Category: Online Special

  • Obasanjo counsels leaders on continuity in government

    Obasanjo counsels leaders on continuity in government

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has advised leaders at all levels to ensure continuity of good policies and projects in governance to aid infrastructural and human capacity development in the country.

    The former president stated this when the Good Governance Group (3Gs) led by its convener, Comrade Seyi Mohammed Gambo, paid him a courtesy visit in his Hilltop House, Abeokuta, Ogun State, at the weekend.

    Addressing members of the 3Gs Obasanjo said most of the failures witnessed in the country were caused by refusal of successive governments to continue institutional and policy frameworks and projects put in place by their predecessors.

    He cited the Operation Feed the Nation and the reforms in the rail transportation and power sectors initiated during his administrations as military head of state and later as civilian president, which could have been beneficial to Nigerians, saying they were abandoned by successive governments.

    The former President also said  the government should encourage growth of private investors and ensure that they are bigger, adding that “the bigger private operators should be able to encourage price reduction on commodities.”

    He called on the government to set up Anti-Trust Commission to protect Nigerians from oppressive big entrepreneurs, saying, “I will never go against Nigerian entrepreneurs getting big but I will go against them becoming oppressive.”

    Earlier in his speech,  Gambo said the visit was to tap from the experience of the former president on issues bordering on leadership challenges in Nigeria.

  • Reward for entrepreneurs

    Reward for entrepreneurs

    It was all joy and celebration at the recent monthly appraisal of Medpro Global Resources.

    Medpro is a network marketing firm that partners Golden Neo-Life Diamite (GNLD) in selling information about relevant food supplements that can help the human system fight anti-bodies.

    The event provided a platform for young CEOs to express their joy not for what they now earn but because they have grown enough to become employers of labour, thus helping to reduce the number of Nigeria’s teeming unemployed youths.

    Speaking at the monthly appraisal/award and end of the year party, Akeem Ojora, Chief Executive Office, Medpro Global Resources charged Nigerians to stir up the potentials that they carry stressing, “Everybody has qualification but one thing that is not the same to everybody is the potentials we carry.

    “I am not saying it is wrong to have that qualification, but it is wrong if you don’t have a personal business you do along with your paid job.”

    Ojora further express beliefs that to amalgamate education and entrepreneurship for the advancement of Nigeria, Nigerians must realise that education is good, “because if people do not go to school the knowledge would not be there and the potential may not be developed.

    “But the truth is, no matter how educated you are, entrepreneurship is number one. Personal development of what you have that other people do not have is what would keep you going. If you want to be a key player in life, you don’t depend on what everybody has in common. If you look the world economy today the downward slope is not affecting some people why.”

    According to him, the difference between July 2011 when he started network marketing and now is that he has great joy when he remembers the number of people he has been able to empower because he believes that success without a successor is failure.

    Ojora has built his business so much so that the staff strength has exceeded about a 100 individuals who are practically independent in their lines of business.

    “If there is an economic meltdown, it would affect the people who go to work to earn salaries because by the time the employer observes the heat is drawing near to him what he does is lay some staff off so the point remains that people who chose to be staff are the ones who would feel the heat and not the employer.

    “Education is light but that light is meant to show you how to use what is deposited inside you and not to remain a follower all of your life,” the international presidential team (IPT) members observed, adding that many do not want to face challenges or take any form of risk to become successful but maintained that ‘Life without challenges would be boring.’

    Sandra Azuka Ngozi, another network marketer through GNLD, has only spent one and a half year in the network marketing but her experience in this line of business gives her overwhelming joy.

    Ngozi had been a lecturer with different qualifications before she worked as a data base administrator yet life was not just fun. According to her, she now earns nothing less than $50, 000 per annum.

    The 3-ruby-director opined: “the era we are now is the 21st century, the era of information and entrepreneurship and one of the businesses you can do is network marketing where you put in a little effort and the rest would be covered by your members.

    “What most graduates are afraid of is to hawk. We don’t hawk, what we do is to market information and people pay for it because many of us do not know our health status.”

    Similarly, Mgbemena Evans tells of her fantastic one year experience in a line of business that has successfully transformed her life from ‘nobody to somebody.’

    Evans recounts that before now she was an employee earning salaries, which she could only describe as ‘never enough’.

    “Anyway, when I joined, I didn’t take it serious but when I went for one convention in January this year, I now decided that I should take it up full time and since then my life has changed in all ramifications.”

    Speaking with winner of the CEO’s Award of the year as best upcoming recruiter for 2014, Asabe Sankey, was formerly a call centre agent earning N50, 000, which she described as frustrating when compared to the nature of her job.

    According to her, the 9 years working experience is nothing compared to the less than a year experience in business networking. Her words: “When I got this opportunity, it was on a part time basis, so had it been that I keyed into this opportunity when I got then, I would have blown now.

    “The award I won today means I am supposed to be a CEO of a company because I always represent my boss in my team and I cannot talk and not get people key into it,” Sankey maintained.

    Ojora, who advised Nigerian youths to take responsibilities for their lives and not to depend on friends or family for assistance, said: “Your future is in your hand, don’t give it to anyone.”

     

  • How students use their phones – Research

    How students use their phones – Research

    A recent research has revealed that students in Nigeria spend at least 10 per cent of their allowances on mobile internet data.

    The research was conducted by Co-Creation Hub’s (CcHub) Mobile Experience Centre in the ‘How I use my phone’ series, a series which seeks to understand the pattern of mobile phone usage among different Nigerian demographics.

    According to CcHub, the purpose of the research, which is to understand the pattern of mobile phone usage among different demographics of Nigeria, will generate information that would be useful to researchers and other stakeholders who build mobile services and products targeted at the Nigerian student market.

    The firm added, “the long-term goal for this project is to contribute to a better understanding of mobile phone end-users in Nigeria to enable decision making guided by empirical data”.

    “It also plans to release more editions in order to identify similarities and disparities in the way mobile phones are used by users in different demographics.”

    While previous editions of ‘How I Use My Phone’ focused on market traders and working professionals in Nigeria, this segment for students, which is yet the largest in the series, featured over 5000 student participants.

    The research population, according to the firm, was drawn from across various Nigerian institutions with a larger percentage of them coming from University of Lagos and Yaba College of Technology.

    “Key findings of the survey revealed that students use their phones mainly to interact on the various social media platforms ranging from WhatsApp, Blackberry messenger (BBM) to Facebook, to mention but few since these are the top three most used platforms.

    “Furthermore, it was revealed that 89.6 percent of students subscribe regularly to internet bundles in order to stay in touch on social media, while about 49.1 percent of them however acknowledged browsing on the web to be the most common use of their internet data.

    “The results of the survey reflected that students constitute a high percentage of multiple mobile phone users.  44 percent of the students own two or more mobile phones, attributing network issues, multiple SIM cards and extra battery life as the three top reasons for multiple phone ownership. In addition, the average monthly allowance of students between the age of 17 and 24 is N5000 – 10,000 with 79 percent of students spending at least 10 percent of these monthly allowances on purchasing internet data,” CcHub explained.

     

  • Leukemia: 22 per cent of Nigerian youths are ignorant of symptoms – Expert

    Leukemia: 22 per cent of Nigerian youths are ignorant of symptoms – Expert

    Twenty two per cent of Nigeria’s adolescent population are ignorant of the early symptoms of leukemia (blood cancer), Dr Ayo Fayehun, Consultant, Family Health Department, University College Hospital (UCH) Ibadan, has said.

    Fayehun made the statement on Thursday in Ibadan on the side-line of an enlightenment programme on health for youths organised by Oluwapamilerin Oni Health Foundation.

    According to NAN, Fayehun expressed concern that several youths in Nigeria particularly males, were unaware of the early symptoms of leukemia, which he said, could be prevented or reduce if detected early.

    The consultant noted that the mortality rate of blood cancer was on the increase in Nigeria and stressed the need for stakeholders in the health sector to rise up to the challenge.

    He said that chronic lymphocytic leukemia is a slow growing cancerous cell that affects the development of B-lymphocytes also known as B–cells and specialised white blood cells.

    He said that though the cause of the disease was still unknown, “it is thought to result from damage to one or more of the genes that normally controls blood cell development.”

    The physician listed some symptoms of leukemia to include: swollen lymph glands in the neck, under the arms or in the groin due to collection of lymphocytes in these areas.

