Tensions ran high at the Coroner’s Court on Lagos Island on Tuesday, as the inquest into the death of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s 21-month-old son, Nkanu, was abruptly suspended, triggering a rare and open clash between the judiciary and the Lagos State executive.
The suspension came after a counsel from the Lagos State Attorney-General’s office informed the court that Attorney-General Lawal Pedro had issued a directive halting the inquest pending a stakeholders’ meeting scheduled for May 12, 2026.
The announcement was met with immediate and unambiguous resistance from Coroner Magistrate Atinuke Adetunji, who did not mince words in rebuking what she characterised as an unconstitutional overreach.
In remarks that will likely reverberate well beyond Tuesday’s sitting, Magistrate Adetunji delivered a pointed ruling that laid bare the tension between her court’s independence and what she viewed as executive interference.
“I find it very appalling that the Attorney-General would take such steps without informing the court. The AG does not have the power, under the principle of separation of powers, to direct the court,” she declared from the bench.
The ruling is a significant moment in a case that has already drawn intense public scrutiny, given the identity of the grieving parents.
That a sitting magistrate felt compelled to publicly rebuke the state’s chief law officer underscores just how sensitive and legally complex this inquest has become.
Despite her objections, Magistrate Adetunji nonetheless suspended further hearing, pending directives from Chief Coroner Justice Mojisola Dada, suggesting that while she contested the basis for the suspension, due process within the judicial hierarchy would still be observed.
For the family of little Nkanu, Tuesday’s outcome represented yet another painful delay in a search for answers that began in the grief-stricken early hours of January 7, 2026, when the toddler died following medical procedures at Euracare Multi-Specialist Hospital in Lagos.
Senior Advocate of Nigeria Adeyinka Aderemi, who represents the deceased’s parents, told the court that Dr. Ivara Esege, Nkanu’s father, had travelled to Lagos and was present in the courtroom, fully prepared to take the stand and offer testimony.
The abrupt halt to proceedings, he noted, was compounded by a troubling lack of communication; parties had received correspondence fixing the Attorney-General’s meeting for Tuesday itself, only to be informed late Monday evening that it had been rescheduled to May 12.
The apparent disorganisation surrounding the scheduling has added frustration to an already emotionally fraught process, raising questions about how the matter has been handled at the administrative level.
Nkanu Adichie-Esege was just 21 months old when he died. According to information placed before the court since the inquest commenced on February 25, the child had been referred from Atlantis Paediatric Hospital to Euracare Multi-Specialist Hospital, a specialist facility, for medical procedures.
He passed away in the early hours of January 7, 2026, while preparations were reportedly underway to transfer him to the renowned Johns Hopkins Hospital in the United States.
The inquest is tasked with establishing the precise circumstances surrounding his death, a proceeding that, by its nature, does not assign criminal culpability but seeks to determine whether the death was natural, accidental, or the result of negligence, and whether any recommendations should be made to prevent similar deaths in the future.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, one of Africa’s most globally recognised literary voices and author of such widely acclaimed works as “Half of a Yellow Sun” and “Americanah”, has not made extensive public statements regarding the inquest.
Legal observers will be watching closely when the matter returns, likely following whatever discussions take place on May 12 and subsequent guidance from Chief Coroner Justice Dada.
For now, a grieving father walked out of the Igbosere Magistrate Court without having been heard, and a magistrate’s sharp words about the limits of executive power hang over a case that is as much about institutional integrity as it is about the fate of one small child.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The inquest into the death of Nkanu Adichie-Esege, the 21-month-old son of author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, hit a significant roadblock on Tuesday when Lagos State Attorney-General Lawal Pedro intervened to suspend proceedings, a move that drew a sharp and public rebuke from the presiding magistrate, who declared the action a violation of the principle of separation of powers.























