Court orders conditional release of Nigerian Air Force officer’s body from Aga Khan Hospital

File image of Aga Khan University Hospital in Nairobi.

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The High Court in Nairobi has directed Aga Khan University Hospital to release the body of a retired Nigerian Air Force officer, but on condition that his son deposits Ksh.8 million or surrenders his passport to the court pending the determination of a case over disputed medical bills.
The ruling follows a petition filed by
Bidemi Okorodudu, who is acting as the legal representative of the estate of
his late father, Air Vice Marshal Terry O. Okorodudu (Ret.), who died on
September 9, 2025, while undergoing treatment at the hospital.
Through his lawyers, Bidemi accused the
hospital of unlawfully detaining the remains of the retired serviceman over an
outstanding bill of KSh9.8 million.
He argued that holding a body as security
for a debt is unlawful, unconstitutional, and against public policy.
“The continued detention of the body
infringes the inherent dignity of the deceased as guaranteed under Article 28
of the Constitution of Kenya,” the petition states.
The family sought immediate and
unconditional release of the body, an injunction restraining the hospital from
interfering with the burial, and orders to allow the repatriation of the
remains to Nigeria for a military funeral.
They also asked the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, Ministry of Health, Department of Immigration, and Parklands Police
Station to facilitate the repatriation and enforce court orders, warning that
the dispute risked causing diplomatic embarrassment between Kenya and Nigeria.
However, Aga Khan University Hospital
opposed the release, insisting that the family must first settle an outstanding
bill of Ksh.8 million. In court filings, the hospital’s Patient Services
Business Department Manager, Jackson Awuor, accused Bidemi of being
uncooperative and hostile to medical staff, despite signing a payment guarantee
when his father was admitted in July 2025.
According to Awuor, the late Air Vice Marshal
Okorodudu required highly specialized treatment for multiple complications,
including severe heart failure, kidney problems, liver disease, pulmonary
hypertension, and other comorbidities. He said the petitioner frequently
clashed with doctors, interfered with medical decisions, and even discharged
his father against medical advice from Coptic Hospital before transferring him
to Aga Khan.
The hospital presented signed consent forms
and medical reports to counter allegations of negligence, noting that the
petitioner had consented to risky procedures but later accused doctors of
incompetence.
By the time of the officer’s death, the
hospital said the bill had ballooned beyond Ksh.8 million. Awuor told the court
that Bidemi had initially pledged to keep the bill below Ksh.1 million but
later reneged, demanding instead that the hospital waive the entire bill, pay Ksh.70
million in damages, and cover Ksh.2 million in funeral expenses.
Awuor further argued that allowing the
release of the body without security would amount to “unjust enrichment” and
undermine the hospital’s right to recover costs, stressing that unpaid bills
from foreign patients strain its operations.
The hospital also rejected the petitioner’s
attempt to invoke Nigeria’s foreign judgment enforcement laws, saying Nigeria
is not recognized as a reciprocal country under Kenya’s Foreign Judgments
(Reciprocal Enforcement) Act, Cap 43.
In its conditional order, the court
directed that the body be released if the petitioner deposits Ksh.8 million as
security or surrenders his passport to ensure compliance with any final
judgment.
The case will be mentioned later for
further directions.
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