By Achadu Gabriel, Kaduna
In June 1996, Emmanuel Ogebe was dragged into Nigeria’s presidential villa—not for an award or state invitation, but for torture. At the height of General Sani Abacha’s military dictatorship, the young lawyer was detained and beaten by agents under the late military strongman for protesting the assassination of Kudirat Abiola, the wife of detained presidential election-winner Moshood Abiola.
Nearly three decades later, Ogebe sits thousands of miles away in Washington D.C., still campaigning for true democracy and championing human rights in Nigeria—this time across hearing rooms in the U.S. Congress, legal chambers at the International Criminal Court, and refugee camps on the African continent.
“The fight never stopped,” Ogebe said in a recent interview. “We were hunted down for demanding freedom. But freedom doesn’t end at a border and some elected “democrats” are yet to practice what democratic freedom really is.”
Exiled to the United States after his release, Ogebe transformed his personal tragedy into a decades-long crusade for human rights. Now one of the most prominent Nigerian lawyers in the diaspora, he has shaped U.S. foreign policy toward Africa’s most populous country, lobbying lawmakers and international institutions to address the abuses many at home dared not speak of.
Congressional Hallways and Courtrooms
Ogebe’s advocacy has led to several significant policy outcomes. He was instrumental in pushing the U.S. President Obama to designate Boko Haram a foreign terrorist organization in 2013, following years of escalating violence in Nigeria’s northeast and reluctance by the State Department. The same year, and again in 2020, the International Criminal Court in The Hague acknowledged the group’s crimes against humanity—developments Ogebe fought for and views as long overdue.
His credibility has brought him into consultations with top American leadership. He was tapped for insights ahead of President Bill Clinton’s trip to Nigeria in 2000, and again during George W. Bush’s Africa visit in 2003.
“Back then, few wanted to talk about what was happening in northern Nigeria,” he said. “We had to force it onto the global agenda.”
Ogebe also played a significant role in memorializing Nigeria’s pro-democracy struggle. In 1998, he successfully campaigned with fellow exiles to name the corner outside Nigeria’s United Nations mission in New York after assassinated activist Kudirat Abiola. It remains a rare U.S. official commemoration of a Nigerian political figure murdered by the state.
Legal Advocacy Beyond Borders
While his political influence spans continents, Ogebe’s legal career has remained firmly grounded in human suffering.
Over a year ago, he scored a rare victory in Indonesia’s Supreme Court. A Nigerian asylum seeker fleeing the 2000 sharia unrest, trafficked and wrongly sentenced to death, was freed after Ogebe provided pro bono legal support for over 18 years. “It was one of the longest, most exhausting cases I’ve ever taken,” he said. “But, miraculously, justice prevailed and we brought him back home from deathrow after 20 years in prison.” His legal team secured the first successful post-Supreme Court pre-execution appeal for a Nigerian condemned convict in Indonesia.
Ogebe currently serves as Special Counsel for the Justice for Jos Project, a human rights initiative that has documented mass atrocities in Nigeria for more than a decade and a half now. His team has worked with survivors of religious violence, providing legal representation, mental health support, scholarships, relocation and international resettlement and global exposure for communities often left behind by Nigeria’s own justice system.
In 2024 alone, the group facilitated over 2,000 surgeries and medical interventions across internally displaced persons (IDP) camps, slums, and remote villages. Last year, Ogebe delivered $400,000 worth of donated medical supplies to Plateau State, one of the flashpoints of genocidal violence, at the hospital where he was born.
The Long Road from Exile
April 2025 marked 25 years since Ogebe’s return to Nigeria on his first humanitarian mission from exile. It was then he traveled to the Niger Delta’s Ogoni land for the reburial of Ken Saro-Wiwa, the environmental activist executed under Abacha.
Over the years, Ogebe has carried out hundreds of such missions, coordinating multimillion dollar shipments of HIV/AIDS medications and technical equipment to African countries by sea and air. Two decades ago, he served as the pioneer Nigeria Country Representative of a donor agency affiliated with the White House, which funded dozens of community projects, including building 400 houses for flood-displaced farmers in Jigawa State.
His advocacy also helped catalyze the creation of the Victim Support Fund by the Nigerian government, following U.S. congressional delegations that he helped organize which benefited thousands of victims over a decade.
Despite his high-level access and recognition—including the U.S. President’s Bronze Volunteer Award under Barack Obama and diaspora accolades in multiple U.S. states—Ogebe says he remains focused on ground-level impact.
“People remember the big names—Abiola, the politicians,” he said. “But there were many of us who bled too. Many who suffered silently. Some never came out.”
Still Speaking Out
Now a father and seasoned human rights lawyer, Ogebe continues to campaign from Washington and around the world. He has spoken at universities across the United States and addressed global audiences via CNN, BBC, Al Jazeera, the United Nations, the Geneva Summit, and the Canadian Parliament.
His work is driven by a simple belief: that democracy is not a finished product, but an ongoing fight. “Nigeria’s future still hangs in the balance,” he says. “And the only way we honor June 12 is by ensuring it wasn’t in vain.”
As Nigeria reflects on 31 years since its aborted 1993 election, the legacy of Emmanuel Ogebe—a survivor of dictatorship, an advocate for the dispossessed, and a lawyer to the voiceless—offers a window into the endurance of justice against the tides of repression.
“In 1996, when I was in prison, several baby girls were born. Little did I know that I would come out alive and that 18 years later when they were kidnapped by terrorists, I would relocate the Chibok girls to be educated in America, my land of exile, and change their destinies. That is to tell you that God orchestrates everything for his purpose ahead of time. I have facilitated over 30 people coming to America – more than one per each year I’ve hear – from different states and tribes. Only one was related to me,” Ogebe marveled.
“We’re not looking for honors but speaking out because of a dangerous trend of historic revisionism. Abacha stole Nigeria’s money. $200 million of it is in litigation in DC court 15 miles from me right now and I have filed briefs urging the court to utilize it for rebuilding terror-devastated communities outside the northeast. Only God could have made it possible that a victim of Abacha is opportuned to advocate to a court on how to dispose of his looted assets. But will our rulers ever learn that they’re not God?” he mused.
Pix 1 – Ogebe’s first mission trip to Nigeria 25 years ago discussing information technology revolution with the Hon. Minister for Information
Pix 2 – Ogebe and team visiting Ogoni land during the reburial of Ken Saro-Wiwa in 2000
Pix 3 – Ogebe with President Obasanjo during his state visit to the United States in 2001
Pix 4 – Ogebe with members of the U.S. Congress standing in solidarity with the global campaign to bring back Nigeria’s terror-abducted schoolgirls 2015
Pix 5 – Young lawyer Ogebe (2nd left) and his American team on maiden humanitarian relief mission presenting donations to late Archbishop Benjamin Achigili for victims of Sharia riots in Kaduna (April 2000), June 12, 2025. END