly in Egypt. That information came not from a law enforcement tracking system but from her own lawyers, who told the court she was there for medical treatment. The EFCC then had to argue in court about whether her medical report was credible. That is not a technologically advanced fugitive tracking scenario. It is a manual, adversarial process that moves at the pace of court adjournments.
Furthermore, the eight week medical window her lawyers cited expired on June 9. The EFCC noted this in open court. However, without a real time monitoring system, the agency is reliant on court dates and lawyer statements rather than verified location data.
The Reform That Is Needed
Nigeria’s National Judicial Council and the EFCC have both identified digital transformation as a priority. The Tinubu administration has also spoken broadly about improving public sector technology. However, the gap between aspiration and operational reality remains large.
For ordinary Nigerians watching the Farouq case, the frustration is straightforward. If a private citizen does not appear in court, they are arrested. If a former minister does not appear, there are adjournments. Technology will not fix that inequality alone. However, a stronger digital justice infrastructure would at least make it harder for wanted individuals to simply remain abroad and out of reach indefinitely.
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