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Home»News»Nurse’s death at Umahi’s home: Calls for investigation mount as family postpones burial
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Nurse’s death at Umahi’s home: Calls for investigation mount as family postpones burial

Daily News HubBy Daily News HubJuly 17, 2026No Comments
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More questions and growing calls for a comprehensive and independent investigation have continued to trail the death of 26-year-old Mary Habila at the Ebonyi residence of the Minister of Works, David Umahi.

Habila, who her father described as the minister’s personal nurse, reportedly died on June 27, and her body was found inside a room in one of the buildings within the minister’s country home in Uburu, Ohaozara Local Government Area of Ebonyi State.

Her death, however, did not come to public attention until July 11, nearly two weeks later, when Sahara Reporters first reported the incident.

Although Umahi has denied any wrongdoing or foul play and, through his lawyers, called for a post-mortem examination to determine the cause of death, the deceased’s father has approached the Ebonyi State High Court seeking to stop the police from carrying out an autopsy and discontinue further investigation into the case.

The family’s position has sparked fresh controversy, with lawyers arguing that it runs contrary to established criminal investigation procedures, particularly where the circumstances surrounding a death remain unclear.

Meanwhile, pressure has continued to mount on the authorities to ensure an independent investigation.

Lawyers, rights activists, social media users and other Nigerians, including former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, have urged the Inspector-General of Police to transfer the investigation from the Ebonyi State Police Command to the Force Headquarters to guarantee transparency and public confidence.

Atiku also called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to direct Umahi to temporarily step aside as Minister of Works pending the outcome of investigations, arguing that such action would allow an independent probe free from perceptions of interference.

“This is not a punishment; it is the minimum standard of public accountability in any serious democracy,” Atiku said.
“No official under this cloud should preside over a federal ministry as though it were business as usual.”
Meanwhile, Daily Trust gathered that Habila’s burial, earlier scheduled for today, has been postponed indefinitely.
An obituary poster circulating online indicated that she was to be buried at the Deeper Life Bible Church, Nok, in Jaba Local Government Area of Kaduna State. However, family sources confirmed that the burial would no longer hold as scheduled.

Henry Marah, member representing Jaba Constituency in Kaduna State House of Assembly, also confirmed the postponement of the burial.

Although no official reason was given, the postponement comes amid the police’ insistence that investigations would continue despite the family’s request for the release of the body.

DPP’s legal advice

A legal advice reportedly issued by the Ebonyi State Ministry of Justice also highlighted unresolved questions surrounding the cause of Habila’s death.

In the advice signed by J.U. Chukwu, Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), and addressed to the Deputy Commissioner of Police in charge of the State Criminal Investigation Department, the ministry acknowledged the family’s request but noted that critical issues remained unanswered.

The DPP advised the police to “invoke their discretionary power to either respect the request of the deceased’s family or proceed with the post-mortem examination.”

The legal advice listed observations made during the preliminary investigation, including that Habila was alone when she was found dead in her room.

It further stated that she was discovered lying lifeless on the floor, naked, with blood stains around her nose and mouth.

The DPP also noted that available evidence suggested she had not been ill before her death.

“That there was no evidence that the deceased was indisposed, sick or unstable health-wise prior to her sudden death, as she was full of life at the time she returned to Uburu in company of her team,” the advice stated.

It concluded that the circumstances naturally raised questions requiring scientific investigation.

“The question that would readily come to mind is what exactly caused the deceased’s sudden death? This curiosity under the law can only be resolved through a post-mortem examination, so as to provide a clue to the police as to the direction of their investigation.”

Father rejects autopsy, seeks end to investigation

In an affidavit deposed to on July 13, Habila’s father, Tanko Habila, urged the court to order the police to discontinue the investigation and release his daughter’s remains for burial.

While expressing appreciation for efforts to determine the cause of death, he insisted that neither he nor his family would consent to an autopsy.

“While I welcome steps being taken to unravel the cause of my daughter’s death, my family and I will not accept any autopsy,” the affidavit stated.

The affidavit also revealed details of Habila’s employment.

It stated that she was a staff member of the David Umahi Federal University of Medical Sciences who had been seconded to the Federal Ministry of Works in Abuja about three years before her death.

According to the affidavit, she served as the minister’s personal nurse and was among his immediate staff, residing at the minister’s guest house in Abuja and at the staff quarters in Ebonyi whenever official duties required.

The father further appealed that the family wished “to leave her body and organs intact” and therefore opposed both the autopsy and further investigation.

