Tag: Commissioner for Justice

  • Kidnapping: Evans‘ll not escape Justice, Lagos assures

    The Lagos State Government on Wednesday assured that no effort would be spared in ensuring the logical conclusion of the cases filed in court against kidnap kingpin, Chukwudumeme Onwuamadike popularly known as Evans.

    Evans, who was arrested at his mansion in Magodo area of Lagos last year, is being prosecuted by the State Government in court alongside others for masterminding and executing series of high profile kidnappings and murder in the State.

    The State’s Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Adeniji Kazeem, who said this at the ongoing Ministerial Press Briefing held at the Bagauda Kaltho Press Centre in Alausa as part of activities marking the third year anniversary of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s administration, said the State Government was committed to ensure the logical conclusion of all pending cases in court and serve justice to the people.

    “On the Evans’ matter, the cases filed against him are ongoing in court. The issue is that the lawyer representing him is trying to play some games to delay the matter but in all his games, we have been defeating him in court.

    “We have filed different cases. Some are for kidnapping and some bordered on murder and his lawyer is fighting all the cases but what I can assure the people is that we are committed to ensure the matter is concluded and defeat him at the end of the day,” Kazeem said.

    While reeling out activities of the agencies under the Ministry in the last one year, the Attorney General said the State Government received and treated a total number of 11,451 cases through the Special Task Force Against Land Grabbers, Domestic and Sexual Violence Response Team (DSVRT) and the Special Offences (Mobile) Court in the last one year.

    He said the government also received 316 inquiries through the recently unveiled first state-owned DNA and Forensic Centre with 71 active cases currently ongoing bordering on homicide, rape, toxicology, child trafficking, serology, among others.

    According to Kazeem, the Anti-Land Grabbers Task Force designed by the present administration to fight the menace of forceful take-over of properties received 1300 petitions out of which 855 were concluded and 530 currently at various stages of resolution.

    “In the period under review, over 35 arrests of suspected notorious land grabbers were effected while 26 criminal prosecution cases against suspected land grabbers are presently ongoing,” the Attorney General said.

    Besides, the Attorney General said in a bid to enhance due diligence in property transaction, the State Government introduced the Real Estate Electronic Litigation Database designed for the provision of access to information primarily on properties which are subject of litigation, adding that since its launch, the portal has recorded over 1,000,000 hits and over 10,000 consistent users from Nigeria, United States, United Kingdom, South Africa and others.

    He recalled that since its inception, the DSVRT had galvanized strategic action and responded appropriately to formal and informal reporting of incidents of rape, defilement, domestic violence, child abuse, neglect and maltreatment in the State through the active support of the Governor and other partners.

    “The Ministry has noted an increase in report of domestic abuse against men. To date, the DSVRT has received a total number of 131 cases in this regard. Overall, a total number of 1771 cases were reported during the period under review. The team also provided free medical services and psycho-social therapy for over 700 survivors of domestic/sexual violence, conducted capacity building trainings with 220 police officers across the State, and successfully secured the conviction of seven perpetrators,” he said.

    He added that through the Citizens’ Mediation Centre (CMC), the State Government received a total number of 47,292 new cases free of charge out of which 25,191 were resolved with others at various stages of resolution.

    “The total value of settlement of debt related matters achieved by the Centre during the period under review from May 2017 to April 2018 as settlement between parties was N1,352,745,391,” the Atoorney General said, among other achievements by the State Government in the justice sector.

    Speaking on Hotel and Restaurant Consumption (Fiscalization) Regulations 2018, Kazeem clarified that it was neither a new law nor an additional tax, but a regulation aimed at ensuring that government gets due revenue.

    “It is a regulation and not a new law. It was made pursuant to an existing law that was already in operation. What this regulation essentially seeks to do is to allow the government to put certain equipment in the restaurant and hospitality organizations to properly monitor the revenue that is coming so we can know what exactly is due to the State Government.

    “It is not an additional tax; it is just to enhance transparency in collection of taxes that are due to the State. So, I want to clarify that carefully,” Kazeem said.

