Category: Law

  • Lagos judges begin vacation on July 17

    Lagos State High Court will be on long vacation from July 17 to September 12.

    The Chief Judge, Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade, approved the vacation.

    The Federal High Court began its nine-week long vacation yesterday. It will resume on September 11.

    Justice Atilade approved the break pursuant to order 45 Rule 4 (D) of the High Court of Lagos State Civil Procedure Rules, 2012.

    The Chief Judge also approved the appointment of 10 judges to hear urgent causes during the vacation in the Ikeja  and  Lagos divisions.

    For Ikeja division are Justice Lateefa Okunnu, July 17-July 28; Justice Sedoten Ogunsanya, July 31-August 11; Justice Ganiyu Safari, August 14-August 15; Justice Hakeem Oshodi, August 28-September 12. Justice Kudirat Jose was appointed  as substitute judge.

    In Lagos division, Justice Karfeel Dawodu will sit from July 17 to 28; Justice Lateefat Folami, July 31-August 11; Justice Wasiu Animahun, August 14-15; Justice Morenike Obadina August 28-September 12. Justice Akintunde Savage will be the substitute judge.

    A statement by acting Chief Registrar, Mrs D.T. Olatokun, said the criminal division in Ikeja and Lagos would sit throughout the vacation.

    “Notwithstanding the long vacation, any cause or matter may be heard by a judge during the period of the vacation, except on Sunday or public holiday, where such cause or matter is urgent or a judge, at the request of all the parties concerned agree to hear it.

    “Any application for an urgent hearing during the vacation may be made by summons in chambers, before the vacation or the judge before whom the substantive case is pending”.

    The statement said the long vacation will end on September 12 while the new legal year 2017/2018 will begin the next day.

    It added that the new legal year service will hold on September 18 simultaneously at Cathedral Church of Christ, Marina and Central Mosque, Nnamdi Azikwe Street,  Lagos .

  • Why I accepted to head Fusengbuwa, by Subomi Balogun

    First City Monument Bank (FCMB) founder, Otunba Subomi Balogun, has told an Ijebu Ode High Court that he agreed to become the Olori-Ebi (Head) of the Fusengbuwa Ruling House to “serve and bring unity” to it.

    Balogun was testifying in a suit challenging his headship of the Royal House.

    The suit was filed by Otunba Abdul-Lateef Owoyemi, Prince Rasaq Akeju, Prince Yisau Ajidagba, Prince Adeleke Adeyemi and one other on behalf of themselves and Fusengbuwa Ruling House.

    They are asking the court to declare that Owoyemi, a former National President, Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN), is the right and legitimate person to occupy the position of the Olori-Ebi of Fusengbuwa Ruling House.

    They alleged that the manner Balogun emerged as the Olori-Ebi of the family after the death of the former Olori – Ebi, Prince Adebisi Adeyemi was irregular.

    Under cross-examination by plaintiffs’ counsel, Adesegun Adebayo, Balogun said he “did not succeed anybody” as Head of the House.

    But when asked if he was the first Olori-Ebi of the House, Balogun said:“No.”

    He explained that he did not succeed “whoever claimed to be the Olori – Ebi” of the house.

    He also told the court that it was the Otunbas, Obas and the late Chief Olu Adebanjo, among others, from the ruling House who raised his hand and presented him to the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikiru Adetona, (at the monarch’s palace, Ijebu-Ode) for royal blessings and approval of the Olori-Ebi position conferred on him.

    Balogun, who hails from the Oba Tunwase lineage of the Fusengbuwa Ruling Family, added that he also heeded the series of persuasions to lead as the eldest among them.

    He noted that his being the head was to “purify,” it, so that the royal family is not adulterated by a number of people claiming to be members.

    According to him, Owoyemi was one of those who persuaded him to lead the royal family.

    Balogun, who doubles as the Olori – Omooba of the princes in Ijebuland,  admitted that he knew majority of the members the Fusengbuwa Ruling house from its Tunwase arm but would not know much about members from other lineages.

    He admitted that prior to his being presented to the Awujale, the people in attendance at the meeting where he was appointed the Olori – Ebi, were not the sole members of the Fusengbuwa Ruling house.

    And following the consent of the claimants’ counsel, Adesegun Adebayo, and that of the defendants, Tunji Ayanlaja (SAN), Justice Aderonke Asenuga, adjourned till October 18 for “further  hearing”.

  • Trial resumes in illegal firearms case tomorrow

    A  Lagos Magistrates’ Court will tomorrow resume the trial of Suleiman Sanusi, son of the late industrialist, Chief Abdul-Rasak Sanusi, for alleged illegal firearms possession.

    Sanusi is also standing trial for alleged disobedience of a Lagos High Court order to, among others, surrender all documents relating to his father’s estate in his possession.

    According to the police, both offences contravene Sections 4 of the Firearms Act, 2004 and 104 of the Criminal Law of Lagos, 2011.

    The case, which has been on for about two years, was stalled last July 28, following Magistrate Omolola Omotosho’s absence.

    It was originally allocated to Magistrate Adeola Adedayo before it was transferred to Omotosho.

