The tragic death of Ruth Otabor, sister of Big Brother Naija winner Phyna, is not just a family tragedy. It is another painful reminder of the blood on Nigeria’s highways. Ruth’s story is heartbreaking, a young graduate full of dreams, only days after finishing at Auchi Polytechnic, struck down by a Dangote truck. Her leg was crushed, amputated, and now she is gone.
How many more Nigerians must die before someone dares to hold Dangote accountable? Or are we to believe the billionaire is untouchable, above the law, above justice, above the people whose blood is spilled on roads every month?
Dangote trucks: roads of death and no consequences
For years, Dangote trucks have been synonymous with carnage. They kill, they maim, they leave families in mourning, and yet nothing happens. No boardroom apology, no sweeping reform, no meaningful compensation to victims’ families. These trucks roam Nigerian highways like moving coffins, and every Nigerian knows it.
If this were not Dangote, if this were a smaller company, would government silence be this deafening? The Nigerian government acts swiftly when it wants to shut down “ordinary” businesses. But when the name is Dangote, suddenly there are excuses, silence, or empty promises.
Is Dangote more than justice in Nigeria?
Let us be blunt. If Ruth’s death does not move the Nigerian government to act, then we are confirming what many Nigerians already whisper: Dangote is bigger than the law. Dangote is bigger than justice. Dangote is bigger than the people.
And that is a national disgrace. Because no individual, no corporation, should be allowed to operate in this country with such reckless disregard for human life. Wealth should not buy immunity from accountability. Influence should not be a license to kill.
The government’s shameful silence
Where is the Federal Government? Where is the Ministry of Transport? Where is the National Assembly? Why is nobody asking why Dangote trucks continue to slaughter Nigerians unchecked?
We see endless committees for trivial issues. We hear lawmakers shouting over party politics. But when blood is spilled on the road by a truck carrying the Dangote logo, silence reigns. This silence is not neutrality, it is complicity.
Every day the government fails to act, it sends a message: the lives of ordinary Nigerians are expendable, so long as the billionaires remain comfortable.
Nigerians deserve answers, not condolences
Ruth’s family deserves more than sympathy messages. They deserve answers. They deserve justice. And Nigerians deserve to know: who protects Dangote from scrutiny?
We cannot continue to live in a country where corporate giants are untouchable, where the rich crush the poor both literally and figuratively, and where death on the highway is written off as “just another accident.”
Enough blood has been spilled
This is bigger than Ruth. She is not the first. She will not be the last, unless Nigerians begin to demand accountability loudly, consistently, and without fear. Every Dangote truck on the road is a reminder of how cheap life has become in this country.
But if we stay silent, if we let this slide, then we are telling the world that we accept this bloodshed. We are saying that one man’s empire is more valuable than our daughters, our sons, our sisters, and our mothers.
Ruth Otabor’s death must not be in vain
The truth is harsh: Ruth Otabor should be alive today. She did not have to die. She was killed by a system that allows reckless trucks to roam free, a system that values billionaires over citizens, a system where accountability is always “for the poor.”
If the Nigerian government cannot summon the courage to hold Dangote accountable, then let it be known: this silence is betrayal. This silence is endorsement. This silence means every future death lies not only at the wheels of those trucks but also at the feet of those in power.