    He said the disease could be diagnosed through full blood count (FBC) or through examination of the bone marrow.

    He said that leukemia could be treated through chemotherapy or through administration of drugs orally or intravenously.

    In her remark at the occasion, Mrs. Omolara Oni, the Executive Director, Oluwapamilerin Oni Health Foundation urged mothers to be observant of changes in their children’s bodies and habits.

    She said she lost her son to leukemia due to late detection of the disease, adding that she was ignorant of the symptoms of the disease exhibited by her late son.

    She listed some of the symptoms to include anemia, malaria and swelling in the groin.

    Oni said the health awareness programme was organised by the foundation to sensitise the youths on the symptoms of the disease.

    Over 200 people including students, parents, the clergy, health workers, market women and men attended the programme.

  • How significant is the wedding ring?

    How significant is the wedding ring?

    Wedding ring comes in various shapes and sizes.

    The exchange of rings between a man and woman is an ancient tradition, which dates back to about 4,800 years ago in ancient Egypt.

    At that period, rings were made from rushes and reeds, when compared to the metallic materials from which wedding rings are made nowadays.

    Wedding rings, which are circular in shape, symbolise eternity, indicating that there is no beginning or end to a marriage.

    From the Roman perspectives, however, “rather than offering a ring to woman as a symbol of love, rings were given to women as a symbol of ownership.

    “They symbolised strength and permanence,” according to DanforthDaimond.com, an online publication.

    Historians say that it was not until about 806 A.D. that the Christians started using rings in marriage ceremonies.

    The wedding ring is won on the fourth finger (also known as the ring finger) of the left hand.

    A man or woman wears the ring on the fourth finger and that singular act signifies that the person is married.

    To most people, wedding rings are symbols of marital union.

    The original purposes of wedding rings notwithstanding, observers insist that the values of wearing the rings are often undermined, particularly in Nigeria.

    Mrs. Nnenna John-Paul, an Abuja-based businesswoman, insists that “a wedding ring is just a sign to let people know that someone is married; it has nothing to do with the relationship, that is, the marriage itself.’’

    She adds that a wedding ring was a signpost which communicates a message to other people that someone is “already taken”.

    John-Paul, however, says that wedding rings are not quite important, as they are only ceremonial objects which couples use while exchanging marital vows.

    “In practical terms, the significance of a wedding ring ends after the vows have been made.

    “This is because a wedding ring is superficial, as it is not significant to building up a relationship; it doesn’t enhance the love between couples and it doesn’t boost the communication level,’’ she says.

    John-Paul insists that the guide to a successful marriage ought to be the commitment which the spouses made to each other, while the ring should only serve as a reminder of that commitment.

    “The decisions a man and woman made before going to the altar should be what keeps the marriage going and the meaning that should be attached to the wedding ring,’’ she says.

    John-Paul argues that the fear of God could only guarantee fidelity in a marriage and not the wearing of wedding ring per se.

    She, nonetheless, want couples to stay committed to their partners, saying: “Commitment in marriage should be seen through the spouses’ actions and not by mere words.’’

    Sharing similar sentiments, Mr. Chuks Nwachukwu, an ICT consultant, says that ring is “just a symbol that keeps activating a person’s memory that he or she is married; it also alerts members of the society that someone is married.

    “It shows the society that there is someone else who is wearing the other counterpart of the ring,’’ he adds.

    He stresses that the reasons why some people attach so much meaning to wedding rings is because “as human beings, we always like to have something to look up to.’’

    Nwachukwu says that the notion behind wearing of rings simply defines the philosophy that “seeing is believing’’.

    He argues that a wedding ring is a reminder and a representation of a marital commitment which has no spiritual connotations.

    In addition, Mrs. Obiageli Titus, a businesswoman, says that the wearing of a wedding ring tends to confer some kind of respect on the person wearing it in the society.

    She, nonetheless, concedes that while many spouses have high regard for wedding rings, several others “don’t give a damn about the ornament.

    “Wedding rings do not guard against cheating in a marriage; adultery is conceived in the mind.

    “It is the fear of God that helps a man or woman to keep away from such illicit acts,’’ Titus adds.

    On his part, Pastor Peter Igomu, an Abuja-based cleric, insists that a wedding ring is a sign of love.

    He notes that even though the trend was a foreign tradition, it has been adopted by the church.

    Igomu stresses that the exchange of rings is a sacred thing before God, as it is meant to remind married couples of their marital vows.

    “The wearing of wedding rings is a good tradition which should be encouraged,’’ he adds.

    However, Alhaji Biola Lawal, a journalist, argues that in Islam, the ring is not recognised as a symbol of marriage.

    He said that if some Muslims are seen wearing rings, they are simply doing that because of its “bandwagon effect.

    “We just live the way we do. This is because one culture or religion is bound to influence the other in a harmonious way,’’ he says.

    Lawal, nonetheless, insists that the most important thing about marriage in Islam is the payment of dowry.

    He also says that the physical appearance of a married Muslim woman is what differentiates her from a single lady.

    “The manner in which a married woman dresses is different from the dressing patterns of others,’’ he says, adding: “her dressing is modified because she is carrying somebody’s label; as her husband’s honour and dignity go with her.’’

    The divergent sentiments on the significance of wedding rings notwithstanding, one point is, however, clear: Married couples should strive to uphold their nuptial commitments and do away with the superficiality of wearing rings that have no connotation whatsoever.

     

  • Nigeria’s romance with MARIJUANA

    Nigeria’s romance with MARIJUANA

    Regarded as an illicit drug in many countries, marijuana is outlawed by many governments. In this report, Joe Agbro Jr. examines the state of the war on cannabis in Nigeria.

    FOR Nurudeen (not his real name), 34, a day is never complete without smoking marijuana. For the past 20 years, that has been a routine for this seller of used clothes. Members of his family and close friends know that he is addicted to the drug.

    “My people know I smoke,” he said, gently puffing away at his spliff at one of the side-stalls located on Ipaja Road, Agege, in Lagos. Just adjacent is Akerele Street, notorious for drug peddling. While the street offers cocaine and heroin, marijuana is the most traded drug there.

    “Marijuana is like pure water here,” says Nurudeen in between puffs of smoke, while sitting under the stairway of a building. Two other men sit in a nearby corner, also smoking marijuana. Less than a minute later, another customer arrives, and the dealer in charge reaches into his bag to bring out marijuana and rolling paper packaged in dispensing packs that are usually used in hospital for dispensing legal drugs. At other times, the marijuana is simply wrapped in paper. Such a ‘wrap’ costs fifty Naira in many places across the country. Larger quantities are sold in ‘parcels’ which can averagely roll about six average-sized spliffs while the more serious buyers buy in bags.About 200 meters away from this scene is Isokoko Police Station, yet the drug users on Akerele Street act without fear. “I’m not afraid of police,” says Nurudeen. “I know at the end of the day, I will just settle them with money.”

    Another way of life

    Marijuana is a burning topic, especially among young people today. In different parts of the world, while law enforcement officers are busy trying to stop the tide of cultivation and consumption of the plant, many users continue to have a field day. At many clubs, street corners, markets, schools, beaches and other exclusive areas, smoking marijuana is no longer considered novel, maybe obnoxious.

    At Oshodi, a commercial hub in Lagos, large sections of the railway lines have been colonised by marijuana smokers. All day long, smokers freely smoke the drug in the public gaze. Those who do the selling, usually boys, as young as 12 year old, are often scruffy-looking and hang around in a cluster. They clutch black nylon bags containing the drugs and make catcalls  a peculiar form of advertisement – to potential buyers. At night, they come closer to the regular traffic. The acrid smell wafts constantly in the air. For the boys, there is little attempt to shield their nefarious activities from the eyes of the security officers permanently stationed there. Successive administrations in the state have cleared Oshodi of marijuana smokers and sellers, but time and again they come back.

    “What can the police do?” asked Tunde Salako, who operates a lotto kiosk at Oshodi bus stop. “I think because they (the sellers) stay on their own (gentle), the police just leave them alone. Once in a while some of them (policemen) even collect igbo (marijuana) from (the sellers).”