He added that he did not intend to honour any future invitation by either the police or the court because the family did not suspect foul play.

“I was never induced, coerced or influenced in any way by anybody to make these depositions,” he added

Family cannot stop autopsy, says lawyer

Legal practitioner and rights activist Hameed Jimoh, however, said the family lacks the legal authority to prevent the police from conducting an autopsy where circumstances surrounding a death warrant criminal investigation.

He explained that the investigation of suspicious or unnatural deaths falls within the statutory responsibility of the police and is ultimately a matter between the state and society rather than a private family affair.

“Criminal investigation in cases of alleged murder or suspicious death is the sole responsibility of the police,” he said.

“The government has obligations under international human rights law to respect, protect and fulfil the right to life. Therefore, where the loss of life of a citizen is involved, the matter becomes one for the state.”

According to him, an autopsy remains one of the recognised forensic tools available to investigators in determining the cause and circumstances of death.

“In my humble opinion, the family has no legal capacity to stop either the investigation or an autopsy where it is considered necessary.”

Atiku, Sowore seek independent probe

The controversy has continued to attract reactions from political leaders and rights advocates.

In a statement personally signed and posted on Th ursday, Atiku accused the federal government of failing to demonstrate sufficient urgency in handling the matter.

“Th e government’s first duty is the protection of life. Where a life is lost in circumstances touching a high official of state, the burden on government to act transparently is at its heaviest,” he said.

He argued that the prolonged delay in conducting an autopsy nearly three weeks after Habila’s death had further eroded public confi dence.

Th e former vice president demanded four immediate steps.

First, he said President Tinubu should direct Umahi to step aside pending the conclusion of investigations.

Second, he urged the Inspector-General of Police to transfer the
investigation from the Ebonyi State Command to Force Headquarters with the involvement of independent forensic experts.

Th ird, he called for what he described as “a full, independent and internationally credible autopsy” whose findings should be made public.

Finally, he urged authorities to ensure that Habila’s family was protected from intimidation, inducement or undue pressure throughout the investigation.

Earlier, activist and publisher of Sahara Reporters, Omoyele Sowore, had also called for a coroner’s inquest into the death.

According to him, the circumstances surrounding Habila’s death warranted a thorough forensic
investigation before any burial could take place.

Friend recounts final
moments

As public attention intensified, fresh details also emerged from an
affidavit reportedly sworn by Anita Baaki, a close friend and colleague of the deceased.

According to the affi davit, reported by Punch, Baaki travelled
with Habila and other officials from Abuja to Ebonyi on June 24
for an official assignment under the
Minister of Works.

She stated that members of the medical team were accommodated in separate but adjoining rooms within a staff chalet at the minister’s country home in Uburu.

Baaki said she last saw Habila alive on the evening of June 26 after she returned from having her hair done.

According to her, Habila stopped by her room to show off her new hairstyle before they chatted briefly.

“Mary told me she was tired and wanted to take a shower before sleeping. That was the last time I saw her alive,” she stated.

Baaki said concern arose the following morning when repeated telephone calls went unanswered.

After knocking several times without response, she alerted a domestic staff member to help locate her colleague.

When searches elsewhere on the premises proved unsuccessful, other staff members were informed and the room was eventually forced open.

She said Habila was found lying unconscious on the floor near the entrance.

She was rushed to the David

Umahi Federal University Teaching

Hospital, where doctors confi rmed

that she was dead on arrival.

Baaki maintained that her

affi davit was made voluntarily

and without coercion to assist

investigators in establishing the

circumstances surrounding Habila’s

death.

Police insist

investigation will

continue

Despite the family’s objections,

the Ebonyi State Police Command

has maintained that the investigation

will continue.

Police Public Relations Offi cer

Joshua Ukandu said detectives

received a distress call on the day

of the incident reporting a medical

emergency involving Habila at the

David Umahi Federal University

Teaching Hospital in Uburu.

He said offi cers were informed

that she had already died before

arriving at the hospital, prompting

the Commissioner of Police to

transfer the matter to the State

Criminal Investigation Department

for a more detailed inquiry.

According to the command,

preliminary investigations showed

that Habila and Baaki were both

members of the minister’s medical

team and had travelled from Abuja

to Uburu for offi cial duties before

the incident occurred.

Th e police said a post-mortem

examination remained necessary

given the nature of the case and the

need to establish the actual cause of

death.

“Th e examination remains

necessary given the sensitive nature

of the case and the imperative of

establishing the true cause of death,”

the command stated.

