Tag: Commonwealth

  • Taekwondo Open: Team Nigeria miss medals table

    Taekwondo Open: Team Nigeria miss medals table

    The four-man Team Nigeria contingent to the US Taekwondo Open was nowhere near the medal zone as the best outing was by Isah Adamu Abubakar, who fought his way to the last eight in the men’s -58kg of the championship held at the West Gate Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, US.
    Abubakar, Commonwealth gold medallist, who was the 6th ranked player in the his weight category, beat Canada’s Alexandre Lavallee 18 – 9 in the first round, edged out, Spain’s Adrian Del Rio Guerrero 12 -11 in a nail-biting affair before succumbing to the number one seed, 2016 Grand Prix gold medallist and former junior World Champion, Mexico’s Carlos Ruben Navarro Valdez 23 – 7 in the quarter-finals.
    In the same weight category, Nigeria’s Usman Sulaiman, who was on the other side of the competition draws, lost 15 – 12 to US’s Joshua Vuong Salamanca in the preliminary round.
    In the male -63kg category, it was a similar tale for Nigeria’s African silver medallist, Edwin Samson who lost to Chinese Taipei’s Kuang Hou 24 – 16. In the -80kg category, former National Champion,Saturday Bashir was equally edged out in the first round by Canada’s Stefano Panos Hovnanian, after the Canadian came back from a 4 – 0 deficit to win the match at 7 – 9.
    For commonwealth gold medallist, Adamu Abubakar, the experience will only make him work harder. “In the past 6 months, I have won the Puerto Rico Opens which is a G-1 tournament and the President’s Cup which is a G-2 tournament. I am sad that I could not repeat the feat at the US opens, but I learnt a lot from my loss. At the same time, I gained some vital world ranking points. I will keep working hard on my weaknesses that were uncovered at this tournament.”
    For 2015 African Games silver medalist, Edwin Samson, “It is all part of the learning process. This is why we came here in order to get this exposure and keep pushing forward. We are well on track to Tokyo 2020 if we keep training and competing like this.”
    Nigeria’s 3-time Olympian, Chika Chukwumerije, who was at the event to obtain the mandatory WTF coach permit and also observe Nigerian athletes, commended the personal efforts being made by the athletes to gain vital exposure and experience.
    “These boys are here on their own as no one paid for their tickets, accommodation or training fees. It is a sacrifice that will be beneficial to the country sooner rather than later, “he said.

  • Commonwealth backs war against refugee, migration

    The Commonwealth of Nations  has scheduled the issue of refugee and migration for discussion at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), it was learnt yesterday.

    The developemnt came on the heels of a global agreement to end the refugee and migration crisis around the world. The move has the backing of the Secretary-General, Patricia Scotland and that of the Commonwealth.

    Also at the meeting, there will be focus on the challenges of climate change on migration even as the Secretary-General will be calling on leaders to pay more attention to the needs of the youths.

    The global compact for safe, regular and orderly migration is part of the agenda for sustainable development and achieving full respect for the human rights of migrants by 2030.

    “I would like to commend this initiative of Secretary-General Ban-Ki-Moon and the UNGA President, Peter Thomson,” the Secretary-General will say. “This high-level plenary meeting is a bold response to forced displacement of populations, which has now become a global crisis that requires our collective effort as the international community.”

     

  • UK’s exit from EU: Consequences for Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth

    UK’s exit from EU: Consequences for Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth

    Publisher of Africa Today Kayode Soyinka writes on what implications the exit of United Kingdom’s from the European Union (EU) will have on Nigera, Africa and the Commonwealth 

    I will be seeing many gloomy faces around the table in some meetings I will be attending in the United Kingdom (UK) in the next couple of days and months. The outcome of the European (EU)-membership referendum is totally unexpected and therefore shocking. The deed has been done. Prime Minister David Cameron took the greatest political gamble of his life. He took the risk to derive political advantage and he has failed embarrassingly and woefully.

    It is therefore right, in my view, that he should resign and allow someone else to navigate the messy process that will eventually exit the UK from the EU. What we have seen played out here is the clash of two different generations – the older, what I would call the “Empire Generation”, who still look at the United Kingdom as if she’s still the colonial, imperial power of the past, dominating the entire world. The flag-waving “Rule Britannia” generation who prefer their island mentality and would like the UK to be truly “independent” and have nothing to do with Brussels that they so much loath and view with contempt for wanting to impose a federal system on them, which they detest and believe has no relevance, and of no use to them in today’s world.

