Tag: court’s

  • 312 defilement cases pending in courts

    Three hundred and twelve defilement cases are pending at high courts in Delta State, Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice Mr. Peter Mrakpor has said.

    Mrakpor, who spoke yesterday in Asaba, said the Rape/Sexual Offences /Child Rights Unit in the ministry is charged with implementation of the Child Rights Law.

    He said five convictions had been secured by the unit, adding that for domestic violence, nine petitions were received, while six had been resolved.

    Mrakpor said 616 cases were initiated against the government, stressing that the cases were land and chieftaincy disputes.

    “Of the civil litigations against the government, 10 cases have been concluded, with six resolved in favour of the state.”

    The attorney-general said the ministry was in the process of reviewing repudiated contracts by the government, adding that the move is to recover excess money paid to contractors.

    He said the ministry inserted dispute resolution clauses in commercial contracts entered into by the state with a view to ensuring that alternative dispute resolution was the first option in resolving disputes.

  • Lagos courts get uniform sentencing guidelines

    The Chief Judge of Lagos State, Justice Opeyemi Oke, has introduced a new sentencing guidelines for use of the courts in the state.

    The new sentencing guidelines would also serve as practice direction for magistrates and high court judges as part of justice sector reform.

    The sentencing guidelines are intended to ensure uniformity in sentence and fines imposed for certain offences by magistrates in particular and forestall prison congestion.

    Addressing the inaugural meeting of Justice Sector Reform Committee, Justice Oke pointed out that the vision of the Lagos State Judiciary under the present administration is to make speedy dispensation of justice a hallmark of the judiciary and to improve on its reputation as a pace setter.

    The chief judge noted that this can only be achieved through inter agency collaboration and cooperation of stakeholders.

    She disclosed that a committee has also been set up to proffer practice direction for the use of the Administration of Criminal Law of Lagos State for the purpose of making the law more explicit for judges, magistrates and prosecutors.

    She said the committee, aside from  interventions in the pipeline, will evaluate initiatives such as adopting Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms in criminal trials, increased use of plea bargain to drastically reduce the number of inmates awaiting trial, front loading of evidence and restorative justice.

    Oke emphasised the importance of an effective criminal justice system to the smooth running of the society, saying that it is fundamental to the maintenance of law and order.

    According to her, “Any society with a sound criminal justice system enjoys rapid economic growth.

    “Going forward, the Lagos State government is working towards building a citizen-centric criminal justice system for the purpose of ensuring efficient and effective justice delivery,“ she said.

    Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Adeniji Kazeem, explained that the essence of the inter-agency meeting is to ensure that they discuss periodically the challenges facing the criminal justice system and find practical solutions with a view of implementing same.

    Kazeem said judges in the criminal division, magistracy, the Police, Prisons, Ministry of Justice among others would participate in the discussion at the sub-committee level.

  • Courts jail two men for human trafficking

    Two men in Kano and Nasarawa states have been jailed 10 and 14 years each for human and child trafficking.

    Yusuf Umar, 57, was sentenced to 10 years for sexually exploiting a 14-year-old girl. He was also fined N2 million by a Federal High Court in Kano.

    A Nasarawa State High Court in Guruku, Mararaba, arraigned a 48-year-old pastor, Bawa Madaki, on a two-count charge of fraudulently procuring two underage children (five and seven years) from their parents in Zango Kataf Local Government of Kaduna State.

    Head of  Press and Public Relations in the National Agency for Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Josiah Emerole  spoke yesterday.

    “A Federal High Court in Kano has sentenced Yusuf Umar, 57, to 10 years’ imprisonment for human trafficking offences. He is also to pay N2,000,000 fine.

    ‘’He will spend additional two years in prison if after the 10 years, he is unable to pay the N2,000,000 fine.

    “Umar, who hails from Nasarawa Local Government of Kano State, procured for himself a 14-year- old girl from the same state and sexually exploited her.

    ‘’The offence is contrary to Section 16 (1) of the Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Enforcement and Administration Act 2015.

    “NAPTIP operatives arrested and arraigned him on March 5 on a one-count charge.

    ‘’When he was arraigned yesterday, he pleaded guilty. At the beginning of the case, the prosecution tendered two exhibits.

    “Delivering judgment, Justice Jude Kanyiot Dagat found him guilty and sentenced him. This conviction has brought the number of those convicted for human trafficking by NAPTIP to 341.

    “The agency has secured another conviction as a Nasarawa State High Court in Guruku, Mararaba, sentenced a 48-year-old, Pastor Bawa Madaki, from Kaduna State, to 14 years’ imprisonment for child trafficking.

