Transforms facts about a deceased person into a structured, dignified obituary suitable for publication. Useful for journalists or families needing a professional draft quickly.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:obituary-writerThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Transforms a set of facts about a deceased person into a structured, dignified obituary suitable for publication in a newspaper, magazine, or website.
Transforms a set of facts about a deceased person into a structured, dignified obituary suitable for publication in a newspaper, magazine, or website.
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[cause of death not provided — confirm before publication]) rather than guessName: Margaret Osei-Bonsu Age: 74, died 14 March 2026 Cause of death: Complications following a stroke Career: Environmental lawyer; founded the West African Environmental Advocacy Coalition (WAEAC) in 1998; argued landmark cases that led to two national pollution regulations; taught law at the University of Cape Coast for 22 years; awarded the African Bar Association Environmental Prize in 2011 Family: Survived by husband Kweku Osei-Bonsu; daughters Abena and Nana Ama; four grandchildren Quote: "She never let you believe the law was an abstraction. She would say: 'Someone is drinking that water. Start there.'" — former student Josephine Armah Service details: A public memorial will be held at the University of Cape Coast on 28 March
Margaret Osei-Bonsu, the environmental lawyer whose advocacy shaped pollution regulations across West Africa, died on 14 March 2026 following complications from a stroke. She was 74.
Over a career spanning four decades, Osei-Bonsu became one of the most consequential environmental litigators on the continent. In 1998 she founded the West African Environmental Advocacy Coalition, a body that went on to argue the cases behind two landmark national pollution regulations. The work was technical, protracted, and often thankless; she pursued it without interruption while also teaching law at the University of Cape Coast, where she remained on the faculty for 22 years.
The African Bar Association awarded her its Environmental Prize in 2011, though colleagues noted she was more pleased by her students' courtroom wins than by any honour she received herself.
Those students remember a teacher who insisted the law remain concrete. "She never let you believe the law was an abstraction," said Josephine Armah, who studied under Osei-Bonsu before building her own practice in environmental litigation. "She would say: 'Someone is drinking that water. Start there.'"
She is survived by her husband, Kweku Osei-Bonsu; daughters Abena and Nana Ama; and four grandchildren.
A public memorial will be held at the University of Cape Coast on 28 March.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsWrites a magazine-style profile piece from interview notes, biographical background, and editorial angle, producing a polished draft.
Composes full personal essays from structured notes in user's voice using persistent style profile, calibrated to platform and word count.
Drafts a factually accurate news article using inverted pyramid structure and AP style. Includes lede writing, source attribution, quote handling, and self-editing steps.