    Nigeria’s romance with marijuana is not a recent one. Often referred to as ‘Indian hemp’, in the country, Cannabis Sativa, which has enjoyed use as fibre, seed and seed oils, medicinal purposes, and as a recreational drug traces its origin to Central and South Asia. The drug also has many other aliases  igbo, dope, ganja, sensi, kuma, morocco, eja, kpoli, weed, trees, etc. Though usually smoked, the plant can be soaked in alcoholic drinks dubbed ‘monkey-tail’, and consumed mostly in the south-south parts of the country. Some people cook food with it, some boil it to drink as tea, while others just chew the plant and seeds. Physiologically, cannabis causes euphoria, relaxes the muscles and increases appetite. On the downside, the drug can impair motor skills, cause anxiety and paranoia and decrease short-term memory.

    Deemed an illicit drug by the law, it had always been an offence in Nigeria to smoke marijuana, and it has largely been frowned upon by society. However, paradoxically, despite increased hounding of growers, sellers, and users, marijuana appears to be consumed in ever greater quantities.

    Some sections of the society feel using marijuana should not be illegal. And they have made their voices heard through music. Apart from older generation of Nigerian musicians such as the late Fela Anikulapo-Kuti and Orlando Owoh, who used marijuana and whose songs sometimes glamorised it, in recent years music stars like Nice, Terry G, Timaya, Oritsefemi, and WizKid have also saluted the scraggly green plant in their lyrics, to the delight of many fans. Seun Kuti, Fela’s son, also praised marijuana in one of his songs titled ‘The Good Leaf.’

    Perhaps following an unwritten legacy by Fela Anikulapo Kuti, radical Afrobeat musician and unrepentant hemp smoker, the New Afrika Shrine built by his son Femi, has mutated to become a sort of ‘Free Parking’ for marijuana smokers. Forget the sign on the wall that reads ‘Drugs are not allowed in the Shrine’. Patrons of different societal class gather to enjoy good music, and with no sign of the buying or selling of marijuana there  it is an invisible trade with only buyers and sellers able to identify each other..

    Arresting the hemp trade

    During a recent raid, Nurudeen was rounded up with 11 others by a team of policemen at the Lagos State Abattoir at Agege.  According to Nurudeen, seven were released from police detention, but only after they had paid amounts ranging from N30, 000 to N40, 000. Nurudeen and the four others who could not afford to pay were charged, and later remanded at Kirikiri Prison. Though Nurudeen had been arrested at a shed where marijuana was sold and smoked, he was charged only with ‘disturbing the peace’, as he said “they (police) didn’t find any marijuana on me.”

    Created in 1990, the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has the job of curtailing the consumption of drugs in Nigeria. The police also join in apprehending and prosecuting offenders. However, it seems that the security agencies are inefficient  as marijuana use still persists across the country.

    Had Nurudeen been charged under the NDLEA Act, the matter would have been more grave. Under this Act  which came about by the promulgation of Decree Number 48 of 1989, the possession or smoking of cannabis, or even allowing one’s premises to be used for dealing in cannabis, can result in a prison sentence from 15 years to life. Its precursor, the Indian Hemp Act, was even harsher, carrying a maximum sentence of death.

    At the court, Nurudeen was released on a bail of N50,000 and a surety with a tax clearance certificate. However, it was because the bail conditions were not fulfilled on the spot that he was remanded. After spending 14 days at Kirikiri, he was set free after his friends satisfied the bail conditions. He said he was one of those lucky to regain their freedom quickly. “I left some people who didn’t have people to come for them,” he said.

    The official position of Lagos State police is that it raids venues where marijuana is sold or consumed. “What we do is that we raid black spots because that is where criminals converge to carry out their illegal activities,” said Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP ) Kenneth Nwosu, the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer.

    There are allegations, however, that Nigerian security operatives do smoke marijuana, and that they even connive with dealers to escape prosecution. When asked to reflect on these allegations, Nwosu denied that this was possible. “How can we who are arresting smokers, now be the ones who are smoking?”

    An Abuja-based lawyer, Segun Momoh, stresses that the law in Nigeria is not properly enforced by law enforcement agencies in order to profit from it. “Some policemen are aware of what is going on,” he said. “It is a racket.”

    Statistics for arrests and prosecutions relating to marijuana are not easily obtained. Three visits and repeated telephone calls to the Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer to get this data had been unsuccessful at the time of writing.

    Through the chain that leads from cultivation to transportation and to sales, the marijuana industry connects different cities throughout Nigeria. At many outdoor markets and public motor garages, it is not strange to see marijuana smokers puffing away. In this regard, Kano State residents take the lead. According to NDLEA figures, 37 per cent of Kano State population abuse drugs, the highest in the country. It is not uncommon to see youths gathering in public spaces, puffing on marijuana cigarettes in the bustling city. At Kwanar Sabo Street, Hotoro, youths gather most evening to smoke.

    Ironically, this area is close to Mobile Police (MOPOL 9) barracks. A resident, Thomas Adelaja said people don’t even see anything wrong in the boys smoking there. “These boys are committing an offence,” he said. “But it now seems as if they are just smoking ordinary cigar.” That is his way of saying it is so usual no one notices any longer.

    In Tudun Wada Quarters, youths flock into the dilapidated cemetery most mornings and evenings to smoke marijuana. The situation is also the same at Danmarke near the NNPC depot where Motor Park touts freely consume it. And at Tinshama, it is almost as if marijuana is already legal as young people walk about holding their marijuana joints and going about life. “Even the people (security officials) that come to raid us smoke,” said Shehu, one of the boys there.

    According to a fall-out report from a 2013 NOI poll, the key causes for the rise in drug and substance abuse are listed as poverty and unemployment.

    These twin problems can be seen at the university campus town of Abraka, Delta State. Here, smoking of marijuana amongst the student population is hardly seen as a misnomer. A section along the River Ethiope close to the Abraka River Resort Motel serves as a joint where students and indigenes converge to smoke marijuana.

    “Many people misunderstand smokers,” said Marho (not real name), a former student who now sells marijuana there. “We just smoke here to relax and forget our sorrows. It helps you to ‘reason’ (think properly) and it is even medicinal.”

    Marho’s boss, Tony (not real name), sells ‘skunk’, marijuana grown with fluorescent light and trending among youths. While Marho uses his motorbike to get supply from neighbouring Obiaruku, Tony gets his from Lagos, most times, using ladies as his couriers.

    “Police or NDLEA won’t suspect any woman,” Tony, 43, said. “They (security officials) don’t search their load and it is easy for them to bring ‘stuff’.”

    Current figures from the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics (NBS) put youth unemployment rate at about 24 percent. In April, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the Coordinating minister for the Economy, quoting NBS figures, said no fewer than 5.3 million Nigerian youths are jobless with 1.8 million graduates entering the labour market annually. Also, earlier in the year, the World Bank estimated the number of poor Nigerians to be about 58 million.

    With surging youth population and high unemployment, some youths are lured by the easy money which drug peddling offers. According to Tony who did not complete his secondary education, poverty drove him to dealing in marijuana.

    “If someone like me had something doing, I wouldn’t be selling dope. But as it is now, I am ready for the risk since I am not stealing or killing anybody.”

    Concerning arresting hemp dealers and users, the Delta State’s police public relations officer DSP Celestina AmadiKalu hinted that the police in the state only “focused on the big-time producers.” But data on arrests of everyday users in the state was not provided.

    Home grown

    The 2011 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) World Drug Report stated that cannabis use was prevalent among 14.3 per cent of 15 to 64 year olds in Nigeria. The same report in 2014 revealed that Nigeria had made the highest number of cannabis seizures of any African country. Following this report, the NDLEA launched a programme dubbed ‘Operation Weed Eaters’ that aimed to rid the country of cannabis.

    harvested cannabis being processed at the farmWhile marijuana can be grown in all parts of the country, according to the NDLEA, the states that are notorious for cultivating the plant are Ondo, Ogun, Osun, Oyo, Ekiti, Edo and Delta. In September, the NDLEA destroyed cannabis farms in Ute and Ose local government areas in Ondo State and arrested 30 suspects, seizing 31 kilograms of dried weed suspected to be marijuana in the Suleja area.

    “Taking the battle to the farms has yielded significant success,” said the NDLEA Chairman, Ahmadu Giade. “We are determined to destroy all cannabis farms and cut off supply to users. This is one of our strategies of reducing crime and violence in our country. More barons shall be arrested and cannabis plantations destroyed.”

