Professor Ibrahim Gambari has commiserated with Dr Maureen Chigbo and her family on the tragic loss of her elder sister, Barrister Nwamaka Chigbo, on 5 January, 2026.
Gambari, founder and chairman of Savannah Centre for Diplomacy, Democracy & Development, and former Chief of Staff to President Muhammadu Buhari, expressed his condolences to the Chigbo Family in a condolence letter he personally signed and addressed to Dr Maureen Chigbo.
He was also a former Permanent Representative of Nigeria to the United Nations and former Under Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Department of Political Affairs.
Gambari stated in the letter, dated 12 January, 2026: “I sincerely sympathise with you and your family on this huge and irreplaceable loss.
“I want to take solace in the knowledge that your sister has lived her life in accordance with the teachings of Jesus Christ and has touched so many lives with her benevolence.”
The former envoy prayed for Nwamaka’s soul to rest in peace, adding: “And may the Lord give you and the family the fortitude to bear this pain.”
The Chigbo Family had announced the brutal and gruesome murder of the late Princess Nwamaka Mediatrix Chigbo by yet-to-be-identified kidnappers in the Federal Capital Territory on Monday, 5 January, 2026.
Before her abduction, the late Nwamaka was on the phone with her sister, Anthonia, who briefly interrupted the call to attend to a client.
When the sister returned to continue the phone conversation, Anthonia could only hear her sister’s distress cry before the phone suddenly went dead and unreachable.
Anthonia alerted her elder sister, Maureen Chigbo, and other family members, who called the lawyer’s number repeatedly to reach her or her abductors to no avail.
When a call finally went through, a male voice rained curses in English and Hausa language, saying: “Thunder fire you there, send three million Naira or else we will kill her.” The captors gave no further details and abruptly terminated subsequent calls.
Barrister Nwamaka’s family later tried to contact the Police Force Public Relations Officer and left a text message on her phone. They were referred to two police complaint numbers.
The family equally sent a distress text and WhatsApp message to the Inspector General of Police (IGP), and also contacted the FCT Police Commissioner, who immediately linked them up to the Commander of the Scorpion Squad, in charge of kidnapping in Abuja.
The Commander later called to inform the family that the police were tracking the kidnappers, who were said to be “in motion and would likely drop the lawyer off once they might have collected the ransom.”
The kidnappers never initiated any calls, and when Nwamaka’s family members reached them through her phone for clarification on how the ransom would be paid, they only heard the lawyer screaming in pain, “I am dying. …save me, please send the money, I am dying,” before the phone finally went dead again.
The family maintained contact with the Police Commander throughout Monday night to follow up on the rescue operation.
At 4 am on Tuesday, 6 January, when Maureen called the Commander, he expressed surprise that the lawyer had not called or returned home. He then promised to escalate the rescue operation.
The Commander later called to inform the family that “a lady had been found in a critical condition” and taken to an Abuja specialist hospital. He requested that Nwamaka’s picture be sent for identification purposes.
Maureen immediately took a flight from Lagos to Abuja and on reaching the hospital, saw her sister’s lifeless body in the mortuary with bruises, swollen eyes, and a cracked skull, all signs of a tortured death.
The Chigbo Family met with the Police authorities, who assured them that the case was under investigation, disclosing that three members of a one-chance gang have been apprehended in connection with the murder.


