    “The accused was arraigned on a two-count charge of fraudulently procuring two underage children (five and seven years) from their parents in Zanzo Kataf Local Government of Kaduna State.

    ‘’The accused subsequently sent one child to Lagos in an illegal adoption arrangement and the other to Abuja as a domestic worker, thus depriving their parents of the lawful custody of the children.

    “This contravenes Section 19 (e) of the Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Law Enforcement and Administration Act, 2003 (as amended).

    “The case, filed on May 27, 2015, was transferred to NAPTIP by the Police, which acted on a tip-off.

    ‘’Officers of the agency thereafter moved in and rescued the children. The trial began on June 23, 2015, and on March 26, 2018, the court found the accused guilty.

    “Delivering judgment, Justice Haruna Offor convicted the accused and sentenced him to 14 years’ imprisonment without an option of a fine.

    “NAPTIP Director-General Dame Julie Okah-Donli hailed the tenacity of the prosecuting officers and the judiciary for ensuring justice.

    “She warned the public against illegal adoption and engaging underage children as domestic workers, who she said were often maltreated and abused by their employers.”

     

  • When courts add to litigants’ burden

    When courts add to litigants’ burden

    Courts are meant to resolve disputes among litigants by interpreting the law. However, incidents abound where, rather than help resolve disputes, courts, either wittingly or otherwise, compound them, leaving each party claiming victory. Eric Ikhilae presents some of such recent incidents.

    The court, ordinarily serves as the main institution through which the Judiciary carries out its core constitutional responsibility of law interpretation. And, in the process of interpreting laws, the court resolves disputes brought before it by litigants, who could either be natural persons or otherwise.

    Ordinarily, courts are meant to resolve conflicts among litigants and help put issues in proper perspective by effectively interpreting the law, eliciting its clear, lucid and unambiguous meanings, and thereby, giving life to the draftsman’s true intention.

    Of recent however, there appears to be a departure from this original practice. Court decisions tend to leave litigants confounded and issues muddled up. Rather than resolve disputes, some court decisions appear to engender dispute.

    Such appears to be the case in the seeming unending dispute over the Anambra Central Senatorial district seat.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), like every other party, had, preparatory to the last general elections, held a primary on December 7, 2014 to choose its flagbearer for the Anambra Central Senatorial seat.

    At the conclusion of the exercise, the PDP pronounced Mrs. Uche Ekwunife, then a decampee from the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), as winner. An aggrieved aspirant, Obiora Okonkwo went before the Federal High Court, Abuja to challenge the outcome of the primary.

    In the suit he filed on December 23, 2014, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/1092/2004, Okonkwo claimed to have scored the highest vote at the PDP’s primary election and sought to be declared the party’s actual candidate.

    He listed as defendants, the PDP, Adamu Muazu (sued for himself and on behalf of the PDP’s National Executive Committee and the party’s National Working Committee) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    While Okonkwo was in court, Mrs. Ekwunife contested the March 28, 2015 National Assembly election as PDP’s candidate and was declared winner of the Anambra Central Senatorial election by INEC.

    By the result announced by INEC, Mrs. Ekwunife polled 101,548 votes to defeat APGA’s Victor Umeh, who had 77, 129 votes and the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Chris Ngige, who came third with 20, 850 votes

    She was issued certificate of return and subsequently assumed the Anambra Central Senatorial seat at the Senate.

    Hardly had Mrs. Ekwunife settled on the Senate seat when APGA’s candidate for the election, Victor Umeh served her court papers, indicating that he was challenging the election outcome before the election tribunal.

    In its judgment on October 8, 2015, the election tribunal, led by Justice Nayai Aganaba, affirmed Mrs. Ekwunife’s election, but proceeded to alter the final votes earlier allotted by INEC to the PDP and APGA candidates.  The tribunal reduced Ekwunife’s final score to 93,300 votes and raised Umeh’s score to 85,898 votes.

    Unsatisfied, Umeh headed before the appeal tribunal in an appeal marked: CA/E/EPT/28/2015. After hearing parties, the appeal tribunal, at the Court of Appeal, Enugu rendered its decision on December 7, 2015, voiding Mrs. Ekwunife’s election on the grounds that she did not emerge as candidate of the PDP from a properly conducted primary election. It ordered a rerun and barred Mrs. Ekwunife and the PDP from participating in the rerun election.

    After a closer look at the appeal tribunal’s judgment, Mrs. Ekwunife, armed with several authorities, particularly some Supreme Court’s decisions relating to improper nomination and sponsorship, who could challenge the outcome of a party’s primary, and which court has jurisdiction over pre-election disputes, went back to the Court of Appeal, Enugu.