  • Leadership, accountability: Citizens’ role

    Being the address delivered by Femi Falana (SAN) at the 50th anniversary summit by Movement of Genuine Change in Ilorin to mark the creation of Kwara State

    Redirecting of the Wheel of Statecraft

    The level of poverty in Nigeria provides a fertile ground for the recruitment of the economically ‘un-captured’ to perpetuate wanton ethno-religious violence. The National Bureau for Statistics has stated that about 70 percent of all Nigerians are poor. The solution to this is to massively invest the material resources of the country on development and employment creation. This would mean that the economy is restructured and diversified, corruption is seriously engaged, and the commitment to development is true and central. Second, there will always be individuals that would benefit from divisions and national discord or secession of the country. In this regard, the security system of the state must be ready to arrest and punish this group of individuals.

    There is also the need to empower institutions. The problem with Nigeria is not the lack of institutions but the challenge has always been that the existing institutions have under-performed or have been hijacked, domesticated and used for certain group interests. Such institutions include the electoral body, police, media, judiciary, religious and ethnic based-bodies. The more these institutions are divorced from ethno-religious interests, the more they champion the quest for nation building. Fourth, there is the need for rule of law. Ethnic tensions and resentments would reduce when it is collectively accepted that politics and governance would be guided by the rule of law. Some individuals should not be above the law while others are subjected to the law. The Fourth Republic has been rightly described By Mr. Tony Momoh as de-democratisation rather than democracy.

    The government has a duty to educate and mobilise the people against centrifugal forces. The proponents of dividing Nigeria have always found it easy to list the challenges facing Nigeria such as corruption, poverty, exploitation, marginalisation and infrastructure among others. Yet, they have often failed to state how these realities would be engaged in the new states that they advocate. For instance, is there any critical reason to assume that there would not be exploitation and minorities in a Niger Delta state or in a Biafra? If it is true that some of the unscrupulous politicians that had benefited from the divide-and-rule politics in Nigeria, what is the certainty that they would not do the same in the new states? The ordinary Nigerians must be educated in this regard.

    Nigerians should also be mobilised against centripetal forces in a systematic way. The public must be sensitised to the dangers and consequences of balkanising the Nigerian State. What happens to federal institutions in each state? Where do the non-citizens of the new states go? How will they be catered for in their new states upon return? If they are not catered for, will it not generate another round of neo-secessionist plots in the new states? The answers to these questions should help government in its national mobilisation strategy which should state from primary to tertiary level and must permeate the informal sector. Indeed, the government and its agencies are equally guilty of sabotaging nation building through the implementation of dangerous and ill digested neo-liberal policies and programmes.

    A  dangerous suggestion on nation building was made by the late strong man of Libya, Colonel Maumar Ghadaffi had advised that for there to be lasting peace in Nigeria, the country must be balkanised along ethnic and religious lines. His thinking, largely based on the Huntingtonian clash of civilisation thesis that forecloses any possibility of building a collective national sentiment in a context where there is an on-going warfare and/or violence along the country’s fault lines that divides Nigeria’s Muslims and their Christian counterparts. Simply put: Ghadaffi believed that stability could only be achieved in Nigeria if the country is divided along religious line.  Although Gaddafi got it totally wrong, the task of nation building remains a challenge in Nigeria just as it was in the immediate years of independence.

     

    On the plan to sack

    the civilian government

    A few days ago, the Chief of Army Staff, General Buratai alerted the Nigerian people of the nefarious plans of a bunch  of desperate politicians to invite some members of the armed forces to terminate the democratic process. Although various civil society groups have warned against the dangerous plot, the media and officials of the Federal Government should stop playing into the hands of anti-democratic elements by giving the false impression that there is political instability in the country.  The enemies of democracy must not be allowed to exploit President Buhari’s ill health to truncate the democratic dispensation. In view of the ruination of our economy, the bastardisation of our politics and the devaluation of our national morality by previous military dictators, the Nigerian people must be prepared to reject the coming into power of another fake Salvation Army.

    Notwithstanding the glaring shortcomings of the fragile democratic process, the people should be allowed to take advantage of the democratic structures to effect change. Our bitter experience has shown that Nigerians have opted for political change through the ballot box and not through the barrel of the gun. On their own part the political class should put their house in order and stop inciting  potential coup plotters. While the decision of the Army Chief to alert the nation of the devilish plot is appreciated the authorities should proceed to fish out the coup plotters and their civilian collaborators  to try them for treasonable felony.

    In his last letter addressed to both chambers of the National Assembly, President Buhari disclosed that he was proceeding on medical vacation and that the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo (SAN) would coordinate the affairs of the state pursuant to section 145 of the Constitution. When a senator questioned the letter for not expressly stating that power had been transferred to the Vice President as Acting President he was called to order by the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki who promptly directed attention to section 145 of the Constitution. Notwithstanding the timely clarification made by the Senate leadership a section of the media alleged that there was a deliberate plan by a cabal to prevent the Acting President Osinbajo from standing proxy for President Buhari.

