Sexual Assault: Court Grants N250m Bail To Suspended UNICAL Don

Cyril Ndifon, UNICAL law professor

A Federal High Court in Abuja, on Friday, granted bail to Cyril Ndifon, the suspended law faculty dean at the University of Calabar (UNICAL).

Ndifon was granted bail in the sum of N250 million with two sureties in like sum.

The Presiding Judge, James Omotosho, also granted lawyer Sunny Anyanwu, charged alongside Ndifon by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), N50 million bail with two sureties.

Omotosho said the court granted them bail because the defendants made a serious case for one.

The Judge held that the two sureties, who must be owners of a landed property in Abuja with registered titles and a minimum valuation of ₦150 million, must submit their certified bank statements to the registrar of the court.

While directing Ndifon to submit his international passport to the court Registrar, he ordered the suspended dean to sign an undertaking not to interfere with the case, be ready to stand trial, and not delay the trial.

Also ruling on Anyanwu’s bail plea, Omotosho, held that one of the sureties must have a property in Abuja, but not with a registered title.

READ ALSO: Suspended UNICAL Prof Demanded Blow Job In Exchange For Admission – Witness Tells Court

He further directed the sureties to file their bank statements and ordered Anyanwu to sign an undertaking not to interfere with the trial.

He said the court exercised discretion in favour of the defendants due to the nature of the offence and on health grounds.

Recall that Ndifon was suspended as a UNICAL dean in August 2023 for sexually harassing some female students.

Following protests and public outcry from the student community, an investigative panel probed the allegations against him.

The panel found the professor, who has since been replaced, guilty of sexual harassment and abuse of office.

The ICPC similarly investigated the professor’s alleged gross misconduct and arrested him on October 4.

It arraigned the senior lecturer on a four-count charge bordering on sexual harassment, official corruption, and abuse of office.

On January 25, Ndifon was re-arraigned alongside Anyanwu as 1st and 2nd defendants on an amended four-count charge bordering on “alleged sexual harassment” and “attempt to pervert the course of justice.”

One of the lawyers in the defence, Anyanwu, was included in an amended charge filed on January 22 by the ICPC.

Anyanwu had called one of the prosecution witnesses, during the pendency of the charge against Ndifon, to threaten her.