Tonye Cole, the 2023 All Progressives Congress governorship candidate in Rivers State, has filed a N40 billion defamation suit against Nyesom Wike, Minister of the Federal Capital Territory and former Governor of Rivers State, and a popular Nigerian broadcast media.
The suit arises from remarks made by Minister Wike on
Channels Television’s flagship programme, Politics Today, aired on the 18th day
of September, 2025, where he accused Mr Cole of “stealing state resources”,
“selling gas assets for $308 million”, and “taking Olympia Hotel”.
Mr Cole contends that the statements were utterly false and
deliberately intended to paint him as corrupt, deceitful, and criminally minded
before millions of viewers, thereby injuring his hard-earned reputation built
over decades in business, philanthropy, and public life.
Prominent human rights lawyer and activist, Mr Deji Adeyanju
has joined the matter as a witness for the claimant, attesting that he
personally watched the defamatory broadcast and was “shocked by the
recklessness of the allegations”.
In his sworn deposition before the Court, Adeyanju faulted
both Wike and Channels Television for using a respected national platform to
disseminate unverified and damaging claims, stressing that such conduct
undermines public trust in the media and in responsible political discourse.
He also testified that he was personally attacked by the 1st
Defendant in a similar manner during a separate live television interview in
2024, where Wike described him as one of “people with no job”.
Adeyanju told the Court that he has tendered evidence of
that broadcast to demonstrate what he described as a consistent pattern of
malicious and defamatory speech by the 1st Defendant against perceived critics
and civic voices.
“I watched that interview live. The words used were
malicious and unbecoming of a public officer. The media has a duty to inform,
not to defame,” Adeyanju stated in his testimony.
Cole, a co-founder and former group executive director of
Sahara Group, says the defamatory broadcast caused immense emotional,
professional, and reputational harm.
He is seeking N40 billion in general and aggravated damages,
a public apology, and a perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from
publishing or rebroadcasting the offending statements.
His writ emphasises that the broadcast not only injured his
personal dignity but also jeopardised international partnerships, with several
corporate and philanthropic associates pausing engagements pending
clarification of the falsehoods.
“This is no longer about politics; it is about truth,
accountability, and the integrity of public discourse,” Cole remarked through
his legal representatives.
“Every Nigerian deserves protection from reckless abuse of
public platforms.”
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users

No comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)
Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com