    However, in line with the letter transmitted to the National Assembly by President the Acting President has continued to exercise the powers of the President. It was therefore embarrassing when the Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed was reported to have said that the government was not sure who would sign the 2017 Appropriation Bill into law. A presidential aide categorical stated that the budget would be signed by President Buhari. Once again, the attention of the Nigerian people has been diverted from the contents of the budget. The debate is whether the signing of the budget would be carried out by the Acting President or the President whenever he returns to the country. Alternatively, it has been suggested that the President may sign the bill in his hospital bed!

    Having regard to our recent experience when the budget of the Federal Government was forged by a cabal the legal status of the 2017 Appropriation Bill ought to be clarified. I wish to state, without any fear of contradiction, that once the President has transmitted a letter to the National Assembly that he is proceeding on vacation all presidential powers are automatically transferred to the Vice President who shall be the Acting President. Therefore, until the President writes another letter to the National Assembly at the end of the vacation he cannot exercise the powers of his office. In other words, the President is not competent to sign any bill into law while he is on vacation. The Constitution did not envisage that a President who is on vacation and an Acting President who is standing proxy for him will be exercising presidential powers simultaneously. To that extent, pending the resumption of duties by President Buhari, the Acting President, Professor Osinbajo, is competent to sign all bills validly passed by the National Assembly.

    In view of the way and manner President Buhari has invoked section 145 of the Constitution no aide should embarrass him by causing unnecessary distraction over his medical vacation. Whereas the Constitution allows the President to send a letter within 21 days before sending a letter to the National Assembly he has always transmitted a letter before leaving the country. It would be recalled that when President Buhari returned to the country on February 3, 2017, he directed the Acting President to continue to rule the country as he would not resume duties until three days later when he would inform transmit a letter to the National Assembly. If President Buhari did not exercise powers during his vacation even though he was in the country why would he want to do so while he is on medical vacation abroad? Henceforth, the debate over the President’s medical vacation should centre on the urgent need by the Federal Government to equip some of our hospitals to avoid the disgraceful practice of sending the nation’s leaders abroad for medical attention.

    And instead of dissipating energies over the competence of an appropriation bill signed into law by the Acting President, Nigerians should subject the 2017 budget to scrutiny. Analysis of the budget should not be limited to the National Assembly as the executive branch has equally made budgetary provisions for items that cannot be justified under economic recession. In spite of the nation’s economic recession the National Assembly decided to increase its 2017 budget by N149 billion. The National Assembly jerked up its own budget from N115 billion to N125 billion. Out of the budget the sum of N13 billion has been earmarked for entertainment, travels and transportation by the federal legislators. Other details included do not reflect the economic reality of the country.

    However, the National Assembly deserves commendation for publishing the details of its budget. But the resolution passed to increase the budget is illegal and unconstitutional as the exclusive power of the President to prepare and lay the budget was usurped by the National Assembly. In other words, the legislators illegally prepared some aspects of the budget, laid them before themselves and passed them without any reference to the President. In order to fund the scandalous budget, the Federal Government is shopping for a loan of $3.5 billion! I am compelled to call on the Acting President to refrain from signing the bill into law if the strange items are not expunged and removed by the National Assembly.

     

    Conclusion

    To cushion the effect of the economic recession, the Federal Government should restore the Peoples’ Bank to give loans to indigent citizens who cannot access loans in commercial banks. The Islamic Bank and others which are not going to charge interests should be established. In addition, the Federal Government should spend  the fund  recovered from corrupt public officers and their privies  on job creation and fixing of hospitals and schools as well as the funding of other social services.

    It has to be pointed out that the economy of the country cannot be transformed in favour of Nigeria on the basis of the dangerous prescriptions of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). Nigerians should therefore be prepared to challenge the recycled neo-liberal managers of the economy who continue to insist on the dominance of market forces which have been discredited by the crisis of global capitalism. The Nigerian people should be organised, empowered and mobilised through their unions, associations and collectives to rebuild the country.

     

  • Physically challenged lawyers petition NBA over conference

    A physically challenged lawyer, Daniel Onwe, has urged the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) to take lawyers with disabilities into consideration in planning for the forthcoming annual general conference.

    In a May 24 letter to the Chairman, Technical Committee on NBA Conference Planning, Prof. Koyinsola Ajayi (SAN), the lawyer urged the association to make adequate arrangements for those with special needs.

    Onwe, who wrote on behalf of Association of Lawyers with Disabilities in Nigeria (ALDIN), identified areas of need as venue accessibility, sign language, Braille version of conference materials, assistive attendants, parking lots and reduced conference fees.

    He wrote: “The venue of the conference should be such that would be accessible for persons with disabilities. Where possible, the buildings to be used should be the ones with ramps and lifts. Similarly, the dais or platforms should be such that persons with disabilities, including those on wheelchair, can access. This is demanded by section 24 of the Lagos State Special People’s Law, 2011.

    “For the benefit of lawyers who have hearing impairment, there should be at least one sign language interpreter to translate the proceedings of the conference to sign language. There should also be some  Braille version of, at least, the most important conference materials for the benefit of lawyers with visual impairment.

    “There should also be designated parking lots for persons with disabilities. We recommend that lawyers with disabilities, particularly the young ones, should be given full or at least partial waiver of the conference fees.”