    It takes an average of six months for the marijuana to be smoke-ready from seeds. NDLEA admits that even locating marijuana farms, which are usually sited in the middle of thick foliage, presents a significant challenge. Once located, such farms are burnt to the ground. However, the sheer demand for cannabis in Nigeria means that new farms subsequently emerge in different locations.

    Mitchell Ofoyeju, Head, Public Affairs of the NDLEA, says that cannabis that has dominated the list of illegal drug seizures ever since the Agency was founded in 1990. “Cannabis farm destruction is one of the most challenging operations in the Agency,” he said. “This is so because cannabis cultivators go very far into the heart of the forests to cultivate cannabis. Locating these farms is not easy. There are no roads, so officers have to walk for several hours to get to the farms. Apart from locating the farms, we are also faced with the challenge of how to destroy the farms. Manual destruction is painful and time wasting.”

    In October, NDLEA discovered a 57-hectare cannabis plantation at Gbongan Forest Reserve in Osun State. And one Godspower Chibogu, 51, was arrested. The street value of the 676, 800kg of marijuana on the plantation was estimated at N6.8 billion. According to Ofoyeju, it took the NDLEA team three days to destroy the farm using a tractor.

    And this is only one farm.

    Between January and June 2014, NDLEA arrested 4,511 suspected drug traffickers and seized 47,423 kilograms of drugs. Of that number, cannabis accounted for 45,875 kilograms. Though these seizure figures are high, large quantities of marijuana still find their way to the market baffling the law enforcement system.

    Orianne Akere, a lawyer and chairman of the Benin branch of the Nigerian Bar Association, believes that law enforcement officials are not helping matters in the fight against marijuana. “You hardly ever hear that anybody has been convicted for marijuana usage,” he said. “They are not taking it upon themselves to interrogate users because I think some of them are also users, so they condone all these.”

    Akere also does not understand why some officials allow ‘consumer quantity’ (usually a quantity at the discretion of the officials) of marijuana. ”Once you are caught with marijuana, so long as it is an offence in Nigeria, I expect the law enforcement agencies and the court to effectively deal with you to serve as a deterrent to other users.”

    To Akere, marijuana use has overwhelmed security officers.

    NDLEA does not agree. “NDLEA is winning the war,” Ofoyeju said. “With the resources available to us, our performance is impressive. We can only improve on this momentum.” Ofoyeju contends that the N9.028 billion that has been allocated to the NDLEA in the 2014 budget is not enough, and says that the Agency is seeking greater funding in the future. Ofoyeju also counters allegations of corruption, stating that the Agency under the leadership of Ahmadu Giade operates “a zero tolerance for corruption.”

    But the history of the Agency is certainly chequered. In 2006, former president Olusegun Obasanjo inaugurated a National Committee for the Reform of the NDLEA, led by Justice Gilbert Obayan (now retired). According to the Committee report, 197 arraigned persons between 2005 and 2006 with aid from NDLEA and prison officials evaded jail terms. In June 2010, former Chairman of NDLEA Alhaji Bello Lafiaji and his Personal Assistant, Usman Amali, were sentenced to 16 and seven years in jail respectively by a Lagos High Court, presided over by Justice Olusola Williams, after they were found guilty of using their offices to confer corrupt advantage upon themselves. However, both were freed in November 2011 when the Court of Appeal discharged and acquitted them unconditionally.

    Making it legal?

    Since the beginning of the 20th century, many countries have enacted harsh laws against the cultivation, possession or sale of cannabis. In fact, dealing or using marijuana in countries such as Singapore, China, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia could land one from four years in jail to public beheadings.

    But in recent years, some nations have adopted a different strategy, of decriminalising marijuana usage as a way of combating it. These societies have also often reduced the penalties for possession of small quantities of cannabis, so that it is punished by confiscation or a fine rather than by imprisonment. The idea has been to focus more resources on those who traffic the drug.

    Uruguay made history by becoming the first country to legalise cultivation, trade and usage of marijuana in December 2013. In countries as varied as the Netherlands, Germany, Mexico, Peru, and Canada, the emphasis has shifted towards the decriminalisation of marijuana. Jamaica, a country where marijuana smoking has long been popular, is set to decriminalise it too.

    Moves towards decriminalisation have also occurred in the United States. Last year, the state of Colorado made history by allowing the recreational use of cannabis following a majority vote. According to the state governor, John Hickenlooper, “this industry will create jobs”. The state of Washington has since followed Colorado’s lead, and in November, Alaska, Oregon and the capital Washington DC also voted to legalize marijuana.

    Although marijuana is still illegal in New York, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said in November that, instead of the state arresting anyone carrying less than 25 grams of marijuana, it is likely that such persons will simply be fined up to $100 in future. De Blasio said the relaxation in policy was particularly aimed at young people, who would no longer have a criminal record for the rest of their lives as a result of carrying a small amount of marijuana. “This is part of a long-term effort to make us safer,” he added.

    tractor working on the cannabis farm in osunThe NDLEA disagrees with these approaches. “Nigeria is not considering decriminalizing cannabis,” says Ofoyeju. “The active ingredient in cannabis is tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). It is one of over 400 different cannabinoids. Cannabis has psychological and physiological effects on the human body. In large enough doses, THC can induce auditory and visual hallucinations. It is a very dangerous drug.”

    Yet recent medical studies have also indicated that marijuana can also be beneficial to health. In a CNN report titled ‘Why I changed my mind about weed’, Dr Sanjay Gupta, a neurosurgeon and the Cable News Network CNN ‘s Chief Medical Correspondent, said that he was misled into viewing marijuana as very dangerous.

    “There is clear evidence that in some people marijuana use can lead to withdrawal symptoms, including insomnia, anxiety and nausea,” Gupta said. “We now know that while estimates vary, marijuana leads to dependence in around 9 to 10% of its adult users.

    “While investigating, I realized something else quite important. Medical marijuana is not new, and the medical community has been writing about it for a long time. There were in fact hundreds of journal articles, mostly documenting the benefits. Most of those papers, however, were written between the years 1840 and 1930. The papers described the use of medical marijuana to treat “neuralgia, convulsive disorders, emaciation,” among other things.”

    Dr Dam iAjayi who works at the Federal Neuropsychiatric Hospital in Yaba in Lagos, takes a more balanced view. Dr Ajayi says that, while taking marijuana may be helpful for some people, it could trigger mental challenges in others. “So, it is good for some people but bad for others”.

    A recent Facebook poll conducted by The Nation newspaper asked respondents to comment on whether marijuana should be legalised or not in Nigeria. 44.7% voted in favour of legalization, while 55.3% voted against, in this case showing a greater alignment with marijuana’s status quo as an illicit drug. Some Facebook respondents also aired reasons for their answers.

    “The dangers inherent in the usage of marijuana would be catastrophic,” Henry Akisikpo wrote against the legalisation of marijuana. “l am absolutely sure there is going to be so much insanity and atrocities arising from its usage which will in turn give birth to crime of various forms.”

    Abdulrazak Abdulhamid also said he would not support the legalisation of marijuana though he knows it is consumed heavily in the country. “At the university, I could not get the image of a stark mad fellow out of my mind as some friends experimented and others perfected their weed-smoking skills,” Abdulhamid wrote. “There was this guy who used to transport it from Lagos to Ado-Ekiti in a 25-litre jerry can, until NDLEA caught him one day, seized his stash and made him pay heavily for it.”

    But not everyone is against legalising it.

    Tosin Adewale wrote, “we deceive ourselves a lot. Now, in motor parks and streets in Lagos, men smoke (marijuana) as if it was legalised and nothing follows. (It is) same thing at carnivals and beaches. So, if it’s banned, let the enforcement agents act without exclusion.”

    Commenting, Ogbonna Valentine opined that marijuana should be legalised but accompanied with strict regulations to discourage abuse. “Legalising it will create more jobs and employments and as well help in improving the economy,” he wrote. “Companies should be licensed to engage in producing medical marijuana. Arresting and detaining offenders will only worsen the case as more individuals will develop a means of taking it without the law getting at them. The most annoying part is that our politicians, armed forces personnel and individuals in law enforcement agencies are also marijuana addicts.”