    On other high profile cases, he said it was gratifying to report that the cases were progressing in court, saying the Synagogue Church case for instance on the collapsed building which killed people was progressing well, adding that a no case submission filed by the accused persons instead of defending the case was recently dismissed by the Court, while the General Overseer of the Christian Praying Assembly, Rev. Chukwuemeka Ezeugo, a.k.a Reverend King who is presently on death roll imposed by the court would have his fate determined in due course.

    Read Also: Evans: Lagos court to hear application to quash charge Feb. 28

     

  • Ajimobi trying to balance history in Ibadan – Attorney-General

    Ajimobi trying to balance history in Ibadan – Attorney-General

    Olusegun Abimbola is the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice in Oyo State. In this interview with our Correspondent, Oseheye Okwuofu , the explains the motive behind he decision of the Govenor Abiola Ajimobi-led administration to carry out the now controversial amendment of the 1957 Olubadan Chieftaincy Declaration.

    DID the state envisage that the issue of chieftaincy review would become a legal tussle?

    In any society, particularly in the evolution of issues of institution, organizations, or even processes, there are bound to be those who support and there are bound to be those who oppose even for the most altruistic proposals. A very good example is that some people thought that slave trade was legal and appropriate. They practice it for generations. At some point, segregation was appropriate in some localities and when there was agitation for change, it was violently resisted in some areas.

    Similarly, when some countries effected legislations to change some obnoxious practices, some people went to court. What I am trying to say is that there is nothing in this life that is suggestive of a change, no matter how positive the change is, that will not be challenged by some people either selfishly or otherwise. Now, to your question weather litigation was anticipated or not, people who have good, bad or no reason at all can challenge any position, policy or proposal at any point in time.

    So, I’ll say it is not beyond contemplation. That is why government ensured that in implementing the decisions taken, every required steps were diligently followed. There is hardly any chieftaincy declaration that exist in any part of Oyo state and the entire southwest, perhaps even beyond the southwest, that is not a product of inquiry at some point.  What then is a declaration?

    The Chiefs law of Oyo State is today a referring material for all the states in the southwest, because when the Chiefs law was originally introduced, we were all in a region. So it became applicable in the other states of the west at a point. What is the purpose of a declaration? Section 4 of the Chiefs law says that the governor may require a committee to be set up to make a declaration on a customary law that will regulate in the selection of any person to hold a recognized chieftaincy post.

    That is what a declaration is. So if you want to become Oba or Baale of any particular locality, there is a statement of appropriate customary laws, processes and procedure that will govern how to become one. Now, under the Chiefs law, the supreme authority remains the governor. Every other institution under the Chiefs law hold their power as delegated responsibility of the governor.

    That is why it is usually said that ‘the governor may by order do this or do that’. So you find out that it is the governor that the law emphatically says holds the power. So everybody else who functions by virtue of the Chiefs law function as a delegated authority under the governor. That is foundational. So if the law says that for every competent council that would be established by the order of the governor, such number of committee may be determine by the governor for the purpose of declaration.

    That means the existence of previous committee is subject to the governor. I am trying to preface the prelude the numbers of issues. What the governor did was to exercise his powers under section 25 and commissions of inquiry law to set up an inquiry because if the governor can ask a chieftaincy committee to make a declaration in respect of any chieftaincy matter, what would be the basis upon which that committee will do so? What will be the basis of the governor’s directive.

    The governor cannot know the customary evolution of every domain in the state and all these chieftaincies need a declaration. The only way the governor can be availed with all the necessary informations that will determine the directive to chieftaincy committee as to the issuance of a declaration would be based on his knowledge of what is the customary law relating to a particular chieftaincy which can only be achieve through inquiry. That is why you hear of Ademola inquiry, Oloko inquiry etc.

    So is there no room for the state house of assembly to legislate on the issue?

    The position of the Chiefs law is that when the governor is satisfied that the declaration is inquired; that satisfaction can be a product of feedback or recommendation of inquiry or his personal knowledge but he won’t say he is satisfied because there would be need to issue a declaration or even to amend a declaration as the case may be. Then he can direct necessary chieftaincy committee that made the declaration to do the amendment.