  • Banks, looters and anti-graft war

    Banks, looters and anti-graft war

    Treasury looting cannot take place in a vacuum. It is with the connivance of banks, which hide the loot and refuse to report shady transactions in defiance of the law. To address the problem, the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the Convention on Business Integrity (CBi) and the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) have held a conference on improving financial integrity. JOSEPH JIBUEZE was there.

    It is not in doubt that corruption cannot thrive without a middleman. But, most times, it is the culprits who are held to account, but those who facilitate the act, such as bankers, are rarely brought to book.

    Stakeholders and experts believe that corruption cannot be tackled if the financial sector does not play its role in detecting and reporting suspicious transactions.

    To them, those who aid looting and facilitate the movement of stolen funds should no longer get away with it.

    As a way out, the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) collaborated with the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) and the Convention on Business Integrity (CBi) to find solutions.

    At a conference on Financial System Integrity Improvement in Abuja, they addressed regulatory and institutional measures being taken by the financial services sector and regulators to minimise fraud and corruption in the sector, the effectiveness of such measures and steps needed to close existing gaps and sanction breaches by defaulters.

    The collaborating parties believe that all stakeholders in the financial services sector share a common goal of enthroning systemic integrity and accountability in the light of existing self-regulating measures, even if inadequate.

    Speakers identified preventive and practical measures for the players and regulators to tackle fraud, corruption and other forms of financial crimes.

    The keynote speaker was Nick Leeson, whose dealings at Barings Bank led to the collapse in 1995 of one of Britain’s oldest financial organisations.

    Others who spoke were PACAC Chairman Prof Itse Sagay (SAN), CIBN President/Chairman of Council Prof Segun Ajibola, CBi Chief Executive Officer Soji Apampa, ACCA Regional Head of Policy Jane Ohadike, Ambassador of Ecuador to Nigeria Leopoldo Verdesoto, former Accountant-General of the Federation Dr. J.K. Naiyeju and Access Bank Plc’s Mrs Mosun Belo-Olusoga.

    Others were Head, Risk Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, Okey Umeano, Chairman, Board of Integrity Organisation, Opeyemi Agbaje, former Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Tunde Lemo and Chairman, Inter-Agency Asset Tracing Team, Bamgbola Sokoya.

    The Director-General, West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM), Prof Akpan Ekpo, Director-General, Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit, Frank Usani, a consultant, Dr. Biodun Adedipe, and ACCA council member Taiwo Oyedele also spoke at the event.

     

    The role of banks

    PACAC Executive Secretary Prof Bolaji Owasanoye believes looting cannot succeed if financial institutions played their roles well as critical stakeholders.

    He said: “Banks are critical stakeholders if we’re to prevent money laundering and financial crimes. It is impossible to successfully carry out any act of corruption without the middlemen. So banks, auditors, lawyers and real estate brokers are included.

    “With regard to banks in particular, people cannot hide assets like funds if banks follow their KYC (Know Your Customers) principles, ethical standards and provisions and the extant laws of the land.

    “It is the duty of banks to know their customers and when any transaction raises an eyebrow, they should not ignore it.”

    Owasanoye, who spoke with newsmen on the sideline of the event, said rather than play their role in preventing corruption, banks have aided and abetted it.

    For instance, he said the alleged bribing of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officials by former Petroleum Minister Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke with $114 million was facilitated by banks.

    “Banks were actively involved not only in holding those funds in suspense accounts, but in helping to disburse them. Was that every anticipated? We were hoping that banks would act as gatekeepers, to help the system and the society diminish corruption, because ultimately corruption will destroy the banks too. The banks didn’t play that role and that’s a major cause for concern,” he said.

    According to Owasanoye, while it is not all banks that engage in illicit activities in aid of corruption, the institutions ought to strengthen their processes while ensuring that the bad eggs are severely punished.

    “Our argument is: if banks follow their own processes and procedure, it would not happen. If banks followed international best practices, it would not happen. If banks followed the laws of the land, it would not happen. So, in all three fronts, they’re violating the rules and helping money laundering to happen.

    “Even though banks do not necessarily need to know the source of funds, when a customer fills an account opening form, the bank asks for what they do and house address and the customer provides a utility bill to back it up. If it is a company, they make you pay for a search at the Corporate Affairs Commission to be sure the company is real.

    “So, when a company that has N10,000 shareholding and doesn’t file annual returns suddenly deposits N1billion into the account, the banks have a duty to report according to law. And there are situations thay can take pre-emptive measures. It is because of the refusal to follow these principles that we’re having these conversations.”

    To Owasanoye, beside banks complying with the laws and banking regulations, there is the need to sanction offenders to serve as deterrent to others.

    “We’ve said that erring bankers, like other professionals and role actors, must be sanctioned. Everyone who violates the rules and those who help them should be prosecuted.

    “Auditors who look at the books of banks professionally, see anomalies and fail to report them, or regulators who are supposed to regulate the banks but collect gratification to look the other way or choose to look the other way because they were encouraged to do so, all them are culpable. So we need to enforce the laws as they are,” he said.

