Senate Defies Court, Blocks Natasha Akpoti — ‘This Is Contempt,’ She Fires Back

Akpoti says her suspension was retaliation for exposing Akpabio’s misconduct.

The Law Speaks, But Senate Doesn’t Listen

Byline: IDNN Politics Desk

Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan’s dramatic standoff with the Nigerian Senate isn’t just a political spat — it’s a constitutional crisis.

Despite a clear ruling by Justice Binta Nyako invalidating her suspension, Akpoti was blocked from entering the National Assembly complex. Police officers sealed the gates. Five patrol vehicles were stationed outside. No statement. No explanation.

“Akpabio isn’t above the law. I was elected by my people — not appointed by the Senate President,” she declared.

Senator Natasha wins court case overturning her 6-month suspension,

Joined by activist Aisha Yesufu, the pair were met with silence and stone-faced security.

“This is cowardice,” Yesufu thundered. “Who sent you? Who gave the order? You can’t say. That’s shameful.”

“This isn’t disciplinary action — it’s a vendetta. Akpabio is personally offended because I dared to speak,” she declared.

A Legal Battle with Democratic Consequences

The Senate insists it’s appealing the judgment — but lawyers argue an appeal does not invalidate an existing order.

“The court has ruled. Anything less than compliance is contempt,” said her counsel, West Idahosa.

Observers warn this signals a dangerous precedent where court rulings are cherry-picked by lawmakers — weakening the pillars of democratic accountability.

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