A fresh political storm is shaking Nigeria after officials from President Bola Tinubu’s anti-graft agency told former Kaduna governor Nasir El-Rufai to quit politics and leave the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and stayed out of the 2027 presidential election. if he truly wants to regain his freedom.
About 32 days before mid-March 2026, El-Rufai, who left the ruling All Progressives Congress last year to join the opposition coalition, appeared for questioning by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). He cooperated fully, answered all questions, and was released after two days.
Days later, he was picked up by the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and has been held for over 30 days without formal charges, court appearance, or trial, exceeding constitutional limits.
In a 30-page criminal complaint filed at a Magistrate Court in Abuja and made public on his Facebook page, El-Rufai sued ICPC Chairman Musa Adamu Aliyu and four top officials. He alleged that during detention, ICPC officers told him continued political activity would prolong confinement, and only withdrawing from politics would secure his freedom.
Court documents describe repeated warnings that staying active in politics would keep him locked up. Paragraph 12 of the complaint says his release was explicitly conditional on abandoning political moves. Count Six of the complaint lists this as wrongful confinement intended to force him to give up constitutional rights, violating Sections 264 and 267 of the Penal Code.
El-Rufai also said his family and doctor were blocked from seeing him, describing the detention as a plan to make him politically irrelevant ahead of the 2027 elections.
The ADC condemned the detention. National Publicity Secretary Bolaji Abdullahi called it “the weaponisation of state institutions against political participation” and said El-Rufai had been denied basic rights, including access to family and medical care, and coerced to abandon political activity. The party warned it could take the case to international human rights groups, including Amnesty International.
ICPC has not publicly responded to the coercion allegations. The agency obtained a 14-day court extension to continue investigating alleged money laundering connected to Kaduna State funds from El-Rufai’s governorship, but no trial date or formal charges have been filed. El-Rufai has also filed a separate lawsuit seeking damages for wrongful detention.
Analysts say the case highlights broader political tensions. El-Rufai has criticized the Tinubu administration as “incompetent and clannish,” and his alignment with the opposition coalition, which includes Peter Obi and Atiku Abubakar, poses a challenge for the ruling party ahead of 2027. Critics warn that state agencies may be used to silence opposition voices.
Nigerians are closely watching developments. The outcome could affect El-Rufai’s political future and shape the democratic process and election landscape leading into 2027