    This generation voted unequivocally to exit, not necessarily having given a serious thought to the consequences of their action. That might only just be dawning on them now after the deed has been done! Whereas the younger generation and the more educated ones prefers to be in Europe because of the advantages, especially of globalisation, and realising that their island nation-state of only about 65 million people, in this time and age, cannot afford to continue to be an island on its own – it has to reach out, engage diplomatically, relate and trade with other nations around the world. I believe Britain will on the long term survive the attendant repercussions or consequences of the decision it has taken to leave the EU. The country was not entirely taken by surprise with the decision to leave.

    For instance, it has, for some time now, been working on contingency plans on what to do if the votes should go against remaining in the EU. Immigration staffs, for instance, have, for some time now, been going through retraining on new approach to immigration if the decision is to exit – a decisive factor in the way they voted. For what you may or may not know, if passports will have to be changed when the UK finally leaves the EU, one should not the surprised if the design of the new UK passport is now ready and only waiting to go to the printers. They are that well organised and leaving nothing to chances. And we have already heard from the proactive Governor of the Bank of England that a contingency plan had been in place in anticipation that the decision might be against remaining, which has been rolled out immediately the decision was known and confirmed.

    So I have no doubt that things will stabilise in the course of days, weeks and months to come. For us in Africa, especially Nigeria, the UK exiting from the EU could have both positive and negative repercussions, or consequences. When Prime Minister Ted Heath took the UK into what used to be known as the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, all powers pertaining to UK’s trade relations with the rest of the world were transferred to Brussels, and the UK started losing interest in its traditional allies in Africa and the Commonwealth generally. It started trading and investing more with her European cousins in the EEC than it used to with her old allies in Africa and the Commonwealth. Even if the UK had, for old time sake, wanted to continue trading directly with Africa and the Commonwealth after joining the EEC, it no longer could do that because it had surrendered that power and authority to the EEC. The only way it could work for the UK to continue trading indirectly with Africa, Caribbean and Pacific Commonwealth was the signing by the EEC of the Lome Convention, updated in the Cotonou Agreement and later the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). Therefore, exiting the EU in about two years time might help to reverse this situation. And here lies the opportunity for Africa to strike new trading deals with the UK directly, because by the time it leaves the EU in two years time, it would, as a country now on its own, have no trade agreement with any country in Africa or anywhere in the world for that matter! The UK would now have to start all over again and be able to decide on its own, who it would like to trade with, on what terms and not having to go through the bureaucracies of the EU trading bloc.

    Therefore, there are very serious consequences for Africa arising from UK’s exit from the EU. The continent now has at most two years to put new policies in place to deal with these consequences. For instance, Africa too can trade directly with the UK as it used to without going through the EU.

    Another advantage to Africa, apart from the fact that it would now have an opportunity to negotiate afresh new trade terms with the UK, is that the continent can still trade as economic/trading blocs – ECOWAS and SADC among others – directly with the EU as it does presently, and encouraged to do by the World Trade Organisation (WTO).

    Specifically, Nigeria should be delighted it still hasn’t signed the controversial Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the EU despite the fact that most of ECOWAS have been bamboozled to sign. Now that Nigeria’s most influential ally in the EU will now be exiting the organisation, that EPA, it would seem, is now dead and buried.

    President Muhammadu Buhari would have been ill-advised if he were to sign it in its present form. Nigeria (and indeed ECOWAS) should take advantage of the crisis within the EU as a result of UK’s imminent exit to negotiate a new trade agreement with the EU – maybe a preferential trade agreement. And, on the other hand, negotiate new trade terms directly with the UK when it eventually leaves the EU. Win-Win situation one might say for Nigeria, and indeed, Africa and the Commonwealth. On the down side, the UK exiting from the EU means that Nigeria, Africa and the Commonwealth have lost a very powerful ally and perhaps most influential voice that can speak on their behalf within the EU! And that is sad! Only two Commonwealth countries now remain as members of the EU – Cyprus and Malta – and even when lumped up together, and Malta soon take the rotational presidency of the EU, they still don’t have the gravitas and influence of the UK and therefore can’t speak effectively for Africa and the Commonwealth within the EU. But to compensate for that, the UK must now have to take the Commonwealth, especially its African members, more seriously, because the 52-nation Commonwealth constitute one-third of membership of the United Nations UN). The importance of having such bloc in the UN as ally cannot be lost on the UK. The UK will need Africa and the Commonwealth as allies in the UN, especially in times of trouble like this.

