Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Mrs. Oyinkansola Badejo-Okusanya, has been elected the 33rd President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), becoming only the second woman to lead the country's foremost association of legal practitioners.
Her emergence followed the conclusion of the NBA's 2026 national officers' election, which experienced delays after technical challenges and a cyberattack disrupted the voting process. The results were announced on Sunday at the NBA National Secretariat in Abuja by the Chairman of the Electoral Committee of the Nigerian Bar Association (ECNBA), Aham Ejelam, SAN.
According to the ECNBA, 26,106 votes were recorded in the election. Badejo-Okusanya secured 12,317 votes, representing 47.18 per cent of the total votes cast, defeating Lateef Akangbe, SAN, who polled 7,934 votes, representing 30.39 per cent. The third presidential candidate, Olumuyiwa Akinboro, SAN, received 5,855 votes, accounting for 22.43 per cent.
The election also produced a new national leadership as Oghenero Okoro emerged as First Vice-President with 11,024 votes, Afam Okeke was elected General Secretary with 8,478 votes, Aghogho Gladys won the office of Assistant General Secretary with 14,312 votes, while Chinelo Audrey Ofoegbunam secured the position of Welfare Secretary after polling 14,911 votes.
Badejo-Okusanya will serve a two-year tenure from 2026 to 2028, becoming the first woman to head the association in more than three decades after Priscilla Kuye, who served as the NBA's first female president between 1991 and 1992.
Although the president-elect was absent during the declaration of the results, Aminu Gadanya, SAN, a member of her campaign team, explained that a flight delay prevented her attendance. He added that she intends to extend a "handshake of friendship" to all contestants as part of efforts to strengthen unity within the association.
Her election crowns a legal career shaped by courtroom advocacy, public service, institutional reform and commercial dispute resolution, an experience that has placed her among the respected figures in Nigeria's legal community.
Long before her emergence as NBA president, Badejo-Okusanya had built a reputation in commercial litigation and alternative dispute resolution. She is currently a Partner at Africa Law Practice (ALP), where she co-heads the firm's Litigation and Dispute Resolution Practice, representing private individuals, corporations and government institutions in complex commercial disputes before trial and appellate courts across Nigeria. Her practice also spans domestic and international commercial arbitration, while she has successfully mediated numerous disputes as an advocate of alternative dispute resolution.
Her understanding of Nigeria's justice system was equally shaped by years in public service. Between 2007 and 2011, she served as Senior Aide on Justice Sector Reform in the Lagos State Attorney-General's Office, contributing to justice sector reforms, public-sector policy, arbitration legislation, public-private partnerships, as well as product liability and consumer protection initiatives. She later served as General Counsel to the Governor of Lagos State from 2011 to 2015, providing legal guidance on key government matters.
Those responsibilities were built on an earlier foundation at Olaniwun Ajayi LP, where she developed her advocacy skills at one of Nigeria's leading commercial law firms before moving into other leadership roles within the profession.
Away from legal practice, Badejo-Okusanya has contributed to the growth of arbitration and dispute resolution in Nigeria through several strategic assignments. She served on the Executive Committee of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (Nigeria Branch), was a member of the Reform of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act Committee, participated in the Nigeria Economic Summit Group's National Assembly Business Environment Roundtable (NASSBER) Arbitration and Dispute Resolution Working Group, and has served on the Board of the Lagos Court of Arbitration since 2015.
Her professional standing extends beyond Nigeria as she is an Accredited CEDR Mediator, a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (CIArb), and a member of the International Council for Commercial Arbitration (ICCA), Arbitral Women, the Commonwealth Lawyers Association, the Nigerian Bar Association and the International Bar Association.
Her areas of professional interest include intellectual property, media and entertainment law, regulatory compliance and public sector policy, disciplines that complement a career defined by legal practice, institutional development and justice sector reform as she begins her tenure as the 33rd President of the Nigerian Bar Association.