    Economics teaches that placing restrictions on a product with high demand especially when supply cannot be controlled creates ‘black market’ situations. That seems to happening with marijuana in Nigeria  it is unregulated, profitable to traders, and easily accessible to consumers.

    Despite being incarcerated for two weeks, Nurudeen, who began smoking weed at age 14, has not been convinced to quit the habit. A month after his release, he is seated with friends at his regular haunt with a marijuana cigarette in his hand. “This is the only way I know how to relax,” he says.

    There are many Nurudeens in cities across Nigeria, who have not been deterred from continuing to smoke cannabis. As the security agencies continue to wage battle against the marijuana industry with arrests and prosecutions, the growers, traders, and users simply continue to do their thing. It remains a fierce battle.

     

     

    This report was produced by Joe Agbro Jr., with support from Partners for Democratic Change and the Institute for War and Peace Reporting. It is part of the Access Nigeria/Sierra Leone programme funded by the United States Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement

  • ‘My two children are free from  the virus eventhough I’m infected’

    ‘My two children are free from the virus eventhough I’m infected’

    MY name is Aminat -Agboola Alli, and I am the Lagos State coordinator of the Network of People Living with HIV and AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWAN). I was at the dying stage, which is what the doctors call the AIDS stage when I got to know about my status. Consequently, I was placed on Anti-Retro Viral drug (ARV), and within six months of being placed on the drug, I revived. Within one year, my virus load had become undetectable.  That was in 2005. Invariably, what ARV does is that it reduces the amount of virus in the body and ever since, it has remained undetectable. Being undetectable however does not mean that I no longer have the virus; it just means that it is at the dormant, and I can give birth to a child, who would be negative. Doctors advise that I should maintain that undetectable level by adhering strictly to the dosage of the drug, which I have to take for life. Usually when the viral load is suppressed, you’d look good and your rate of infection to others is minimal.

    At the moment, I have two children, whom I gave birth to through natural birth process and who are HIV negative. My husband is negative as well. It is important to note that he knew of my HIV status even before he got involved with me. However, practising unprotected sex with him still comes with a level of risk, despite my undetectable viral level, because there is still that probability of him getting infected. But the probability is low, because being a woman; I am at the receiving end. So I just make sure that my vagina, when we’re having sexual intercourse is not tight. I make sure that I am wet, so that there is no bruise of any kind; because HIV passes a through a medium, which is blood. And blood cannot just come out, except there is a bruise or cut.

    On stigma and stigmatisation of victims

    First of all, I’d like to say that we are not victims. We say we’re not victims because, as you can see, we are looking good. And you’re not likely to know that I have the virus because it is not written on my face, until I open up to you. And because the ARV drugs are available – they’ve been free until recently when they began to place some charges, people are accessing them. Although some people, for fear of being stigmatised in their locality, commute to long distance to access the drug, the fact remains that they still access it. And because of that, they are looking good and are no longer dying. What’s killing people more today is self-stigma or stigma and discrimination from outside world.

    Be that as it may, stigma is minimal now, compared to some years back, and that is because a lot of things have been put in place. I am in Lagos, which is a responsive state, and we have an anti-stigmatisation law, which means that I can take you to court if you stigmatise me. But in Nigeria as a whole, the bill is still in process. Also in Lagos, we have the Lagos State Workplace Policy on HIV/AIDS, in which we want to encourage business organisations to employ people living with HIV AIDs, so that they can work and not be discriminated against. That, is yet to be signed.

    Systematic discrimination

    Discrimination still occurs and there are instances where people living with HIV/AIDS have been discriminated against during the process of job recruitment. However, they don’t tell them. A typical example would be that you’ve been interviewed, got to the final stage, gone for health screening, and then suddenly dropped. So, usually you go your way, wondering why you’re so unlucky. But after sometime, you begin to fall sick, go to the hospital, do a screen test and eventually find out that you are HIV positive. But at that time, you really can’t take any legal action because it is a bit hard to establish the connection.

    Contracting the virus

    There are different modes of infection, namely mother to child, blood transfusion, sharp object and sexual intercourse. I know my mother didn’t give birth to me with HIV and I didn’t do blood transfusion, so it could only have been through any of the two others. But I’ll tell you that I practised unprotected sex; so there is high probability that I got it through that medium. At first nobody thought it was HIV. All our concentration was on Tuberculousis, but the illness persisted even after I’d been treated for tuberculousis. It was at that point that someone suggested to my sister that I went for HIV test. Looking back, if my sister had said, ‘no, my sister can’t have HIV’, maybe I would have been dead by now. Like I said, I was at the AIDS stage; but with appropriate treatment, and support and love from my family, I was able to recover and get back on my feet.

    Did she try to contact any of her sexual partners?

    I practised what we defined in our field as serial monogamy, which is when one has one sexual partner at a time. I contacted at least the last person I had sexual relationship with and he wasn’t infected. So it didn’t occur to me to even think about the person before him. I also remember that my last partner didn’t opt for the test initially, so I assumed it was him. By the time I finally thought about the other person and went to look for him, I was told he had died. So I concluded that it must have been him.

    On the decline in awareness campaign

    Even those working on the field feel that HIV is been over-flogged. And that is why the awareness campaign has been on the decline. There is however need to step up action against HIV infection, especially with young people, because we found that more than 80% of infection is still through sexual intercourse and prevalent amongst people between ages of 15 to 49. We should step up action on reaching out to both in-school youth and out-of-school youths and equip them with Comprehensive Sensuality Education. They need to know that they can’t just go experimenting and endangering themselves, or think that HIV/AIDS danger is no longer out there.

    Challenges facing HIV positive people

    The major challenges we face is that from October this year, some treatment centres have started putting charges on the treatments such as pick up of drugs, follow up lab test and some of us cannot afford it. I speak not as Aminat, but as coordinator of Lagos State Network of People Living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWHAN). Even though it has not been proven, HIV has the face of poverty, since most of those living with it live below the poverty line.

  • ‘My husband loved and  married me despite  my HIV/AIDS status’

    ‘My husband loved and married me despite my HIV/AIDS status’

    I first got to know about my HIV status in 2005. I had taken seriously ill after delivering my first daughter, who by the way was negative. So I was asked to do an HIV test, to which I tested positive. Of course there was a lot of stigma and discrimination at that time, but the good thing was that I had a family that supported me. They gave me all the love and support I needed. My husband at the time, however, did not support me, because he was negative. He accused me of promiscuity. At that time, you were always going to be accused of promiscuity, but I have really never been able to figure out how I got the virus.

    Along the line, I met and got married to somebody else who was negative and knew of my HIV status well before we started the relationship. And today, we have a child who is free from the virus.

    Immediately my second husband started making overtures at me, I told him that I was HIV positive and if he was ready to go the long haul. But his reaction was that being HIV positive wasn’t the end of the world. ‘You’re intelligent and I believe you can add value to my life.’ Interestingly, telling him about my HIV status turned out to be a major attraction. He said he had never seen any woman with that kind of courage. But basically, it was love.

    However, his family is not aware of my status, and we agreed to keep it that way, to avoid unnecessary issues.

    End of the world?

    Of course it felt like the end of the world. You know then it was like a death sentence. Once you test positive, people think that you’re going to die in another two or three days. I actually felt like that too; and I was therefore thinking: ‘Who would take care of my child when I’d passed on? Am I going to live? I even thought of suicide. I thought,  ‘Do I just kill myself?”A lot of negative stuff came into my mind then.

    But all that changed when I went to the hospital and saw other people living with the virus, and looking good and well. In fact, I got the encouragement to live from them. And that gingered me to join the support group and also counsel women that it is not the end of the world. We also passed the message onto those who find themselves in the situation anew. And for those who are pregnant, we let them know that, ‘Hey, you can still have babies who are HIV negative; if you take your drugs regularly and follow the doctors instruction on the usage of the drug, your viral load will get to that zero level, where chances of mother to child infection is very slim.’

    ARV drugs

    The good news is that once you start taking the ARV drugs, the risk of deteriorating to that dreaded AIDS level is remote, except for the fact that the drug itself, like the doctors tell us, can have side effects. Aside the fact that it can keep the virus in check, it can also damage some body organs and make the person come down with AIDS. So it’s not as if it is 100 percent safe. But it suppresses the power of the virus and also increases the CD4 counts.