    Sagay (SAN) decried fraud in the banking sector, saying the fight against corruption cannot be won without the collaboration of banks and financial institutions.

    “Private sector fraud, particularly in the banking sector, is enormous,” he said, adding that the economy and banks are at risk if urgent steps are not taken to tackle corruption in the sector.

    Ajibola regretted that the banking sector was not immune to “the rot and corruption in the entire economy and even across the globe.”

    His words: “It is no gainsaying that several corrupt individuals in the society have used the channels of banking and finance services to perpetrate financial crimes and corruption on the nation’s collective financial resources, thereby impinging on the integrity and credibility of the system.”

    As a way out, he said the institute ensures strict adherence to the Code of Conduct in the banking industry by all cadres of employees.

    CIBN, he said, also acts as a financial ombudsman, being the secretariat of the Bankers Committee sub-committee on ethics and professionalism, with a mandate to adjudicate cases or petitions against banks on unethical practices or excess charges.

    Ajibola said since inception in 2001, the sub-committee has received 1,889 petitions/cases with total claims of N320.4 billion and $415 million. No fewer than 1,766 cases have been refunded, with N22.98 billion and $16,9 million refunded to petitioners and bank customers, he said.

    “In addition to this, banks or individuals who engage in any form of infraction and reported, are arraigned before the institute’s Investigation Panel and Disciplinary Tribunal and appropriate disciplinary sanctions meted out against such an organization or individual.

    “We would like to further encourage the banking public to continue to report to the institute actions that are inimical to the promotion of high ethical conduct in the industry. We are ready to collaborate with government agencies and he private sector in our collective bid to further entrench financial system integrity in the economy,” Ajibola said.

     

    Causes, solutions

    Leeson said opportunities to commit fraud must be removed. He argued that corruption in the banking sector would be curtailed if culpable persons did not get away with it.

    “If you catch someone doing something wrong, there has to be adequate punishment. But if you see people doing something wrong and getting away with it, you’re also likely to do it,” he said.

    Leeson said banks needed to keep their rules updated. “If your rules are two years old, then know that someone is already circumventing them,” he warned.

    Apampa said lip service was being paid to the behaviour of banks. To him, stricter regulation and sanctions for wrong behaviour is needed to stop what he called “tainted money” being hidden in banks.

    “We turn a blind eye and allow certain practices to go on. We have reporting problems and transparency issues. We don’t sanction and reward appropriately. There’s a big gap that leaves us vulnerable. There is also a big gap in the area of self-regulation,” he said.

    Verdesoto said Nigeria had not punished erring banks and middlemen adequately.

    “If a corrupt banker is not in jail, then something is wrong. The society and his colleagues ought to punish offenders,” he said.

    Belo-Olusoga said for any economy to be vibrant, the financial sector must be free of corruption.

    To her, it behoves individual bankers to ensure that their colleagues do not get away with wrongdoing.

    “You cannot legislate integrity. It is something you decide to do. But we must put in place a system that rewards good behavior and punishes bad behavior,” she said.

    To her, asking people who engage in wrong acts to retire was not enough; harsher punishment is needed. “We should dismiss them,” she said.

    The pressure banks put themselves in, she said, also leads to banking improprieties.

    “Banks put too much pressure on themselves. If Bank A makes N100million profit, Bank B will want to exceed it. So, they take more risks. Let’s stop short term performance that should be based on an industry-wide agreement,” she said.

    Agbaje believes poverty and inequality are among socio-economic factors are causes of corruption. He decried a situation where junior and middle-level staff are paid peanuts, saying that could be an incentive for fraud. “There must be fair remuneration,” he said.

    He warned against allowing ethnic and nepotistic arguments to obscure the need to punish acts of corruption.

    “Let them not say I am the one who destroyed his career,” he said as an example of why people fail to report and punish acts of fraud.

    Agbaje said banks should also be compelled to show the strategies that underline the targets they set and how to achieve them without the undue pressure that leads to cutting corners.

    Lemo, in the same vein, said the compensation structure of financial institutions needed to change. He said a situation where top staff earned bonuses that are twice their annual salaries to the detriment of other employees should be stop.

    Oyedele said the practice of banks competing on the basis of profit must also stop.

    “The regulator could recognise the best banks from a corporate governance point of view,” he said.

    According to him, suspected kidnapper Evans could not have succeeded in his business if banks played their role well.

    “It was easy for him to move money within the banking system. He could have been caught if banks had done the right thing,” he said.

    Oyedele called for a specialised Financial Services Integrity Tribunal to which the regulators and the regulated will be subjected.

    Prof Ekpo said corruption was a systemic problem, therefore, financial institutions were not immune to it.

    He thinks existing laws have not been well enforced. “Several laws are already in place but are we acting on those laws? The monies being looted go through banks. People should be heavily punished and jailed. If the crime is so serious, I don’t mind them being executed,” he said.

    Usani said a specialised criminal court with trained manpower was needed to adjudicate corruption cases so they do not drag in court or culprits get away with crime.

    Adedipe said strong anti-corruption institutions were needed rather than strong individuals.

    “We must build a strong monitoring system. We must create a system of incentives that demand and encourage good behavior. Regulation must also be strong,” he said.