    On a final note, the decision to exit the EU, as we have seen, would inevitably thrust on the UK a new political leadership. That, in itself, might not necessarily be a bad thing – even though it was unplanned for. It is a big risk and serious gamble that the UK took, especially when one is reminded that the decision might have the added unpleasant repercussion of Scotland gaining independence and eventually leaving the UK itself – the Scots and Northern Ireland voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU. If Scotland should break away as it is threatening, that will be the end of the UK itself, leaving us only with Great Britain – possibly without the “Great”. But let us make no mistake about it; whether as UK or Britain, the “Brits” will still remain a powerful and influential political, economic and military powerhouse, traditional ally and friend to have.

    The next few months, and years, will be very fascinating in the UK and Europe.

  • Terrorism killed 10,000, displaced two million – Buhari

    Terrorism killed 10,000, displaced two million – Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari said on Friday night that at least 10,000 people have been killed and over two million Nigerians displaced internally by Boko Haram terrorists in the last six years.

    The President, who spoke at a banquet hosted by Queen Elizabeth II for Heads of State and Government participating in the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Malta, said majority of the internally displaced persons were women and children.

    A statement issued on Saturday by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, said Buhari called for the establishment of a Commonwealth Committee to oversee the rendering of greater assistance and support to Nigeria and other member-countries that had been adversely affected by terrorism.

    He expressed hope that the committee would have been established before the next meeting of the organisation.

    According to the statement, the President also expects the committee to visit Commonwealth member-countries where terrorist organisations have established a foothold with a view to evolving practical strategies for more meaningful assistance to the affected countries.

     

  • Commonwealth joins war against terrorism

    Commonwealth joins war against terrorism

    British Prime Minister David Cameron yesterday announced plans to set up a Commonwealth unit targeting the extremist “scourge.”

    Commonwealth countries have “a vital role to play in broadening international efforts to counter extremism,” Cameron said as he arrived in Malta for the  biennial summit of the Commonwealth.

    He said  that the U.K. would  put 5 million pounds  toward the  unit that will work with smaller countries struggling to combat terrorism.

    “The fight against extremism is something that affects us all,” he said.

    French President Francois Hollande  was due  to address Commonwealth leaders last night ahead of the U.N. climate change conference beginning in Paris next week.

    He was scheduled to hold separate  bilateral meetings with President  Muhammadu Buhari and Pakistan’s Muhammad Nawaz Sharif on the margins of the summit .

    Following Paris’s deadly attack, Hollande is on a mission to tackle global terrorism. The French government has declared readiness to synergise with the Armed Forces to tackle global terrorism.

    France Director of Mili­tary Intelligence, General Christophe Gomer said most terror­ist attacks were not anticipat­ed and the phenomenon of global terrorism was gradu­ally catching up with all na­tions that were napping.

    “It’s something we did not prepare for, including developing countries like Nigeria,” he said. “We have to evolve new ways of tackling them, stamp them out of exis­tence.”

    Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat said the Commonwealth should  become more relevant to the aspirations of its citizens.

    “The Commonwealth must have an agenda with clear priorities, especially in the fight against radicalization and the tackling of the migration phenomenon, which can be challenged through education and employment,” Muscat said.

    “Terrorists are more scared of well-educated girls and boys who manage to get a good job than they will ever be of any army,” he said.

    Declaring the summit open,Queen Elizabeth praised the accomplishments of the 53-nation Commonwealth and her happy associations with Malta.

    “Prince Philip and I first came to live here in Malta in 1949, the year the Commonwealth was founded,” she said, hailing a vast advancement in freedom and human rights in the decades since then. “I have been privileged to witness this transformation and to consider its purpose.”

    The organization appointed its first female secretary-general  yesterday  when leaders chose Dominica-born lawyer Patricia Scotland to take over the running of the 53-country organisation.

    Scotland, a former attorney general to the British government,  takes over from Indian diplomat Kamalesh Sharma on April 1, 2016.

    “I am incredibly proud to be the first woman to hold the post of secretary-general,” Baroness Scotland of Asthal told  reporters.

    “Can I just say what a huge privilege and a pleasure it is for me to be entrusted with one of the most burdensome but wonderful roles that there is in the international world?” the 60-year-old asked rhetorically.

    “There is much to do but I hope all 53 of us will look together at the vision, will look at what we need to do on climate change, on education, on science and technology and we will make this a better world for our children.”

