TRENDING
UPDATED: Court strikes out suit seeking recognition of Turaki-led PDP • France vs England: thrilling football showdown for the World Championship bronze medal • Assessing Impact of AI on Estate Surveying and Valuation Practice in Nigeria • Breaking: Court Dashes Hope of Turaki-led PDP To Be Recognised By INEC, Dismisses Suit • Rainy season: TRACE warns motorists against driving through flooded roads • Anambra Court Jails Self-Styled Prophet Onye Eze Jesus For Six Years, Imposes N20m Fine • Court Strikes Out Suit Seeking Recognition Of Turaki-Led PDP Leadership • World Cup of memes: Japan fans, Beckham unbothered and a simmering bromance • ACT yazidi kusukuma hoja ‘Zanzibar yenye mamlaka kamili’, yaibua mjadala mkali • Lagos begins controlled demolition of fire-damaged Martins Street building • I was shocked Temi, Mr Eazi were expecting baby after wedding — Nana Otedola • Bella Shmurda dismisses $4m property scam report as fake • VP Shettima tasks LG chairmen with driving ‘Nutrition 774 initiative’ at council level • Yusuf bags BusinessDay’s governor of the year in good governance • Nvidia Briefly Drops Below Apple As Most Valuable Company • Beginner Mistakes To Avoid While Using Cricbet99 Platform • I’ll resign as minister if my claims on roads are false — Wike • Nigerian govt charges three men with terrorism over Oyo school children, teachers abduction • DC Masindi ahimiza wanawake kukuza uchumi wao • Weija Children's Hospital to open to the public after EOCO brokers handover agreement • UPDATED: Court strikes out suit seeking recognition of Turaki-led PDP • France vs England: thrilling football showdown for the World Championship bronze medal • Assessing Impact of AI on Estate Surveying and Valuation Practice in Nigeria • Breaking: Court Dashes Hope of Turaki-led PDP To Be Recognised By INEC, Dismisses Suit • Rainy season: TRACE warns motorists against driving through flooded roads • Anambra Court Jails Self-Styled Prophet Onye Eze Jesus For Six Years, Imposes N20m Fine • Court Strikes Out Suit Seeking Recognition Of Turaki-Led PDP Leadership • World Cup of memes: Japan fans, Beckham unbothered and a simmering bromance • ACT yazidi kusukuma hoja ‘Zanzibar yenye mamlaka kamili’, yaibua mjadala mkali • Lagos begins controlled demolition of fire-damaged Martins Street building • I was shocked Temi, Mr Eazi were expecting baby after wedding — Nana Otedola • Bella Shmurda dismisses $4m property scam report as fake • VP Shettima tasks LG chairmen with driving ‘Nutrition 774 initiative’ at council level • Yusuf bags BusinessDay’s governor of the year in good governance • Nvidia Briefly Drops Below Apple As Most Valuable Company • Beginner Mistakes To Avoid While Using Cricbet99 Platform • I’ll resign as minister if my claims on roads are false — Wike • Nigerian govt charges three men with terrorism over Oyo school children, teachers abduction • DC Masindi ahimiza wanawake kukuza uchumi wao • Weija Children's Hospital to open to the public after EOCO brokers handover agreement
Palace siege: Olojo Kosoko Ruling House urges police to obey court order
Back to Home

Palace siege: Olojo Kosoko Ruling House urges police to obey court order

Vanguard Nigeria about 4 hours 2 mins read
Palace siege: Olojo Kosoko Ruling House urges police to obey court order

By Dapo Akinrefon
The Olojo Kosoko Ruling House of Lagos has faulted what it described as an unlawful siege on the Oloja of Lagos Palace, despite a subsisting court order directing parties to maintain the status quo.


The ruling house, in a statement by its Head, Prince Surajudeen Abiodun Olojo-Kosoko, and its Secretary, Prince Theophilus Olojo-Kosoko, alleged that the actions were being orchestrated by some individuals in defiance of a July 7, 2026, ruling of the Lagos State High Court.


According to the statement,Justice Oresanya had ordered all parties in the chieftaincy dispute over the Oloja of Lagos stool to maintain the status quo ante bellum pending the determination of the substantive suit.


The ruling house alleged that despite the order, police officers had been deployed to the palace, where they were preventing family members and legitimate visitors from gaining access while providing protection for suspected thugs.


It also claimed that Prince Abiola Olojo-Kosoko, described as the Oloja of Lagos-elect, and other family members had received police invitation letters allegedly instigated by the same individuals.


“The Palace is currently under siege, and this direct violation of a court order is a recipe for a breakdown of law and order on Lagos Island,” Prince Surajudeen said, urging the police not to allow themselves to be used in a civil chieftaincy dispute already before the court.


The family described the alleged actions as contempt of court, abuse of police powers and a violation of the constitutional rights of its members.


It called urged the Lagos State Police Command to immediately withdraw officers from the palace, investigate the circumstances surrounding the police invitations issued to its members, reject what it termed false petitions, and ensure strict neutrality while the matter remains before the court.


The ruling house said it had forwarded certified true copies of the court order and other relevant documents to the Commissioner of Police, adding that the Inspector-General of Police, the Lagos State Attorney-General, the Registrar of the Lagos State High Court, the Oba of Lagos and the Chief of Staff to the Lagos State Governor had also been notified.


It appealed to the police hierarchy to intervene urgently to uphold the rule of law and prevent a breakdown of peace on Lagos Island.

The post Palace siege: Olojo Kosoko Ruling House urges police to obey court order appeared first on Vanguard News.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Judiciary

View All
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.