    Naiyeju called for better use of the tax system in detecting crime.

    “Taxation has been used in other jurisdictions to catch people who engage in financial crimes. Let those supervising the financial system be alive to their responsibilities,” he said.

    He also backed the death penalty for corruption.

    But, Owasanoye does not think the death penalty will solve corruption. To him, strict enforcement of the law and compliance with rules and regulations will.

    “I don’t support death penalty for anything. The reason is that the death penalty has not been proven to be deterrent to crime. There are many other factors involved. I appreciate that in some countries there is the death penalty, but the very fact that you still have criminals in those places where there is capital punishment justifies the fact that death penalty doesn’t solve crime.

    “Using Nigeria as an example, when death penalty was introduced for armed robbery, it escalated. It didn’t go down. Armed robbers became more desperate. For me, death penalty is not the issue,” he said.

  • Build strong institutions, NBA urges Fed Govt

    Build strong institutions, NBA urges Fed Govt

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has urged the Federal Government to focus on building institutions that will allay fears and give a sense of belonging to all Nigerians.

    NBA President Abubakar Balarabe Mahmoud (SAN) made this known at a briefing on the association’s Annual General Conference billed for Lagos between August 18 and 24.

    He  said: “Nigerian leaders  need to build strong institutions that can protect everyone regardless of where we come from. It is the only way we can have peace and harmony. It is the only way we can be respected.

    “For a country where building of strongmen and godfathers is the norm, the NBA advocacy for strong institutions are seen by many as a clarion call to all that there is need to fix institutions that make the country strong. Only during the week, the Federal government admitted the collapse of educational institutions.”

    Mahmoud was in the company of the members of the conference committee led by its chairman, Prof.  Konyinsola Ajayi (SAN), Dr.  Myma Belo-Osagie and Mr Olasupo Shashore (SAN).

    The parley was hosted by the Ikeja Branch of the association and its chairman, Adesina Ogunlana, and members of the branch were on hand to receive the conference committee team.

    On the suggestion that public confidence in the justice system appears to be low, Mahmoud said: “It is for these reasons that the association is advocating the need for building strong institutions. It is also for the same reasons the NBA has set up a regulatory reform committees to come up with major ideas for transformation. The committee has come up with a draft bill that we intend to persuade the National Assembly to work on”

    He said: “We are conscious of the reform of the legal profession to really prepare the Nigerian lawyer to take his place in the leadership of the country. There’s no doubt that no country can develop without strong institution. The legal system as an institution is key because it advocates rule of law which is the only guarantee for democracy and development. We are not focused on individual champions but on transformational initiatives that will build strong institutions.”

    Mahmoud said that it for this reason that association’s annual conference will focus on building strong institutions within and outside the Bar.

    He said the conference will be graced by a host of local and global thought leaders drawn from various spheres of influence including Acting President Yemi Osinbajo (SAN),  former Prime Minister of Georgia, Nika Gilauri; consultantancy guru, Ram Charan; Attorney-General of Ghana, Gloria Akuffo; as well as Forbes Africa’s Richest Man, Aliko Dangote, amongst others.

    Mahmoud said the conference would be “a face-changing legal and business forum that will inspire, teach and challenge members of the Bar to take their place in bridging the growth gap between the Bar and the business world.”

    Prof Ajayi said the aim of this year’s conference “is to inspire, teach and challenge members of the Bar to take their place on the wall of construction, in bridging the growth gap between the Bar and the business world, in bridging the development gap between the African Bar and the International Bar, in creating a stone wall of African institutionalism, in building the bridge between the Bar and government thus, leaving a legacy for our continent and the society at large”

    He added: “The NBA Conference has over time become a melting pot of intellectual and policy shaping discourse. This year is going to be no different as we expect more than 5000 delegates.

    “We have just launched our new websites which will leverage cutting edge technology to cater for all conference enquiries, registration and hotel bookings, at the click of a button, so, we are set to go.

  • Benue CJ, others seek reform of criminal justice system

    A group, Citizens United for the Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE-Nigeria), has toured prisons in Benue State, donated materials and engaged stakeholders on how best to reform the Criminal Justice System. Eric Ikhilae reports.

    Those who should know, say the country’s prisons suffer from three key ailments: dilapidation, poor facilities and congestion. They believe this was caused by the failure of relevant agencies to effectively perform their roles over the years.

    This failure, they say, has transformed the prisons to “deformatory” institutions as against their intended role of “reformatory.”

    The need to reverse this state of affairs engaged stakeholders in the Benue State criminal justice system, at a stakeholders’ meeting in Makurdi recently.

    The meeting was part of a series of activities organised by a group – Citizens United for the Rehabilitation of Errants (CURE-Nigeria).

    It involved a four-day tour of prisons in Benue by CURE and officials of the United States Embassy in Nigeria, among others.

    The tour, which lasted between May 29 and July 1, saw the visitors present books, furniture and writing boards. They also donated a 28-inch television set, power generator, reading tables and other materials worth over $10,000 for the setting up of libraries in Makurdi, Otukpo and Gboko prisons and the Children Remand Home in Gboko.