    When the commission of inquiry make its recommendations, that is the content of what will inform the governor to know the facts relating to a particular chieftaincy. It was brought to the governor and the executive council. Then governor issued his opinion which was contained in a white paper and gazetted. That white paper was a represents the opinion of government in respect of what is to be done.

    The white paper is still not the amended declaration. It is the opinion of the government as what to be done. It was pursuant to that white paper and pursuant to the Chiefs law in section 10 that if the government is satisfied, he may require a chieftaincy committee to amend the declaration. It is contained in the white paper which was transmitted to relevant chieftaincy committee. It is the chieftaincy committee that amended the declaration. And when the chieftaincy committee amended it, it was gazetted and registered. Those are the steps as contained in the law and as followed by the governor. There is no part of it that says the House of Assembly must amend the declaration or register it.

    But in the past, declarations usually come from the Olubadan-in-Council. Why is it government this time?

    It won’t be correct if anybody alleges that there was no consultation because I am aware that there were consultations and this issue did not start with this administration. But it predates this administration and all the parties involved are aware that it predate this administration. Perhaps it is as far back as 30 years ago. All the settlement chiefs that were also part of the entire process know that it has been in existence for many decades, not as if it is just started yesterday.

    We also need to know that the essence of the commission of inquiry is to ensure that all stakeholders make impute into the final decisions. The essence is to invite memoranda and in this case, they receive about 120 memoranda. At that point when they were receiving memoranda, the people who had gone to court were expected to submit their own memoranda to avoid disagreement. It will interest you to know that none of the people that went to court submitted memoranda.

    But they have gone to court at that time?

    The commission of inquiry had started its sitting before they approach the court. That shows that they chose not to submit any memoranda but rather to go to court. The commission was set up on May 19 and went on public hearing in June 7  while the first case was filed in 25th of June. The public hearing was to allow those who have already submitted memoranda to come and speak on it so that it won’t be their own personal interpretation of written documents.

    With your explanation, don’t you think it is a mistake on the part of the government that you didn’t limit the promotion to the Baales and not the High Chiefs?

    Like I said, the essence of the commission is to take suggestions from all the stakeholders through memoranda. In many of those memoranda submitted different positions were canvassed and justified. Some of the memoranda were from Olubadan in Council, High chiefs and other institutions with respect to the elevation of the Olubadan in Council. Even this one predate this administration. These are the issues that have been on ground for long and we need to recognize some of the issues at hand.

    When change begins, there is always some measure of resistance. In several part of the state like Ibarapa and Ogbomoso, there were similar situation where government had elevated some traditional rulers to crown wearing Obas. Now, imagine a situation where a Baale who is a crown wearing Oba, sits as a member of a traditional council headed by one of the high Chiefs who is not an Oba.

    Can you see the aberration that will be created? That means someone who is an Oba has been put under a High chief. You can see that it is a way of balancing history and keeping the trend, peace and hierarchy in chieftaincy institution. The government is trying to create balance. Governor Ajimobi’s action is purely calculated to clean up the historical problems that different generations keep passing on because nobody could boldly take the decision this administration has taken.

    The new Obas are also members of the  Olubadan in Council, can they wear the Olubadan crown again in future?

    One of the things about life is evolution and none of us is in the position to determine what is in it until you face the circumstances that demands it of you. Just as you said you have never seen a promoted King so also you will say you have never seen a domain with emergence of paramount ruler the way we have it in Ibadan. It doesn’t exist anywhere but we cannot say because it does not exists elsewhere, our own is aberration. It is not because that is how we are.

    One of the things we should appreciate is the uniqueness we possess in Ibadan. Today, we are faced with issues that has to do with boundaries with some neighboring states and for those states to assert authority, they have conferred Obaship title on the boundaries community Chiefs. When it is time to take decision, you know what happens. Also, now that they are proposing a national council of traditional rulers, do you think a Baale will be part of the council?

    The qualification to be in the council will be something that shows your superiority in the hierarchy of traditional institutions. So, if we remain on that premise, we are not doing ourselves any good. Don’t forget, there was a time we have only one local government in Ibadan land. I mean Ibadan Municipal Council. When there was moves to have many councils, there was this kind of resistance.

