Opinion
As Millions of Nigerians Sink Deeper into Poverty and Doctors Go Unpaid for 18 Months, the Tinubu Administration Quietly Builds Luxury Villas for Judges with Taxpayer Money” -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo
Mansions. For judges who already earn millions monthly, command drivers, cooks, and security escorts, and who preside over a justice sector where billions in bribes change hands. When they retire, they keep these mansions permanently, gifted forever with your taxes, while you struggle to survive.
These houses were not for the widow, not for the nurse, not for the family on the floor. While all of these are happening, bulldozers rolled into so many areas with little warning, instantly flattening Makoko’s floating homes, Oworonshoki’s crowded lanes, and the sawdust-strewn Oko-Baba Sawmill. Officially framed as “urban regeneration” and “safety,” the demolitions have displaced more than 10,000 residents since late 2025, echoing decades of sporadic mass evictions across Nigeria’s cities. Families now sleep under leaking zinc roofs in Ajegunle, widows in Kano juggle rent against food, and frontline nurses in Makoko cannot afford a single room in the city they serve. As luxury mansions rise for the privileged, the poor are left to rebuild their lives from rubble, an urban renewal drive that looks less like progress and more like erasure. Yet, the Tinubu administration has deemed it appropriate to build luxury mansions for judges, already living above the average standard, while millions of Nigerians remain homeless.
These are millions of Nigerians living in multidimensional poverty, hungry, sick, sleeping under leaking roofs in a nation sitting atop some of the world’s largest oil reserves. A nation whose government told them, repeatedly, that there was no money. No money for doctors owed eighteen months of salaries. No money for professors whose universities have been on strike longer than they have been in session. No money for the 28 million Nigerians without a roof over their heads, the largest housing deficit in Africa.
But then, miraculously, the cranes rose in Abuja. The concrete was poured. The villas took shape.
The Tinubu administration, through FCT Minister Nyesom Wike, is constructing a 40-unit judicial housing estate in Abuja: 20 houses for FCT High Court judges, 10 for the Court of Appeal, and 10 for the Federal High Court. Exclusive villas have also been commissioned for heads of courts, including the President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Judges of multiple federal courts.
The official justification is that providing comfortable and secure accommodation allows judges to focus entirely on the timely and efficient administration of justice, free from the distractions of inadequate living conditions.
It sounds reasonable, until one asks why the same logic does not apply to the nurse, the doctor, the teacher, or the 133 million citizens living in poverty who must also work, survive, and serve their communities from conditions far more wretched than any judge has ever endured.
Judges who benefit from this programme already earn millions of naira monthly. They command drivers, cooks, and security escorts. They receive vehicle allowances, medical allowances, and entertainment allowances. Upon retirement, according to reporting on the estate’s terms, they will keep the mansions permanently, gifted forever with the taxes of ordinary Nigerians who cannot afford their own rent.
The contrast with Nigeria’s healthcare workers is not manufactured outrage. It is documented, timestamped, and damning.
As recently as November 2025, the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) went on indefinite strike, demanding unpaid salary arrears, full implementation of the Medical Residency Training Fund, and improved working conditions, leaving public hospitals across the country with sharply reduced services and patients stranded at the gates.
The Federal Government owed healthcare workers an estimated ₦38 billion in accumulated allowances at the time. In some state institutions, such as Benue State University Teaching Hospital, doctors had gone as long as eighteen months without pay.
₦38 billion — Estimated allowances owed to healthcare workers (Nov 2025)
18 months — Duration of salary arrears in some state teaching hospitals
₦341 billion — Judiciary budget allocation in 2024, up from ₦165 billion in 2023
133 million — Nigerians living in multidimensional poverty
28 million — Nigerians without adequate housing (Africa’s largest housing deficit)
60 days — Time before government broke its MOU with doctors after the November 2025 strike
₦9.4 billion — Bribes documented flowing through the justice sector, 2018–2020 (ICPC)
NARD declared another indefinite strike starting January 12, 2026, citing the government’s failure to implement a 19-point Memorandum of Understanding signed just two months earlier, following a previous 29-day strike. The government could not sustain its commitments for even 60 days.
This pattern is not an oversight. A government that builds luxury housing for judges while repeatedly breaking salary agreements with doctors is not merely misallocating funds. It is making a values statement about whose welfare matters. It is telling the public, in concrete and steel and broken promises, exactly who it serves.
The construction of luxury housing for judges is not merely a question of spending priorities. Legal scholars and senior advocates have raised an alarm that strikes at the constitutional foundations of Nigerian democracy, that funding judicial welfare directly through the executive branch violates the constitutionally protected separation of powers enshrined in Sections 4, 5, and 6 of the 1999 Constitution.