    Moved by the state of gross infrastructure deficit at the Juvenile Remand home in Gboko, the visitors wondered how a state, with a government in place, could abandon such a facility meant to reform its future generation.

    On July 1, participants from the Nigerian Prison Service, office of the Attorney-General, the police, civil society organisations and the US Embassy, examined issues identified during the tour.

    One of these issues is the non-domestication of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) in Benue.

    Many of the participants noted that this had deprived the state of the benefits of the many innovative provisions of the Act that aids swift determination of criminal cases in jurisdictions where the law operates.

    They also considered the problems of prison congestion, lack of rehabilitation and reintegration programmes and inadequate vehicles to convey inmates to courts. Others were arbitrary arrest and detention of people, violation of human rights of suspects, long court adjournments, among others.

    Benue State Chief Judge, Justice Iorhemen Hwande said there was need for commitment on the part of the relevant agencies to ensure a total overhaul of the criminal justice system to allow for better performance.

    Justice Hwande said the state’s Attorney General informed him that the process leading to the domestication of the ACJ Act was at an advance stage.

    On the issue of lack access to lawyers for inmates, the CJ said he had directed that inmates without lawyers should be assigned lawyers by the judges handling the cases.

    He regretted that inmates sometimes frustrate efforts to assign lawyers to them by supplying false information to their lawyers, thereby making legal service for inmates difficult. He promised to strengthen the process through enlightenment.

    CURE Executive Director, Sylvester Uhaa decried the absence of Black Maria vehicles to convey inmates to court, citing the example of Makurdi Prison “with only one bus to convey inmates to courts.”

    Uhaa also observed the unfortunate lack of medication as well as personnel in prison clinics, a situation he blamed for cases of avoidable deaths among inmates.

    He urged prison authorities to ensure the transfer of prisoners, who suffer from mental illness, to hospital, “because they are not supposed to be in prison.”

    Director, International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, US Embassy in Nigeria, Roselyn Wiese expressed discomfort at the rising number of awaiting trial inmates in Nigerian prisons and the perennial delay in the justice dispensation process.

    She urged Justice Hwande to learn from the examples of Lagos and Kano states where the office of the Public Prosecutor is established to accelerate access to justice.

    Ms. Wiese assured of her home government’s support to Benue State in the area of prison reform, particularly as it relates to education programmes.

    She urged the government to double its effort in ensuring an effective criminal justice system.

  • Cleaner Lagos: Govt didn’t flout court order, says commissioner

    The Lagos State Government did not flout court order by inaugurating the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI),Commissioner for the Environment, Dr Babatunde Adejare, has said.

    He spoke at the ‘’Phase one implementation soft launch’’of the CLI in partnership with a firm, Visionscape Sanitations Solutions Ltd.

    Visionscape, an environmental utility group, is a primary collector for residential solid waste and will build and manage waste processing facilities across the state.

    However, there is a subsisting suit against the state and five others before Justice Taofiquat Oyekan-Abdullahi of a Lagos High Court concerning the management of domestic waste.

    It was brought in January by the Incorporated Trustees, Association of Waste Managers of Nigeria, otherwise known as Private Sector Participation (PSP) operators of wastes.

    Joined as respondents in the suit are the Commissioner for Environment, Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Visionscape Group, Visionscape Sanitation Solutions and ABC Sanitation Solutions Limited.

    But, speaking in Ogudu, Adejare noted that the CLI was not about the PSP suit.

    He said the CLI is in furtherance of the Environmental Management Protection Law signed last March by Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.

    Adejare said: “This is not about PSP. PSP were our contractors. Their contract expired last July. They have no subsisting agreement to work with us.

    The launch, he added, did not violate the court order requiring parties to maintain the status quo.

    Adejare said:  ”We are not sacking PSP operators. We are maintaining the status quo. The court never said we should not evacuate waste anymore.”

    He said being in court should not hinder waste management, adding that the state government was ready to partner with the litigants and was working on achieving harmony with them.

    Adejare added: “They are our people; we can’t run them out of jobs.”

     

  • ‘How to achieve efficient justice system’

    For three days, lawyers gathered in Lagos for the 11th Annual Business Law Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association Section on Business Law (NBA-SBL). JOSEPH JIBUEZE reports.

    What is the future of legal practice? Bleak or bright? How can an efficient system of justice delivery be achieved? What roles can technology play in law practice? What are the global opportunities open to Nigerian lawyers? These and more were among the issues discussed at the 11th Annual Business Law Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association Section on Business Law (NBA-SBL).

    It had the theme: Law and the changing face of legal practice.

    Delay in the administration of justice has remained a problem. What is the way out? Senior lawyers and a judge of the Federal High Court, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba, said the imposition of punitive cost for time wasting, use of electronic recording devices and effective use of case management powers by judges will enhance speedier justice delivery.

    Justice Dimgba, who was a panelist in the third session with the theme: Creating an efficient system of justice delivery, urged judges to make better use of their case management powers.

    He said fear of being accused of bias sometimes forces judges to grant frivolous applications for adjournments.

    According to him, judges operate in a “difficult terrain” in which false reports are sometimes sponsored against them in the media by litigants whose prayers for adjournment were refused.