    Then, did anybody know that there was still going to be the 1999 constitution which will tie distribution of consolidated revenue of Federal Republic of Nigeria to the number of local government we have? Assuming Ibadan remains only one local government rather than eleven, now we have 774 local government in the constitution that the revenue mobilization and physical commission divides allocation to every months based on the parameter set out.

    Ibadan would have been taking only make one slot because we are one local government. Now that we are eleven local governments, it is more resources and development for Ibadan land. That is what I am saying that naturally people resist change because they cannot see far off into the future. But that should not stop us from doing what is good for our people once we see that it is the good thing to do.

  • Institute to partner Yobe on peace

    Institute to partner Yobe on peace

    The Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution, on Friday said it would partner the Yobe government on sustainable peace and conflict resolution as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) returned to their communities.

    Prof. Oshita Oshita, the Institute’s Director-General, stated this at a meeting with stakeholders in Damaturu.

    He told the Commissioner for Justice, Ahmed Mustapha, that there was need to have relevant laws to protect the IDPs, as they returned to their communities.

    Similarly, the Director-General also solicited for partnership with the Ministry of Information to use the state Radio and Television Stations to pass the message of peace and peaceful coexistence to the people of the state.

    Responding separately, Alhaji Ahmed Mustapha and Alhaji Mala Musti, commissioners for Justice and Information, respectively, pledged to support the programme to promote peace in the state.

  • Leashed girls’ saga: Lagos Govt, Police step in

    Leashed girls’ saga: Lagos Govt, Police step in

    …Suspect admits act is anti-social, promises to stop

    Following social media outrage on last weekend’s show by a socialite, Mike Eze-Nwalie Nwogu, aka Pretty Mike who stormed a wedding venue in Lagos with two masked girls bounded by dog chains, the Lagos State Police Command, Wednesday, quizzed the suspect who admitted his transgression and promised to desist from the act.

    Nwogu, 30, and owner of ‘Club Uno’, located in Ikeja, Lagos was arrested on the orders of the Lagos State Government.

    It was the second time Nwogu was stepping out in that fashion which has been condemned by many who called calling on the government to step into the matter.

    Reports say the suspect was released after giving a useful statement to the police with an undertaking to desist from putting any woman or man on a leash again.

    Pretty Mike

    The undertaking reads in part: “I, Mike Eze Nwalie, a.k.a Pretty Mike of 21A Magodo GRA, Luma Street, do hereby undertake to stop whatever act of putting girls on a leash or any other degrading treatment to ladies and guys.

    “I am aware that such act offends the law of the State of Lagos and if I repeat it again, there will be legal act towards me.

    “I undertake to issue a letter of apology to the public effective from tomorrow on all my social media platforms.”

    Speaking on the matter, the State’s Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Adeniji Kazeem said the State Government will not tolerate any anti-social behaviour that attempts to dehumanise any citizen in the State.

    Kazeem restated government’s determination to prosecute any individual or group of persons who violate any law of the State under any guise.

    “The Lagos State Government is committed to the protection of the rights of all citizens including children, women and all the vulnerable persons in the State,” he said.

  • 1,536 criminal cases prosecuted in one year – Lagos

    1,536 criminal cases prosecuted in one year – Lagos

    The Lagos State Government on Friday said that it prosecuted a total of 1, 536 criminal cases in all courts in the last one year through the Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP).

    State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr. Adeniji Kazeem who disclosed this during the ongoing ministerial press briefing to herald the one year anniversary of the Governor Akinwunmi Ambode administration, said that out of the total number of cases being prosecuted, judgments were delivered in 15 of the matters being handled by the Directorate.

    He said out of the 1,536 cases, 1,375 cases are currently being prosecuted at the Federal and State High Courts as well as 122 and 38 respectively at the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court.

    Kazeem said that in addition to the 1,536 active criminal prosecution files, the DPP’s office was also handling 137 applications for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.

    “With regards to criminal prosecutions, our Directorate of Public Prosecutions is committed to ensuring that all offenders are brought to book, thereby discouraging impunity in our society.
    The Directorate is also committed to speedy trails, especially so that suspects are not detained for too long awaiting trial.

