The Nigerian media industry has been thrown into mourning following the death of Lewis Obi, former Managing Director of the now-defunct African Concord magazine and one of the most influential editors of his generation.
Family members and close associates, including former Minister of Power and Chairman of Geometrics Power Limited, Prof. Barth Nnaji, confirmed that Obi died in Enugu on January 5, 2026. He was 77.
Obi, a towering figure in Nigerian journalism, went into exile in the United States in 1998 during the military dictatorship of General Sani Abacha, following a manhunt for senior editors of African Concord, including Soji Omotunde and Obiora Chukwumba. Family sources said he battled prolonged health challenges in the years that followed and, on several attempts to return home, was compelled to go back to the United States for medical treatment.
He later took up an editorial consulting role with The Sun Publishing Nigeria Limited and eventually returned to Nigeria in the closing months of 2025, shortly before his death.
Tributes have since poured in from across the media landscape, with colleagues, protégés and professional bodies celebrating a journalist widely regarded as one of the architects of Nigeria’s bold press resistance to military dictatorship in the 1980s and 1990s.
The Nigerian Press Council, in a statement issued over the weekend, expressed deep sorrow over Obi’s passing. The Council’s Executive Secretary, Dr. Dili Ezughah, described him as “one of Nigerian journalism’s finest and most decorated practitioners,” hailing him as a consummate professional, media trainer and mentor. He extended condolences to Obi’s family, the Nigerian Union of Journalists, the Nigerian Guild of Editors and the wider media community.
Recalling Obi’s early newsroom years, Dele Omotunde, a founding editor of TELL magazine, said the late editor was one of the formidable hands deployed by the late Dele Giwa to revitalise the features desk at Daily Times as both writer and copy editor. According to Omotunde, Giwa later took Obi along as a pioneer staff member to Concord Press, where he rose steadily through the ranks.
Obi succeeded Duro Onabule as Features Editor of National Concord and was later appointed the founding Editor-in-Chief and Managing Director of African Concord.
Former journalist and Senator Babafemi Ojudu, who trained under Obi at African Concord, described him as a gentle but exacting editor who ruled by standards rather than volume.
“He was a formative presence, one of those editors whose influence lingers long after the newsroom lights have gone out,” Ojudu wrote. “Obi was a master prose stylist—deeply committed to clarity, rhythm and precision. He believed in the power of the perfect sentence and the exact phrase.”
Mike Awoyinfa, former Features Editor of National Concord and founding editor of Weekend Concord, described himself as a disciple of the Lewis Obi tradition of integrity and impactful journalism, recalling how he followed Obi’s editorial path from the features desk to the weekend publication.
Never flamboyant but deeply influential, Obi was known for his simplicity, accessibility and quiet intensity. Through African Concord, he built a formidable editorial brand that attracted some of Africa’s most respected voices, including Patrick Wilmot, Doudou Diène, Femi Aribisala and Pini Jason.
He also mentored and worked with a generation of journalists who went on to shape Nigeria’s media and public discourse, among them Okey Ndibe, Bayo Onanuga, Ohi Alegbe, Femi Ojudu, Dele Momodu, Sam Omatseye and Obiora Chukwumba.
Lewis Obi is survived by his wife and children.