  • Buhari to lead Nigeria delegation to CHOGM, UN conference

    Buhari to lead Nigeria delegation to CHOGM, UN conference

    President Muhammadu Buhari will leave Abuja on Thursday, November 26, for Malta to participate in the 2015 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting which begins in the island nation on Friday.

    The Commonwealth is made up of Britain, Nigeria and 51 other countries that work together to pursue common goals and promote development, democracy, peace, security and good governance.

    According to a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, President Buhari and other Heads of State and Government who will be in Malta for this year’s summit are expected to deliberate on fresh Commonwealth initiatives on development and climate change with a view to adding greater value to ongoing global efforts in these areas.

    A new Secretary-General of the Commonwealth who will take over from the incumbent, Kamalesh Sharma, will be announced at the summit which will also feature the presentation of a progress report on the eradication of polio.

    The Head of the Commonwealth, Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, will formally declare the summit open and host a banquet in honour of President Buhari and other participating Heads of State and Government.

    At the conclusion of the Summit on Sunday, President Buhari will leave Malta for Paris, France, where he will present Nigeria’s statement at the United Nations Climate Change Conference scheduled to open in the French capital on Monday, November 30.

    The President will join over 100 other world leaders  at the Leaders Event on the opening day of the conference which will be hosted by President Francois Hollande of France and the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Mr. Ban Ki Moon.

    President Buhari will also participate in a summit of the Heads of State and Government of the Lake Chad Basin Commission and Benin Republic which has been scheduled to take place on December 2 in Paris on the sidelines of the UN Conference on Climate Change.

    Deliberations at the Paris meeting of the Lake Chad Basin Commission and Benin Republic will focus mainly on the war against Boko Haram and other security issues of common interest to participating countries.

  • Ex-Commonwealth lawyers’ boss wears new cap

    Former Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA) president Mrs. Boma Ozobia has been appointed a member of the MNCapital Africa Advisors ( MNCAA) advisory board

    MNCAA is a South Africa-based firm which offers corporate advisory, capital raising and market entry services, with partners in key African markets, including Botswana, DRC, Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania and Zimbabwe, as well as key financial centers across the globe.

    Ozobia was the first woman CLA President in over 50 year. She was on the Board of Trustees of the Royal Commonwealth Society and also served as the Chairwoman of the Association of Women Solicitors of England and Wales between 2005/2006. She was awarded national honours of Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) in September 2014.

    MNCAA Managing Partner Mansur Nuruddin said: “Boma’s wealth of experience will enable us to provide a much higher level of service to our international clients looking to invest in Nigeria as well as our clients in Nigeria seeking capital and international partners.”

    Ozobia said: “MNCapital Africa Advisers is well positioned to drive economic growth and employment in Africa through its expert advisory services and strategic partnerships. I am delighted to be a part of this and look forward to working with the team to achieve the corporate objectives.”

     

  • Commonwealth Sec Gen candidate Sanders for Nigeria

    One of the four candidates for the influential post of the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Sir Ronald Sanders, is expected in Nigeria between July 26 and 30 to deliver the keynote address at the international conference on the EU-ECOWAS Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs).

    The conference organised by Africa Today will take place between July 28 to 29 at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel in Abuja. The renowned diplomat and scholar, who is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, is expected to share and give his insight into international trade negotiations, most especially as they pertain to the EU and African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of countries, with members of the Nigerian business community and government officials.

    Sir Sanders has considerable experience in international trade negotiations especially with the European Union (EU). He was a member of the Caribbean team that negotiated with the EU on their EPA. Aside that he was also a former Ambassador to the old European Economic Community (EEC) and the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The Caribbean region has since signed their EPA with the EU.

    Justifying inviting Sir Sanders to Nigeria, publisher of Africa Today, Mr. Kayode Soyinka, said in Abuja: “I sit with Sir Sanders on The Round Table – the Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs, which has been publishing since 1910. And I have been very privileged from that close quarter to know and respect his views on the EPA, which are very progressive and I would like my people here in Nigeria, in particular, and ECOWAS and Africa in general to listen to him. That is why we are bring him to Abuja for this EPA conference as the Keynote Speaker.”

    Soyinka added that “Nigeria, most especially members of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), the National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANT) NACCIMA – the chambers of Commerce, and of course the consumers, can get the benefit of the Caribbean experience from someone like Sir Sanders close to the center of the negotiations. Sanders has a progressive view about the EPA and his views will be beneficial, insightful and an eye opener for Nigeria, ECOWAS and the AU”, adding that “his contribution to the discussion in Abuja will go a long way in deciding whether it is helpful for and beneficial to Nigeria, ECOWAS and Africa as a whole to sign the EPA or not”. As Africa’s economic powerhouse, other countries on the continent will certainly take their cue from Nigeria’s decision.