    Stigmatisation

    The truth is stigmatisation still happens. People still withdraw into their shells, the moment they become aware of your status. But at the end of the day, we are all human beings. But self-stigmatisation is the biggest one that we are facing today, although a lot of efforts, campaign and support is going on. Government is really doing great to support people living with HIV/AIDS. Ordinarily there is no difference between you and me. The only difference is that there is a virus in me that I have to take a drug for. But I know people who are hypertensive, who are also on drugs; people who are diabetic, who are also on drugs for the rest of their lives.

    Message to the youths

    HIV is real and the mode of contraction is still mostly through sexual intercourse. So recklessness or I-don’t-care attitude will only put you in danger. You may be at that youthful stage when life can be very interesting, but be careful and protect yourself. Life has no duplicate. It is not easy living with the virus. Of course, everyone is going to die, but living with the virus always makes you think that somehow, you are going to die. Neither is it easy taking the drugs, which would have to be every day for life. I was not a drug person initially, but once I realised it was my only chance of staying alive, I accept my fate and began taking it regularly. I had worked with Medicine Sans Frontier before and seen people die for not taking the drugs. And since I’m not ready to go down that same way, I have set an alarm; in fact, my brain has become an alarm: once it is time to take the drug, something just triggers in me.

    Association of Women Living with HIV

    Our main vision is to ensure that women living with HIV/AIDS live a healthy and fulfilled life. We have this forum, where we make sure that members have and use their drugs as at when due; we also try to make sure that members are empowered through skill acquisition, so that they can earn income, because you must be happy, eat adequately, take your drugs regularly and provide your basic needs. Our association is also out to ensure that justice and equity is ensured, because you find out that some of the men are not helping matters. I was at a clinic one day and I had the opportunity to assist in the registration area and I had this interaction with a man who told me that he has two wives and both of them are not aware that he is HIV positive. So he has already infected them, and to now come out and take responsibility is difficult. He actually confessed that he married one of them, a virgin. And yet he couldn’t do her the favour of telling her before marrying her! Call that wickedness and you’d be right on point. And we’ve had several other cases of men who, because they thought they got the virus from a woman, have sworn to spread it to as many women as come their way. But that is not right. If you try to spread it, you can also contract another type of virus called HIV II and other more deadly diseases. Towards this end, the government is trying to put in place a disclosure mechanism, whereby anyone who is found guilty of such act will be prosecuted and punished by the law.

  • UK to deport man over wife’s low salary

    UK to deport man over wife’s low salary

    A South African, Michael Engel, is set to be deported from the United Kingdom (UK) after a court ruled that his British wife’s salary was not high enough.

    Mr. Engel, a 31-year-old living in Cornwall, said he and wife Natalie plan to go back to South Africa with their 18-month-old daughter Nyana.

    A Home Office spokesman said the rules were designed to stop foreign spouses from becoming reliant on UK taxpayers.

    The BBC reports that the couple were told of the immigration tribunal’s ruling after they had appealed on the grounds of a right to family life.

    Responding, Engel said the “bizarre” Immigration System Rules were “attacking British citizens”.

    However, under the rules that were introduced in 2012, British citizens who want to bring a foreign spouse to the UK must earn £18,600 a year and a further £3,800 – a total of £22,400 – if the couple have a child.

    Mrs. Engel’s business made £19,786 in 2014 which was deemed not enough by the tribunal panel, which met on 3 December.

    She said the decision made her feel like her family was being “kicked out” of the country.

    She said: “I’m gobsmacked, lost for words, angry and deflated. I’m not so proud to be British right now.”

    But Judge Michael Wilson, who heard the appeal, said UK taxpayers “should not be expected to have to financially support the appellant in the event of him not obtaining work”.

    The couple are now awaiting a deportation date.

    Mr. Engel said: “We did everything in our power to tick all the boxes.

    “They are just attacking the wrong people – they are attacking British citizens.”

    Engel and Natalie met in 2009 while working on a cruise ship and lived in South Africa for four years.

    They moved to the UK in January 2013 with Mr. Engel on a holiday visa, living first in Yorkshire and then in Cornwall.

    In a statement the Home Office said: “Our family rules were brought in to make sure that spouses coming to the UK do not become reliant on the taxpayer for financial support.

    “This is fair to applicants and to the rest of the public, and has been upheld by the Court of Appeal.”

    Average gross full time pay in Cornwall was £23,305 for the year ending April 2014, compared with £27,195 for the UK, according to the Office for National Statistic.

    North Cornwall Liberal Democrat MP, Dan Rogerson, said in October: “It’s absolutely right that anyone who comes to settle in this country has the resources to do that and is not going to claim benefits straight away.

    “But I think it’s also important that we get the thresholds right, so that in low income areas like Cornwall, we are not disadvantaging people.

    “We need to keep families together who want to settle here.”

  • How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing the Judiciary (2)

    How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing the Judiciary (2)

    In this concluding part of a report on the judicial system, JOSEPH JIBUEZE provides more evidence of how other factors aside sabotage, blackmail and undue delays contribute to the snail speed of the justice system. 

    Apart from delays caused by abuse of legal technicalities, other factors contribute to denial of justice in criminal cases.

    Justice Yetunde Idowu, one of most senior judges of the Lagos State High Court, said a justice system that is remote, unaffordable, slow or incomprehensible to ordinary people effectively leads. to injustice.

    “The rule of law in itself is collated with economic growth and investment, and an effective judicial system promotes better livelihoods for all people,” she said.

    The judge said cogs in the wheel of justice include financial and budgetary constraints; lack of adequate institutional reforms and modernisation; low investment in information and communication technology; lack of political will and commitment to a better society; use of archaic and outdated laws, procedures and processes that are riddled with loopholes.

    Other adverse factors, she said, are lack of public trust and confidence in the system; corruption due to lack of accountability and transparency; inadequate courts; indiscipline, among others.

    According to a former Lagos State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Prof Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), failures in criminal justice are not only a significant disincentive to foreign investment, but constitute a burden on the cost of doing business.

    To him, interlocutory appeals on practically any issue have remained a major hindrance to early disposition of cases, especially as it almost always involves a stay of proceedings at the court appealed from.

    Osinbajo pointed out that relative to Nigeria’s population, the number of convicts per capita is extremely low.

    “This may either mean that Nigerians are an incredibly law abiding people or that their custodial sentences are not frequently used or that the criminal justice system has quite significant problems. Russia with a population of only 3million higher than ours has almost 20 times as many convicted prisoners as Nigeria,” Osinbajo said.

    The professor of law said interminable delays reduce the chances of ever concluding cases in a satisfactory manner. Witnesses lose interest. Investigating police officers are transferred outside of the states where the offences were committed. Judges are also transferred and cases start de novo.

    A frontline lawyer, Chief Afe Babalola (SAN), said corruption in the judiciary and the incompetence of some lawyers and judges do not help the situation.

    An ill-prepared lawyer will seek an adjournment at the first opportunity, and a judge who lacks the intellectual capacity to adjudicate a case will indulge such lawyers and adjourn even the simplest of rulings.

    Babalola said: “If a lawyer lacks the necessary competence for the prosecution or defence of any given case, he unavoidably becomes a hindrance and liability to the course of justice which under normal circumstances he is supposed to serve. The law reports are replete with cases that were painfully lost by nothing but the ignorance and incompetence of lawyers.”

    He said there had been several instances where lawyers frustrate the hearing of court cases, especially when they know they have weak defences.

    “Some go to the extent of writing false letters stating that they were otherwise engaged in the Court of Appeal or Supreme Court when in fact they had no case pending in those courts. Such conduct is clearly unbecoming or unworthy of any lawyer,” Babalola said.

    For judges, it is not surprising to see some of them who preside over criminal cases sit by noon when courts ought to resume by 9am. Some exhibit crass laziness.

    According to Babalola, before a judge can dispense justice, he must possess the necessary judicial qualities of integrity, deep knowledge of the law, honesty and a sense of justice itself. Unfortunately, many of them, he said, lack such qualities.

    At the heart of incompetence is corruption, which is manifest in the process of appointment of judges.

    “It must be realised that a knowledgeable but corrupt judge is a great peril to the administration of justice. He is bad if not worse than an honest but an incompetent judge,” Babalola said.