It disclosed that detectives had

visited the scene, taken statements

from relevant witnesses and were

making arrangements for a qualifi ed

pathologist to conduct the autopsy.

Th e command added that

it was awaiting the presence of

members of the deceased’s family

or their representatives to witness

the process, describing their

participation as important to

ensuring transparency.

‘I recently paid

N2.2m hospital bill for

her,’ Umahi speaks

Minister of Works David Umahi

on Th ursday once again spoke

on Ms Habila’s death, insisting

he suspected no foul play and

describing attempts to link him to

the incident as “politics taken too

far.” Umahi said the deceased, whom

he said was “like a daughter”, had

worked closely with him for about

three years and had a history of

medical challenges, revealing that

he personally funded her treatment,

including a medical bill of about

N2.2 million in April.

He also claimed that shortly

before she was found dead, Habila

had complained of bleeding from

her nose during a telephone

conversation with her boyfriend,

maintaining that there was no

evidence suggesting criminal

activity.

Speaking at a press briefi ng in

Abuja aft er the Federal Executive

Council meeting, the minister

said the deceased was a nurse

employed by the David Umahi

Federal University of Health

Sciences, Ebonyi State, and not a

physiotherapist as widely reported.

Th e clarifi cation followed a

statement by the Nigeria Society

of Physiotherapy on Th ursday

that Mary Habila’s name does not

appear on its register of licensed

physiotherapists, as well as her

father’s affi davit stating that she

served as the minister’s personal

nurse.

Th e minister’s latest comments

came amid growing public interest

and demands for an independent

investigation into the circumstances

surrounding the 26-year-old’s death.

Giving his fi rst detailed account

of the incident, Umahi said Habila

had lived and worked with his

family for years and enjoyed a close

relationship with them.

He appealed to the deceased’s

family to allow an autopsy to

establish the exact cause of death,

revealing that he had instructed

that her body should not be released

for burial until the procedure was

conducted.

“Th e lady in question was like

a daughter to me. She stayed with

me for three years. She was a staff

member of the Federal Medical

University. She was a nurse and not

a physiotherapist. Her family and my

family are like one family,” he said.

Th e minister disclosed that

Ms. Habila had been receiving

treatment for an undisclosed illness

at a hospital before her death and

claimed he personally paid her most

recent medical bill of N2.2 million in

April.

Narrating what he described as

her fi nal moments, Umahi said Ms.

Habila told her boyfriend she had

developed a nosebleed but later said

it had stopped. According to him,

the boyfriend advised her to seek

medical attention before ending the

call.

“Th ree minutes later, the

boyfriend called back, but she was

no longer responding,” he said,

adding that she had earlier told the

boyfriend she intended to take a

bath.

Umahi said colleagues became

concerned the following morning

aft er she failed to come out of her

room. When the door was forced

open, she was found dead, while the

bathroom tap was still running.

Th e minister argued that the guest

house where the incident occurred

was separate from his personal

residence and questioned eff orts

to hold him personally responsible

simply because the death occurred

on government premises linked

to his offi ce. Daily Trust could not

confi rm if the minister was at his

country home when the incident

occurred.

He maintained that investigators

should obtain the telephone

records between Ms. Habila and

her boyfriend, insisting they would

provide further insight into her fi nal

hours.

While acknowledging the

widespread public concern, Umahi

reiterated that he had requested

the Inspector-General of Police to

transfer the investigation to Abuja

and facilitate discussions with the

family over the autopsy.

“I suspect no foul play because

the room was locked from the

inside and had to be broken open

before they discovered the body. Th e

investigation should continue, but an

autopsy is necessary,” he said.

Umahi’s latest remarks come

as public scrutiny over the case

continues to intensify, with

opposition fi gures, civil society

groups and lawyers calling for

an independent and transparent

investigation into Habila’s death.

Th e controversy has also revived

memories of previous allegations

made against the minister while he

served as governor of Ebonyi State.

Months earlier, businesswoman

Tracy Ohiri publicly accused Umahi

of harassment and intimidation

following a dispute over business

dealings with the Ebonyi State

Government. She alleged that she was

unlawfully detained and subjected to

pressure aft er disagreements over

contractual matters.

Umahi denied the allegations,

insisting they were politically

motivated and without merit. Th e

claims did not result in any criminal

conviction against the minister aft er

a settlement. However, rights groups

at the time urged the authorities

to ensure that the allegations were

thoroughly investigated.

(Source: Daily Trust with modified headline)

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