    “The truism ‘justice delayed is justice denied’ is one of our guiding principles, especially in criminal justice administration. Both the victims of a crime and the alleged offender deserve to have their case resolved at the earliest possible time,” he said.

    He said the Legal Advisory Unit which focuses exclusively on the review of criminal case files, containing reports of investigation submitted by the Police and issuance of legal advice has been able to hasten considerably the speed of criminal prosecutions by reducing the time spent on issuing legal advice.

    “In the period under review, out of 1,209 police investigation files sent to the DPP’s office for legal advice, the Unit has already completed work on 940 while the rest are still being processed, many requiring additional information or further investigation by the Police or other relevant agency,” the Commissioner said.

    Kazeem said the government has always taken the lead in legislation and law reform initiatives just as he assured of the present administration’s commitment to continue ensuring that every citizens of Lagos State has access to justice.

    He said the State Government in order to ensure that its laws are kept updated and readily accessible to the general public has completed a new compilation of the Lagos Laws, which includes all amendment and additions.

    He said, “In line with the direction of His Excellency,  the Governor of Lagos State, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, the 2015  Revised Laws of Lagos State are now accessible online to the general  public, which provides access to all the Laws that have operated in the state since inception in 1967”.

    “The landmark achievement within the past one year are indicative of the people-oriented theme of the governor’s agenda, which includes establishment of mobile courts, access to justice, fight against domestic and sexual violence as enactment of laws that provided the springboard for improving  and promoting socio-economic activities,” Kazeem said.

     

  • Judges sit on stools, litigants on bare floor – Plateau CJ

    Judges sit on stools, litigants on bare floor – Plateau CJ

    Chief Judge Pius Damulak of Plateau said in Jos on Monday that judges sit on stools while litigants sit on bare floor in many rural courts in the State.

    Damulak made the remark when the state’s Commissioner for Justice, Mr Jonathan Mawiyau, visited him.

    “The judiciary is the most sensitive among the three arms of government, but it has suffered age-old neglect; its infrastructure is just a sorry sight.”

    Damulak said the decay affected the entire state, but that the courts in the rural areas were the worst hit as judges and their members sit on little stools to handle cases.

    “If you go to the courts in the rural areas, there is no furniture at all. “The judge, with the members, sit on very little stools while the people sit on the ground to listen to cases. “In one local government, we had to bend to enter the court because the roof of the court was supported with sticks.

    “There, the roof leaks and whenever it rains, the judge has to go to a nearby house to sit; that is how bad it is,’’ he said.

    He said apart from the sorry state of infrastructure, judges were finding it very difficult to run their offices as subventions were not paid to them.

    According to him, salaries are usually delayed, and judges always forced to borrow to run their offices.

    “For 13 months, we have not been paid overhead costs; we have been borrowing and sometimes judges are compelled to ask litigants to pay for stationery,’’ he added.

    Damulak stated that some judges cannot use their cars because they had become unserviceable, and regretted that such judges had to share public transport with litigants.

    “Judges are entitled to new vehicles every four years as contained in their condition of appointments, but the vehicles we are using have been with us for the past 10 years.

    “When this government came in, it bought vehicles for members of the House of Assembly as well as the commissioners including you (commissioner), but the judiciary was forgotten”, he added.

    “The judiciary is also supposed to be ICT-compliant as it is done globally, but here in Nigeria, particularly in Plateau, we don’t have internet in our offices and courts.”

    He said high court judges do not have official accommodation, and had not been paid housing allowances as stipulated.

    Damulak expressed the hope that the new government, headed by a lawyer, would give some attention to the judiciary, “so that its services will improve.’’

    In his response, Mawiyau said his visit was to solicit their cooperation to ensure the free flow of justice. “Justice is that essential commodity that is needed by the society.

    “Without justice, certainly there will be no peace; and if we are able to deliver justice to the masses, we will solve much of the security problems in the state.’’

    The commissioner said the state government was aware of the situation in the judiciary and assured his hosts that the executive arm would address them. He promised that the ministry would diligently prosecute cases, pointing out that justice delayed was justice denied.

    “We are working toward making the ministry and the judiciary ICT-compliant to ease the handling of cases,” he added.