Under Sections 81(2), 81(3)(c), and 84(2) of the same Constitution, the judiciary is mandated to have financial autonomy and to manage its funds directly through the National Judicial Council (NJC). Executive-funded luxury estates bypass this mechanism entirely.
Femi Falana (SAN), one of Nigeria’s most prominent public interest advocates, has argued that such initiatives reflect a failure of the NJC to assert its mandate, and that any executive assistance to the judiciary should be routed through the National Assembly, not handed over as personal benefits by a sitting minister.
The concern goes further. When the executive provides personal benefits such as houses and cars to judges who may later preside over cases in which that same executive is a litigant, a structural conflict of interest is created. Critics describe it plainly as a “paying the piper” scenario, where the power to call the tune inevitably follows.
The Tinubu administration has faced multiple high-profile court battles over electoral legitimacy since coming to power in 2023. The Presidential Election Petition Tribunal upheld Tinubu’s victory, rejecting opposition claims of non-compliance. The Supreme Court finalized its decision in October 2023, concluding that the original tribunal had properly upheld the February 25, 2023 election results.
Against this backdrop, the 2024 national budget raised the judiciary’s total allocation by over 100 percent, from ₦165 billion in 2023 to ₦341 billion in 2024, with special emphasis on raising salaries and improving welfare for judges. The judicial housing estate is one visible expression of that surge.
Critics argue this alignment is not coincidental. A government facing sustained legal challenges to its own legitimacy, which simultaneously doubles judicial funding and commissions luxury estates for judges, creates, at minimum, the appearance of institutional capture. At maximum, it represents a calculated investment in a compliant third arm of government.
The phenomenon of “judge shopping” and the documented influence of political actors on judicial processes in Nigeria are frequently cited alongside these increases, raising the question few are willing to answer directly: is increased funding improving justice delivery, or securing the interests of the political elite?
In February 2026, the President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mazi Afam Osigwe SAN, described the current state of the Nigerian judiciary as a “moral crisis and a democratic emergency.” He noted that Nigerian courts are increasingly perceived as a marketplace where justice is auctioned to the highest bidder, a characterization supported by data from the ICPC, which documented ₦9.4 billion in bribes flowing through the justice sector between 2018 and 2020.
Against this documented reality, the construction of luxury villas for judges, funded by the executive and handed over personally, outside transparent audit or competitive procurement, does not constitute judicial reform. It constitutes the formalization of a relationship of indebtedness between the bench and the most powerful executive litigant in the country.
What is presented as judicial welfare is, in the analysis of its sharpest critics, a smokescreen for institutional capture, a propaganda of reform masking the systematic transfer of public wealth into private hands, with constitutional language as cover.
The criticism directed at the Tinubu administration’s judicial housing programme is largely justified, even if one accepts the institutional logic that judicial welfare has value. The scale of luxury investment in courts at a moment when doctors go unpaid for eighteen months and agreements with medical unions are broken within 60 days represents a moral and political failure of the first order.
A government serious about institutional reform would fund both the judiciary and healthcare simultaneously. It would sequence its investments by urgency. It would not commission judge villas while simultaneously failing to honour signed agreements with the professionals responsible for keeping Nigerians alive.
Nigeria’s political class has once again revealed its priorities: institutions that safeguard elite power over services that protect ordinary lives. Healthcare workers save lives. Judges protect power. The national budget reflects, with precision, which one this government fears and which one it has decided it can safely ignore.
Nigerians are suffering. One hundred and thirty-three million citizens are drowning in poverty. Doctors are collapsing under eighteen months of unpaid salaries. Twenty-eight million families sleep without a roof over their heads. Yet the Tinubu government has chosen this moment to build luxury mansions for judges.
Not hospitals. Not schools. Not a single affordable home for the widow in Kano calculating whether to eat or pay rent, or the nurse in Lagos who saved lives during COVID and still cannot afford a flat in the city she serves.
Mansions. For judges who already earn millions monthly, command drivers, cooks, and security escorts, and who preside over a justice sector where billions in bribes change hands. When they retire, they keep these mansions permanently, gifted forever with your taxes, while you struggle to survive.
Facing serious court battles over its own legitimacy, the administration has chosen to reward the very judiciary that will judge it. They call it judicial welfare. It is institutional corruption dressed in the language of reform, funded quietly, deliberately, and shamelessly with public money.
Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is a Nigerian investigative journalist, publisher of Profiles International Human Rights Advocate, and policy analyst whose work focuses on governance, institutional accountability, and political power. He is also a human rights activist, human rights advocate, and human rights journalist. His reporting and analysis have appeared in Sahara Reporters, African Defence Forum, Daily Intel Newspapers, Opinion Nigeria, African Angle, and other international media platforms. He writes from Nigeria and can be reached at dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.com.