    The EPA, a controversial issue over the years, is a reciprocal preferential trade agreement being promoted by the EU to create a Free Trade Area [FTA] between the EU and the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States [ACP] through six regional economic communities into which the ACP is divided. The ECOWAS Commission, one of the six regional economic communities, negotiated agreement on behalf of the 16 countries in West Africa, including Nigeria. The agreement was concluded in July 2014 after 11 years of negotiations. Nigeria has expressed reservations on the agreement’s current form due to the perceived economic implications to its economy.

    The EPA agreement is also an emotive issue for members of Nigeria’s organized private sector including members of the influential Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), the National Association of Nigerian Traders (NANT), NACCIMA – the chambers of commerce, the consumers and NGOs. Members of these associations will be at the receiving end if and when Nigeria signs the agreement with the EU. Deadline for signing the agreement was last October and Europe has said it will not come back to the negotiation table. Nigeria, in 2014, supported by other African countries, had refused to sign saying the agreement’s terms were not favourable to Africa. This is despite progress being made by some regional blocs towards finalizing these trade pacts.

    The conference, which is in partnership with the Bank of Industry in Nigeria, is expected to put the EPA and its economic ramifications on the continent’s economy on the front burner of national discuss, enlighten ordinary citizens and business people about the agreement, examine the agreement’s pros and cons as it affects Nigeria’s economy and that of the west African (ECOWAS) sub-region, and Africa as a whole. To sign or not to sign the agreement will most likely be President Mohammudu Buhari’s first major foreign policy action since been sworn in as Nigeria’s President May 29.

    Sanders’ contribution at the conference will no doubt, elevate the discussion. He will be joined by other distinguished speakers including Mr. Rasheed Olaoluwa, managing director, Bank of Industry, Dr. S.U. Jacobs, president of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, and Ken Ukaoha, president, National Association of Nigerian Traders, Prof. Ademola Oyejide, an Emeritus professor of economics from the University of Ibadan, among others. The conference is being organized because of the importance attached to the agreement especially as it relates to the economic growth of Africa especially the West African (ECOWAS) sub-region.

    Sir Sanders, a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London, was a former High Commissioner for Antigua and Barbuda to the United Kingdom and former Ambassador to the European Economic Community (EEC) and the World Trade Organisation (WTO). He is also a member of the Commonwealth Eminent Persons Group (EPG). Known as a progressive minded international personality, he is currently seeking to become the Secretary General of the Commonwealth. His visit to Nigeria could, no doubt, enhance his visibility especially among African members of the Commonwealth of which Nigeria is key.

  • Oshodi makes Commonwealth Table Tennis Federation board

    Oshodi makes Commonwealth Table Tennis Federation board

    For his efforts at reviving the fortune of table tennis and the crucial role Nigeria has played, the Commonwealth Table Tennis Federation (CTTF) yesterday at its election held in Suzhou, China, elected President, Nigeria Table Tennis Federation (NTTF), Wahid Oshodi into its board of directors.

    As the second African on the board, Oshodi, who is also the Lagos State Commissioner for Youth, Sports and Social Development, has joined South Africa’s Audrina Mcdonald, who is the treasurer in the board.

    The board, which is the highest ruling body administering table tennis in Commonwealth nations, is made up of 12 members chaired by England’s Alan Ransome.

    Aside Nigeria and South Africa, other nations on the board include, Canada, New Zealand, Malaysia, Barbados, Scotland, Cyprus, Singapore and India. Also at the Annual General Meeting of board, India has been named as the host of this year’s Commonwealth Table Tennis Championship and it will hold in Gujrat from October 27 to November 1.

    Prior to this election, Oshodi is also a member of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF) nomination committee. For Oshodi, this election has also confirmed the relevance of Nigeria among the Commonwealth nations and this is another call to serve.

  • Lawyers disagree on gay rights at Commonwealth conference

    Lawyers disagree on gay rights at Commonwealth conference

    To what extent should gay rights be protected? Speakers were divided on the issue at the Commonwealth Lawyers Association (CLA) Conference.

    A Kaduna-based lawyer, Oladipo Tolani, disagreed with the guest speaker Michael Kirby at the closing ceremonies.