    “Sometimes fear and intimidation impede the exercise of their (judges’) case management powers. Some of my colleagues are afraid of petitions being written against them. It is true that some careers have damaged by such petitions, but I always ask them, is a petition going to kill you? As long as my conscience is clean, I do my job,” he said.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Dr Babatunde Ajibade, called for imposition of full indemnity cost against those who file frivolous cases, as is done in other jurisdictions.

    According to him, if people pay heavily for time wasting, they would be discouraged from deliberately delaying court actions, especially when they have bad cases.

    “If people have a dispute and know it will never be settled in court, they can just send assassins to kill the other person. If we have an efficient judicial system, crime will reduce and people won’t take laws into their hands,” he said.

    A United Kingdom-based lawyer, Segun Osuntokun, wondered why Nigerian judges still record proceedings in long hand rather than with electronic devices.

    “In UK courts, there is real time transcription of what is being said. Everyone sees it instantly. Here, everyone waits for the judge to write in long hand,” he said.

    Osuntokun also faulted the practice whereby cases which had spend years in court begin all over (de novo) when the judges handling them are elevated to Court of Appeal.

    “In England, when you are elevated, you finish your portfolio of cases before leaving. That way, you save at least two years of cases having to start afresh before a new judge,” he said.

    Another SAN, Chief Chief Arthur Obi Okafor, said courts could schedule cases so that lawyers know when to be in court, rather than everyone being in court at the same time and some waiting all day for their turn.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki, who opened the conference, said the National Assembly was making steady progress towards a methodical legal reformation of the obsolete laws.

    “This is already signalling to the world that Nigeria is ready for business and global competition. Our policy drive is simple; to create jobs and enable SMEs for growth. The focus has significantly been on infrastructure mobilisation, access to capital and credit and the reduction in the cost of doing business to encourage investment.

    “By the end of the second session of the eight assembly, we have successfully passed the following bills aimed at creating a modern Nigerian business environment including; The Electronic Transaction bill 2015, Bankruptcy and Insolvency bill 2015, the Credit Reporting Bill, The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission Bill, the Independent Warehouse Regulatory Agency Bill and the Secure Transactions in Movable Assets Bill.

    “The Companies and Allied Matters (Act) (CAMA) (Amendment) Bill and the Investment and Securities Act (ISA) (Amendment) Bill are today undergoing committee consideration. It is expected that with the passage of these bills together with others we will have a new Nigeria business regulatory environment that is pro innovation and business growth,” he said.

    NBA-SBL chair Olumide Akpata said the section decried the fact that a number of subject matter areas that form the core of commercial law practice are not taught in the universities.

    “We have commenced discussions with NIALS, with a view to collaborating with that institution on the establishment of a Centre for Commercial Law Studies where some of these subjects would be taught.

    “Still on the subject of capacity building, our Council also recognises that on-the-job training is one sure way of building capacity and it stands to reason therefore, that where there is a dearth of legal work, capacity building on the part of the commercial lawyer may not be fully achievable.

    “To this end, Council has resolved that, as a necessary first step, we will engage with all relevant stakeholders with a view to ensuring that where any law places certain categories of legal work within the exclusive purview of Nigerian lawyers, we shall ensure that such laws are fully complied with.”

    “I must not fail to mention that we are also in the process of designing a Mentorship Programme for young lawyers which will provide for effective and beneficial interaction between young lawyers and selected senior lawyers on a one-on-one basis. Our Vice-Chairman, Mr. Seni Adio (SAN) has been charged with the responsibility of putting this programme together and I have his assurance that we shall be rolling out very soon,” he said.

    NBA President Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) described the theme of the conference as apt, adding that the core objective of the NBA under his administration wass to ride on the four-pronged approach of Regulation, Representation, Re-engineering and Public interest.

    “It is only with an association this sturdy that we can safely and efficiently achieve our goal of promoting the rule of law, contribute to nation building in general, as well as industry specialisation, practice globalisation, and guarantee client satisfaction in particular,” he said.

    Prof Jayanth Krishnan of the Indiana University-Bloomington Maurer School of Law whose paper borders on redefining the Provision of Cross-Border Legal Services said both Nigeria and India currently do not allow foreign law firms to set up independent offices in their countries.

    He, therefore, proposed that both countries could adopt a Foreign Legal Consultant model, which currently does not exist in either country.

    The conference had in attendance eminent lawyers, business executives, some of who participated at the various sessions as either moderators, co-ordinators, session chairs or panelists, and others.

    It feature a session on health, in which a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr Osaro Eghobamien (50), did 50 push-ups, drawing a loud applause.

    There were nine sessions in all, including on the changing face of the entertainment industry – prospects and opportunities, legal services procurement – what do clients really want?

    There was a debate session on the rules of professional conduct in the 21st century: challenging the status quo.

    Lawyers debated on whether counsel should continue to wear the wig and gown, whether law firms should be set up as a partnership, whether the profession should be split, whether the restriction on advertising is still relevant, and whether a lawyer should be allowed to combine legal practice with other businesses.

    Lagos State, Akinwunmi Ambode was represented by the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Adeniji Kazeem.