
By Fortune Abang
Abuja, Jan. 8, 2026
In a significant diplomatic resolution, Pastor Benjamin Egbaji, a Nigerian cleric and businessman incarcerated in the Republic of Benin, was released on Thursday following a presidential pardon granted by President Patrice Talon. The release concludes a protracted two-year ordeal that drew international attention and tested bilateral relations.
Nigeria’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, confirmed the development, attributing the breakthrough to sustained high-level diplomatic pressure and a formal amnesty gazetted on December 17, 2025.
The Case: From Accusation to Deteriorating Health
Pastor Egbaji, a native of Cross River State, was detained in Benin over an unspecified offence. His case took a grave turn as he was held under what officials described as “dehumanising conditions” in a hospital in Cotonou. For over two years, his health deteriorated significantly while in detention before he was eventually transferred to formal prison custody.
The turning point in the case came in August 2025, when a viral photograph surfaced showing Egbaji chained to a hospital bed. The image provoked widespread outrage among Nigerians and human rights advocates, transforming a quiet consular case into a public diplomatic imperative. Ambassador Odumegwu-Ojukwu’s personal visit to the detained citizen at the Cotonou hospital that same month signaled a serious escalation in Nigeria’s engagement.
The Mechanics of Diplomatic Resolution
The minister detailed a multi-pronged strategy that secured Egbaji’s freedom. First, her office leveraged the public outcry to initiate immediate and sustained diplomatic dialogue with Beninese authorities. Second, they worked to align the case with an existing presidential amnesty framework in Benin, using the gazetted decree as the legal instrument for release. This approach demonstrates a critical lesson in international consular affairs: effective intervention often requires navigating both the court of public opinion and the formal legal and political channels of the host nation.
Furthermore, Nigeria has formally requested that Egbaji be allowed to serve any remaining custodial term within Nigeria, a process known as prisoner transfer, which is governed by bilateral agreements and international conventions. This highlights the ongoing nature of such cases even after a pardon or release is secured.
Contextualizing the “4-D” Foreign Policy
Ambassador Odumegwu-Ojukwu framed the successful intervention within President Bola Tinubu’s foreign policy doctrine, specifically the “Democracy, Demography, Diaspora, and Development” (4-D) framework. The “Diaspora” pillar explicitly commits the Nigerian government to protecting the welfare and rights of its citizens abroad—a population estimated in the tens of millions. This case serves as a practical test of that policy, moving it from rhetoric to tangible action.
The minister stressed that Egbaji now requires urgent and proper medical care to address the health consequences of his prolonged incarceration, underscoring the long-term humanitarian dimensions often overlooked in release announcements.
Broader Implications and Community Response
The release has been hailed as a victory for citizen diplomacy. Alhaji Munir, Chairman of the Nigerians In Diaspora Organisation (NIDO) Benin chapter, commended the ministry’s “uncommon commitment,” noting it sets a precedent for safeguarding Nigerians living abroad. He also called for intensified efforts to secure the freedom of other innocent citizens jailed overseas, pointing to a persistent challenge for many migrant-sending nations.
Ultimately, while celebrating a moment of “enduring fraternity and cooperation” between the neighbouring West African nations, this case reveals the complex, often arduous pathway to securing justice for citizens detained in foreign jurisdictions. It underscores the necessity of persistent diplomacy, the strategic use of legal mechanisms like amnesties, and the powerful role of public advocacy in achieving consular outcomes.
Edited by Kamal Tayo Oropo
Source: NAN News