    While Kirby believes gay rights should be respected everywhere, Tolani thinks it is wrong for anyone to impose their culture on others.

    The 19th edition of the conference was held at the Scottish Events and Conference Centre,  Glasgow, United Kingdom.

    In attendance were lawyers  from over 53 countries of the  Commonwealth countries.

    CLA is a pan-Commonwealth organisation, which upholds the rule of law in the Commonwealth by encouraging exchange of ideas between legal professionals, academics and students, through projects and by driving improvements in legal education.

    •From left: Afam Okeke, Bimbo Kayode, Justice Ibrahim Auta and NBA First Vice-President Francis Ekwere.
    •From left: Afam Okeke, Bimbo Kayode, Justice Ibrahim Auta and NBA First Vice-President Francis Ekwere.

    The conference started with a welcome address by the former  Chairman  of the Scottish Civil Courts Review, Lord Gill, who spoke on the Independence of the judiciary and the legal profession.

    Speaking on gay rights, Kirby, who was a member of the Commonwealth Eminent Group that reviewed the operations, efficiency and the essence of the Commonwealth, gave an account of the work of Emminent Persons Group and its recommendations to the Commonwealth Heads of Government (CHOGOM).

    Among them is the need to set up the office of a Commissioner for Human Rights. He said the group’s recommendations did not receive the blessings of the Commonwealth Secretary-General, who felt that his office could handle such human rights matters.

    Kirby cited the  plight  of former human rights crusader, Mohammed Nasheed, as one of such critical  violations of human rights, which a commissioner for human rights could handle.

    He said he hoped that the next Secretary-General of the Commonwealth would defend the rights of all, including the vulnerable group, the minorities, and the gay rights.

    Kirby who told the audience that he and his partner had been together for the past 48 years, adding that it was a wonderful

    relationship.

    •From left: S. Akubor (SAN), former Chairman, NBA Jos Branch Caleb Dajan; Steve Adah and Edward Ekpokol.
    •From left: S. Akubor (SAN), former Chairman, NBA Jos Branch Caleb Dajan; Steve Adah and Edward Ekpokol.

    He canvassed the protection of gay rights as he propounded the advantages of the gay relationship.

    During the question and answer session, Tolani expressed displeasure at the speakers’ views on gay and rights.

    He frowned at the efforts of developed countries to foist their beliefs on developing countries.

    He said: “The idea and theory of gay relationship is alien to the Nigerian culture and belief system and that  is why Nigerian lawmakers refused to pass the bill seeking to legitimise gay relationship into law in Nigeria, so no body should force us to accept it.’’

    He called on the Commonwealth lawyers to live together and respect each others’ views and rights as efforts to coerce people to accept what they do not believe in could create divisions.

    Lord Gill, in his address, said judicial independence is one of the fundamental values that the institution of the Commonwealth represents.

    “Society’s standards and its expectations of our justice system are changing all around us. But we must adhere to our own constant values.

    “As Judge William Cranch put it, ‘in dangerous times, it becomes the duty of the judiciary calmly to poise the scales of justice, unmoved by the armed power, undisturbed by the clamour of the multitude.’ Only in this way can we truly defend the right of the citizen to call the executive to account.

    •From left: Ime Obot, P. Okorie, Kauna Penzin, former Chairman NBA Ikom Branch Emmanuel Okang and Gloria Nweze.
    •From left: Ime Obot, P. Okorie, Kauna Penzin, former Chairman NBA Ikom Branch Emmanuel Okang and Gloria Nweze.

    “That the independence of the judiciary cannot survive without the independence of the profession; and I ask the question: What kind of judges do we wish to have?

    “In 48 years in the business of the law, I have known judges of outstanding academic brilliance who found it difficult to make a decision for fear of being wrong; or who pursued relentless logic without due regard to common sense.

    “I have known lawyers who were not forceful pleaders at the Bar yet flourished in the judicial life when they had time for reflection.

    “So, when a judicial appointment is made and the profession – as always – passes its confident verdict, remember this: you never can tell.”

    He added: “I suggest that to answer the question: What kind of judges do we wish to have?, our starting point should be that we wish to have judges who have come to judicial office by a process of appointment that is open, transparent and fair.

    “ Only in that way can the judiciary deserve and enjoy public confidence. I think that it is fair to say that until 20 years ago, in the United Kingdom jurisdictions the appointment process – if such it could be called – remained hidden from public view and had aspects of mystery.”

    Other keynote speakers includeed Ms. Hina Jilani and Dame Silvia Cartwright.