As a patriotic Nigerian and global advocate for responsible leadership, I extend my deepest condolences to the families affected by the tragic accident involving our beloved boxing champion, Anthony Joshua, in Ogun State. May God grant them strength and peace during this painful time.
Beyond the grief, this incident exposes a troubling trend: our instinct to de-market Nigeria at the slightest opportunity.
Before the facts are clear, social media is awash with sensational claims, painting Nigeria as a failed state, alleging that no emergency responders came to Joshua’s aid, and amplifying narratives that now dominate headlines from India to Australia. Sadly, some of these damaging statements come from individuals who claim to be journalists.
Here is what verified information reveals. Eyewitnesses acted heroically within two minutes, assisting Joshua before professionals arrived.
The Federal Road Safety Corps and the police reached the scene within minutes, finding locals already intervening. Joshua was en route to a hospital before an ambulance could arrive; this entire process took minutes, not hours. Preliminary reports confirm that fatalities were due to collision trauma from excessive speed, not negligence.
So, where is the failure? Even in advanced nations, rural accidents take time to respond to. Remember Princess Diana’s accident in Paris?
It took fifteen minutes for an ambulance to arrive and over an hour to reach the hospital. Or the scandal in Spain involving Diogo Jota’s crash? These delays happen globally.
This tragedy also reminds us that technology is not a luxury, it is a necessity for saving lives. Imagine if real-time accident reporting apps linked directly to emergency services were widely adopted, if geo-location tracking systems automatically dispatched the nearest responders, if drone-assisted first aid kits reached rural areas within minutes, and if AI-powered traffic monitoring predicted and prevented high-risk collisions.
These innovations are not futuristic, they exist today. What we need is policy alignment, investment, and public awareness to integrate them into Nigeria’s emergency response framework.
Technology can turn minutes into seconds, and seconds save lives.
The real lesson is that patriotism demands patience and responsibility. Let us wait for official statements before crucifying our institutions. Irresponsible commentary not only damages Nigeria’s image but also undermines truth and justice.
We made this mistake before, after the tragic death of Somtochukwu Maduagwu, when misinformation caused irreparable harm. Let us not repeat history.
Nigeria is not perfect, but neither is any nation. Let us choose facts over frenzy, build rather than break, and embrace technology to make our systems future-ready.
If you love Nigeria, share this message. Let us promote truth, unity, and responsible citizenship, and advocate for tech-driven solutions to save lives.