    Besides, he said there are cases in which judges for reasons best known to them personalise issues and frustrate the exercise of the right of appeal by litigants by their refusal to release records of proceedings or their judgments. Others, he said, lack courage and succumb to undue political influences.

    According to Babalola, poorly trained and inefficient court officials are also a cog in the wheel of justice.

    “Some court registrars in Nigeria have become so infested with the virus of corruption that they deliberately frustrate the doing of justice in our society,” he said. Some officials, he added, deliberately omit to list cases for hearing. The sad effect is the the judiciary has lost its fear factor.

    A former Lagos State prosecutor, Fola Arthur-Worrey, said: “The courts have lost authority. Today people write petitions against judges and then the judges will hands-off the cases.

    “Unfortunately for us, we don’t seem to understand the implications of weak institutions; we don’t understand the signals it sends to citizens and to the rest of the world. A country is only taken as seriously as its law and justice systems are managed.”

    Most courts are burdened with antiquated physical and legal infrastructure that renders them extremely slow and inefficient. Many judges must take their own notes in longhand while, in the words of one judge, they “sweat and choke” in stiflingly hot courtrooms – hobbling the speed of any proceedings. The judiciary, including appellate courts, also strains under the burdens of an excessive caseload.

    A judge of the Delta State High Court, Justice Roli Harriman, said only a few states, such as Lagos, have any form of electronic recording of proceedings.

    Majority of courts, she said, still use archaic equipment and judges write longhand, which is later reproduced by typists.

    “The use of longhand and typewriters obviously tend to delay justice,” she said.

    Another factor, the judge said, is that little use is made of software designed for case management and legal research. This lack of tools leads to judges adjourning till further dates rulings they could otherwise have delivered immediately.

    “Apart from a few states, the acquisition of this software is not on the priority list of governments,” Justice Harriman said.

    Delays, the judge added, even start from the filing process.

    “I am hoping a time would come when e-filing will take centre stage in the judiciary, a time when lawyers can, with a registered access code, file their processes and make payments online,” she said.

    Besides, it will not be out of place if court registries accept Point of Sale (POS) payments.

    Lack of courtroom technology, such as video conferencing, is also a challenge. In criminal cases, a greater number of adjournments are due to investigating police officers being transferred to other locations or being sent on other assignments. Some witnesses are also reluctant to come to court.

    “If their evidence can be taken through video conferencing, then this would eliminate the delay,” Justice Harriman said.

    The physical state of some courts also does not help speedier justice delivery. Some courts do not have air conditioning, and some courtrooms are like cubicles.

    For instance, in the Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos, courtrooms used by Justice Okon Abang and Justice Mohammed Idris, two of the busiest judges, for instance, are so small that lawyers take turns to go in for their cases.

    Several of the lawyers who make it inside, stand during proceedings waiting for their turn. Majority stand outside the door, straining to hear their cases called. Others flee for fear of suffocation. The consequence is that the judges could easily get tired in such working conditions.

    In some states, lack of adequate number of courtrooms force judges to share spaces, alternating sitting times. This leads to unsecured storage of court documents, leading to “loss” of case files, and provides room for corruption.

    “The bad shape of court buildings does not only reflect poorly on the relevance of justice sector institutions, but also prevents them from working effectively. It is also true that those working in these buildings get affected by the lack of a somewhat dignified working environment. Most importantly, decrepit infrastructure and dysfunctional design exacerbate delay and affect the quality of work done,” Justice Harriman said.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and former External Affairs Minister, Mr Odein Ajumogobia, believes delays have unfortunately become a recognised and accepted strategy in escaping justice.

    “It obviously serves the defendant well when he has no defence or simply needs to buy time to answer a complaint and is therefore only interested in putting off the anticipated final decision by the court for as long as possible,” he said.

    According to him, the most common causes of delays and abuse are the preliminary objection (the outcome of which is appealed up to the Supreme Court); frivolous arguments and false affidavits; longer adjournments due to full dockets; lack of strict adherence to time limit provisions and scheduling (with no severe and deterrent cost); poor service of court processes (with parties claiming they were not ‘properly’ served); frequent amendment of processes (which foist adjournments and further amendments); abuse of the right of appeal, and lack of enough punitive costs which, to Ajumogobia, should be in millions of naira for deliberate time-wasting.

    EFCC chairman Ibrahim Lamorde said the commission is helpless regarding the causes of delays.

    “You have to know where the responsibility of the EFCC starts and ends. When we take people to court, our duty is to prosecute them. But some of these accused persons/ suspects are taking advantage of the criminal laws.

    “The unfortunate aspect for us is that when such criminal proceedings are delayed, you start having witness fatigue. Some of the witnesses would have died and some officers transferred,” Lamorde said.

    He expressed regrets that some cases filed by EFCC against suspects, including politically exposed persons eight years ago, are still pending.

    He added: “We have cases we filed since 2006; we have been going in and out of the Supreme Court because of applications here and there.

    “We cannot change what is obtainable at the court because the laws of the land allow people to go to court. Some people are delaying cases to the detriment of the people of Nigeria and the affected states.

    “The outcome of these cases would have definitely defined what people will get. These funds to be recovered ought to be used for the development of these states,” Larmode added.

     

    Experts seek way out

    Falana said the gross abuse of judicial process is encouraged under the criminal legal system. This, he said, must change.

    On deliberate abuse of injunctions, Falana said: “The dangerous practice calls for an urgent review of the criminal justice system in the overall interest of the society.

    “If the trend is not stopped, other people accused of engaging in armed robbery and terrorism may soon be asking for interim, interlocutory or perpetual injunctions to stop the state from investigating or prosecuting them.”

    The human right lawyer described as painful the fact that the lawyers involved in the prosecution and defence of the cases that have lingered endlessly are Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs).

    “The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) owes the legal profession a duty by calling lawyers who frustrate the prosecution of corruption cases to order. Trial courts are also enjoined to report such lawyers to the Disciplinary Committee of the NBA for appropriate actions,” Falana said.

    To him, judges too must be bold and strong in the face of such intimidation, and should punish unscrupulous for contempt in facia curia (in the face of court).

    He condemned what he called the seeming indifference of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) to the criminal abuse of the judicial system.

    “While the Federal Government is clearly complicit in some of the abuses suffered by the criminal justice system, at other times the AGF merely stands aloof, and watches our common humiliation as a modern state, which is what those conducts amount to.

    “As the legal precept posits, ‘justice delayed is justice denied’; and in this instance, both an accused and the state deserve to have a speedy and transparent trial at all times.

    “A situation whereby the poor are daily railroaded to prison while criminals who are rich and powerful are allowed to breath the air of freedom has to stop. Judges should, therefore, desist from conferring immunity or granting perpetual injunctions restraining anti-graft agencies from investigating and prosecuting politically exposed persons.

    “In a display of class solidarity with the ruling class, the EFCC charges the rich accused of looting the treasury with money laundering while the poor are charged with stealing.

    “Since the penalty for money laundering is two years or payment of fine while stealing attracts seven years imprisonment, the discriminatory treatment of the two sets of criminal suspects should stop in the interest of justice and fair play,” Falana said.

    The rights activist also wants strict adherence to the new practice directions of the Federal High Court, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court that require accelerated hearing of cases pertaining to corruption and terrorism as well as appeals arising from them.

    For instance, the trial of such cases is required to be conducted day by day at the Federal High Court. Regrettably, the practice directions are not being adhered to by all the relevant stakeholders. Hence, corruption cases are adjourned for all manners of reasons contrary to the letter and spirit of the law.

    Also, in view of the presumption of innocence in favour of accused persons, the prosecution should stop opposing applications for bail on frivolous grounds, Falana suggested.

    In other words, the prosecution and the defence counsel should agree on the conditions to be attached to bail to enable the defendants to stand trial.

    However, where the parties are unable to reach an agreement, the trial judge should impose bail conditions. The procedure, Falana believes, will go a long way to accelerate the trial of criminal cases.

    “To arrest the undue delay in the prosecution of criminal cases, I suggest the introduction of front-loading and Pre-trial Conference. The prosecution should go beyond making available to the defendants the proof of evidence. There should be sworn statements of all witnesses which should be served on the defendants in line with the current practice in civil cases,” Falana said.

    Babalola said since looting of public fund by office holders is a serious wrong against the society, the government must show the will to prosecute offenders rather than shield them.

