By Okechukwu Nwanguma
Previous commentaries and opinions on the Comfort Emmanson incident – including mine – were based on incomplete information.
But new testimonies from other passengers on the same aircraft have emerged, sharply contradicting the official account. These developments make it imperative to call for an independent, impartial, and exhaustive investigation.
Here are the facts we know so far.
Comfort was asked to switch off her phone. She initially resisted but complied. Video shows her slapping an airline staff member – but we do not know what provoked it or whether she had first been assaulted.
What followed was a public stripping of her dignity. Airline staff verbally abused her, physically restrained her, dragged her across the floor, tore her clothes, seized her wig, and exposed her nakedness. Someone recorded her humiliation and posted it online, sparking a torrent of insults and sexualised abuse. She was detained, charged, jailed, and banned from flying – while the Minister of Aviation and the Airline Union sided with the airline without hearing her version of events.
At least three passengers tell a different story – one in which airline staff were the aggressors, acting with rudeness and unprofessionalism. If true, this raises urgent questions about excessive force, abuse of power, and corporate impunity.
This is bigger than one woman’s ordeal. It is about the collapse of due process, the cruelty of mob justice, and the dangerous precedent of institutions punishing first and asking questions later. Comfort may have erred, but nothing justifies public degradation and systemic overkill.
Until we confront this culture of humiliation and unaccountable power, every Nigerian is one bad day away from being Comfort.



