BENIN CITY, Nigeria — The Department of State Services (DSS) has formally assumed investigation of the December 28, 2025 attack on media personality Don Pedro Obaseki, according to a statement by his lead counsel, human-rights lawyer Femi Falana (SAN), marking a major escalation in a case that has triggered local and international legal petitions.
Obaseki alleges he was seized while playing football with friends in Benin City, marched through public streets to the palace area, handed to police, and later released. Falana’s latest “state-of-the-case” briefing said the legal team has characterized the incident as involving terrorism-related conduct, conspiracy, unlawful detention, assault, and obstruction of justice.
According to the statement, Obaseki has already had engagements with DSS operatives in Benin City under the authority of the state director, and any concerns about procedure and handling have been formally documented in consolidated representations to relevant authorities. Falana said his client is cooperating with lawful investigative processes.
Beyond domestic proceedings, Falana said petitions and formal communications have been sent to international and regional mechanisms, including the ECOWAS Court of Justice and UN special-rapporteur channels tied to torture and arbitrary detention claims. Several reports also cite outreach framed around broader human-rights accountability.
The incident has been politically sensitive from the outset because it was linked in public discourse to alleged remarks Obaseki made abroad about the Benin monarchy—an allegation that has intensified debate around free expression, traditional authority, and vigilante-style enforcement.
What changes now is institutional weight: if DSS is indeed leading the probe as stated, the case may move beyond a conventional assault file into a higher-priority national-security frame. That could affect both investigatory scope and prosecutorial strategy, especially where allegations include coordinated intimidation and cross-jurisdictional evidence.
At the time of filing, the core facts in circulation remain driven largely by Obaseki’s legal team statements and secondary media reports; authorities had not yet publicly released a full, independent investigative brief detailing suspects, charges, or timeline for prosecution.
For now, the case sits at the intersection of criminal law, security law, and human-rights scrutiny. The next key marker will be whether investigators publish verifiable findings that clarify command responsibility, identify direct perpetrators, and establish whether terrorism-related statutes will be formally invoked in court.


