    “It would be incompatible with justice for the government to neglect or refuse to bring appropriate criminal charges against public officers who have been indicted simply because they have apologised or have resigned from their posts,” he said.

    Besides, there is the urgent need to weed out unethical behaviours, ineptitude resulting in low productivity, mal-administration and lazy, incompetent judges, Babalola said.

    He also called for a comprehensive review of the conditions of service of judges, including salaries.

    “Judges should be well paid, properly housed and well equipped with modern verbatim recording machines, trained stenographers, photocopiers, regular power supply and air conditioning,” he said.

    Justice Harriman wished for a time when evidence can be displayed electronically in front of the judge; when witnesses or counsel can be allowed to demonstrate or annotate situations or scenarios by using a fingertip directly on a monitor; when live video presentations of witnesses who cannot be physically present for a trial or hearing can be conducted; and when lawyers can create their own slide show presentations to enhance their arguments.

    “For judges, technology can increase opportunity to control the proceedings, set time limits, and decide matters expeditiously,” Justice Harriman said.

    Eminent professor of law, Itsay Sagay (SAN), believes it is everyone’s duty to save the judiciary from collapse, being the “ultimate source of democracy and rule of law”. He prayed for a return to the past, when it was inconceivable to bribe members of the bench.

    “It was absolutely unthinkable to bribe justices of the past. Even the contemplator will rot in jail. In the 80s, we could predict the outcome of a case. Judges created remedy where there was none. They were not colourless and neutral about justice. They had a philosophy,” he said.

    Prof Sagay also wants a dislodgment of those he referred to as “judicial mafia.”

    “There is a mafia in the judiciary, a mafia that is untouchable, a mafia that decides what happens to us in this country. You cannot tell the truth as far as the mafia is concerned,” he said.

    According to him, the Supreme Court, for instance, is too limited in the choice of those appointed as justices. In his words, “nothing is said about merit, character. They don’t tolerate bringing in fresh faces either.”

    He recalled that in the past top professors of law and academics were appointed to the appellate courts, but not anymore.

    “Now, incompetence is recycled among themselves, so, there is no growth in the judiciary. What prevents excellent SANs from going to the Supreme Court so that the mafia will not continue to control things?

    “Justices should stop hobnobbing with the executive. They should not consider themselves as part of the executive. They must insist on playing their role without fear or favour,” Sagay said.

    Prof Osinbajo called for a fundamental restructuring of the rules. “It is my view that the problems of delay especially require some hard thinking and collaborative interaction between the Chief Justice of Nigeria, the Attorney-General of the Federation and the heads of the National Assembly,” he said.

    These interactions, he added, must address fundamental issues on changing the rules to engage the challenges of Nigeria’s peculiar circumstances.

    “Clearly, there ought to be a more stringent costs regime to prevent dilatory tactics of counsel. Judicial accountability for delays in delivering rulings and judgments must be closely monitored,” he said.

    Prof Osinbajo also wants a limitation of interlocutory appeals, which are often abused.

    “Constitutional amendments providing for the termination of interlocutory appeals at the Court of Appeal is much needed. There need also be clear and definitive intervention by the Supreme Court on notorious and recondite issues frequently deployed to delay trials.

    “Issues of jurisdiction require one clear Supreme Court decision which lays down the principles and the law. Some disciplinary action may be required with the full backing of our courts to check counsel who in the face of clear authorities delay trials by raising such issues,” Osinbajo said.

    A Supreme Court justice, Kudirat Kekere-Ekun agrees with Osinbajo. In addition to “a major attitudinal change,” she said there is the urgent need for constitutional amendment to limit the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction so that interlocutory decisions or cases where there are concurrent findings of fact by the two lower courts and there is no dispute as to the law should terminate at the Court of Appeal.

    Respect for ethics of the profession, which is severely, lacking, must be enforced, she said.

    “Where a client has a bad case, it is unethical to institute an action in court merely to frustrate his opponent and delay the fulfillment of an obligation. The same applies to a defendant who has no defence to an action but engages in all manners of delay tactics, including the ubiquitous preliminary objections on jurisdiction, wasting valuable judicial time and expense,” Kekere-Ekun said.

    Ajumogobia said delays cannot be eliminated as long as deliberate time-wasting is the objective of “gifted and talented lawyers.”

    According to him, justice can only occur when there exists a degree of uniformity, competence and integrity of not just the lawyers and the Bar leaders, but other court officials.

    Ajumogobia said:  “As long as we choose (and it is always a conscious choice by counsel) to deliberately exploit the existence of constitutional lapses or the inevitable and necessary flexibility of procedural rules, curbing delays will remain an illusion.”

    Justice Idowu believes that administration of justice will be enjoyed by people when they are able to use institutions that are quick, relevant and effective in meeting their needs for justice.

    “A functioning justice system requires the effective supply of justice services by state and non-state entities as well as the expression of effective demand by people who trust the system enough to use it,” she said.

    Some judges are easily manipulated by the executive and the corrupt political class. It is not strange to find criminal suspects seeking a transfer of their cases from one judge to the other, all in a bid to get a more pliant, easy-to-manipulate or corrupt judge. The process of appointment of judges, therefore, needs to be more transparent.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Queens Counsel (QC), Mr Oba Nsugbe, said the secrecy surrounding judges’ appointments must be stopped.

    “We need to make greater efforts to completely demystify the system of judicial appointments in Nigeria from beginning to end,” he said.

    Nsugbe said he once sought to know how to go about applying to be a judge in Nigeria, and to learn about upcoming vacancies, criteria for appointment and the process, but came up with no reliable information.

    He interrogated various official websites for answers, read a number of publications, and spoke to people in the judiciary, and still got no useful information on how to be a judge.

    His words: “The answers never seemed complete or exhaustive. This needs to change. In so important an area, you can never have enough clear, systematic information about what each and every stage entails – exactly what is needed of the applicant, when, who will assess it; how it will be assessed; who will be spoken to; against what criteria, etc. There needs to be more transparency about the appointments procedure. The lack of it acts as a disincentive to many aspiring judges,” he said.

    Another provision in the rules that has caused delays is the principle of a case starting de novo (afresh) where witnesses had been called before a judge is transferred, is elevated to a higher court, or dies and another judge takes over. In such a situation, witnesses would have to be recalled.

    Lagos lawyer Mr Segun Ajibola (SAN) said aspects of this provision needs to be revisited.

    “It’s difficult for a case not to start de novo. One of the functions of the judge is to watch the demeanour of the witnesses before him, not just listen to their testimony alone. He has to see that the evidence being given is given with conviction, and in a manner which portrays the truth.

    “What I will be happy to see is that the aspect of the requirement for trial to start all over as it is in most cases is restricted strictly to aspects which evidence by witnesses have been taken, so that whoever takes over assumes all the processes and procedural steps taken before then.

    “In this country where our approach to things is most times questionable, once you have a witness come in once and give evidence, getting him back most times to repeat most things he has said is a problem. Situations change and influences would come in. Eventually some people escape justice.”

    To lawyers whose stock in trade is to frustrate cases by means foul or fair, Ajibola said: “We need to re-orientate ourselves and appreciate the fact that at the end of the day we’re all losers.

    “It (deliberate delays) may work for you today, because you’re on this side of the law. If tomorrow you find yourself on the other side, and the same thing happens to you, you will lose.

    “Encouraging that kind of approach to administration of justice is something that will do no one no good at the end of the day. It may help in resolving a temporary situation, but in the long run, we’re all losers.

    “Perhaps there is no other country that has as much causes of delays in dispensation of justice as Nigeria. We need to evolve better arrangement which will be in place to curb the excesses of some of us who abuse the process.

    “I think it requires a thinktank approach, as we try to do regarding law reforms, which gave rise to the new Lagos State civil rules that came from the need to fast-track and reduce bottle-necks and roadblocks in dispensation of justice.

    “However, no one process is perfect. Any process designed by man stands to be defeated by the same man. The same man who invented the pencil invented the eraser. We don’t benefit from abuse generally. As far as I’m concerned, we’re all losing.

    “Once we can accept that as a platform, and get people to understand that the failure of one is that failure of all, the sooner we will begin to approach the situation from a standpoint of positive and honest sense of purpose.”

    To many who have already lost faith in the system, true justice will only remain a fantasy.