
Details Emerged: How Arise TV Host Somtochukwu Maduagwu Died Without Treatment at Nigeria’s Premier Hospital
The loss of Somtochukwu Christelle Maduagwu, known to so many as “Sommie,” has left a void in the hearts of Nigerians and beyond. At just 29, this radiant Arise News anchor, producer, reporter, and lawyer was a woman whose warmth and brilliance touched everyone she met. On September 29, 2025, her life was stolen in a violent armed robbery at her home in Abuja’s Katampe district. But it’s the heart-wrenching details of what followed—allegations that Maitama General Hospital, one of Nigeria’s leading medical centers, turned her away for lack of identification—that have sparked grief, anger, and a desperate plea for answers.
Her colleagues and the Nigeria Union of Journalists are now calling on the government to investigate the hospital’s actions, hoping Sommie’s story will ignite change in a system that failed her when she needed it most.
Sommie was born on December 26, 1995, the eldest of three siblings, a former beauty queen whose intelligence and compassion shone through every story she told on Arise News. She had a gift for making people feel seen, whether through her reporting or her kind smile. That night, as armed robbers invaded her home, she suffered devastating injuries—some say from a fall while trying to escape, others mention possible gunshot wounds.
Friends rushed her to Maitama General Hospital, clinging to hope. But according to her Arise News colleagues—Ojy Okpe, Reuben Abati, and Ayo Mairo-Ese—the hospital staff refused to treat her without identification. By the time someone brought the ID, Sommie was gone, moved to the morgue without a word to those fighting for her life.
The thought that a simple piece of paper could stand between a young woman and survival is unbearable.
The pain deepens with stories from a family friend, who shared that police at the scene refused to help get Sommie to the hospital, saying their vehicle had no fuel.
In her final moments, she called out for help, reaching a friend by phone, but time slipped away. Some say she may have passed before even reaching the hospital; others believe the hospital’s delay was the final blow. Her last words on X, “I Pray Nigeria Never Happens To Me,” feel like a cry that echoes still, a plea against the very system that let her down.
Now, her colleagues at Arise News and the Nigeria Union of Journalists are demanding the government investigate Maitama General Hospital’s policies. Reuben Abati, his voice breaking on air, spoke of a system where paperwork trumps human lives. The NUJ has called for a full probe, wanting answers for Sommie and for every family who’s faced such loss.
Across Nigeria, voices like Peter Obi, Atiku Abubakar, Enugu Governor Peter Mbah, and the Federal Minister of Information have shared their sorrow, pointing to this tragedy as a mirror to Nigeria’s struggles with crime and healthcare.
The Nigeria Police Force is looking into the robbery, but the hospital has stayed silent, and no autopsy has yet clarified whether Sommie was still alive when she arrived.
Sommie’s death has stirred hearts far beyond Nigeria, shining a light on a healthcare system where rules like demanding ID can delay care, even when laws say hospitals must act fast in emergencies.
Her story is a call to the world: no one should die because of red tape. As we grieve, Sommie’s kindness and strength live on, pushing us to fight for a world where every life is valued, every second counts, and no one is left behind.
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