    She filed an application and urged the court to reverse itself. Although she drew the court’s attention to its decisions in similar cases involving Senators Andy Ubah and Stella Oduah, the court refused to be swayed and in a ruling on March 3, 2016, held on to its earlier decision, ordering INEC to conduct a rerun election for Anambra Central.

    Dissatisfied, Mrs. Ekwunife headed for the Supreme Court in an appeal marked: Supreme Court SC/204/2016. In its unanimous judgment on February 10, 2017, the Supreme Court dismissed Mrs. Ekwunife’s appeal on the grounds that it lacked the necessary jurisdiction to hear such appeal.

    Justice Amina Augie, in the lead judgment, said: “Looking closely at the wordings of Section 246 (3), it is clear that the decision of the Court of Appeal is final. This court is completely bereft of jurisdiction to entertain the appeal.

    “Once the Court of Appeal delivers its judgment on a National Assembly Election Petition appeal, the judgment becomes final. For the umpteenth time, the Constitution does not approve of the apex court to entertain this appeal no matter how cleverly it has been framed.”

    Meanwhile, while Mrs. Ekwunife was struggling to have her sack reversed, INEC, working with the December 7, 2015 judgment of the appeal tribunal, Enugu, fixed the rerun election for March 5, 2016. The rerun election never held. A lower court intervened and purported to reverse the decision of the Court of Appeal, Enugu.

    Contrary to the order by the appeal tribunal, Enugu, barring the PDP from participating in the rerun election, Justice Anwuli Chikere of the Federal High Court, Abuja gave a judgment on February 29, 2016 in a suit by the PDP and ordered INEC to include the party and its candidate in the rerun election scheduled for March 5, 2016.

    INEC rejected Justice Chikere’s decision and appealed to the Court of Appeal Abuja. Umeh equally appealed the decision. And on November 20 this year, the Court of Appeal, Abuja gave its decisions in both appeals marked: CA/A/160/2016 and CA/A/165/2016, and restated the December 7, 2015 decision of the appeal tribunal in Enugu, ordering a rerun, with the exclusion of the PDP and its candidate.

    The PDP has since appealed November 20, 2017 judgment and asked the Supreme Court to among others, void the judgment and order its inclusion in any rerun election to be conducted in Anambra Central.

    However, while Mrs. Ekwunife was fighting her sack up to the Supreme Court, and INEC and Umeh were challenging Justice Chikere’s decision at the Court of Appeal, the suit filed by Okonkwo since December 23, 2014 was stuck at the Federal High Court, Abuja, without it being decided one way on the other.

    Mrs. Ekwunife late applied and was joined as the 4th defendant in the suit by Okonkwo, following which parties filed all necessary processes and adopted them, after which the trial judge, Justice Ahmed Ramat Mohammed adjourned for judgment.

    Before the date set for judgment, the judge directed parties to adduce oral evidence to enable him determine which of the primary election results sheets, as presented by Okonkwo and Ekwunife, was the authentic one, and which the court could rely to determine the case.

    Court documents revealed that parties complied with the judge’s directive and another date was fixed for judgment. But before that date, Mrs. Ekwunife filed an application to set aside the order of adjournment for judgement and sought for an adjournment to enable her call additional witnesses.

    Although Okonkwo opposed the application, Justice Mohammed, in a ruling, granted the Ekwunife application. But, for unexplained reason, the judge later withdrew from the case.

    Okonkwo later appealed against Justice Mohammed’s ruling, allowing Mrs. Ekwunife to call additional witnesses. The Appeal Court dismissed the appeal and returned the matter to the FHC to continuation of trial and allow Ekwunife to call additional witnesses.

    When parties returned to the Federal High Court after the Appeal Court’s decision, the case was reassigned to another judge – Justice Okon Abang.

    At the resumption of proceedings before Justice Abang, Ekwunife failed to call the witnesses she had applied for, but instead, came with a fresh application urging the court to allow her do away with the planned additional witnesses.

    Okonkwo objected to the application and, in a ruling, Justice Abang dismissed it and ordered Mrs. Ekwunife to call her witnesses on the next adjourned date.

    Again, for an unexplained reason, when parties got to court on the set date, Justice Abang recused himself from the case and returned the case file to the Chief Judge for re-assignment to another judge.

    After some delays, the case got reassigned to Justice Babatunde Quadri, before who Mrs. Ekwunife failed to call her additional witnesses as ordered by Justice Abang in his last ruling in the case.

    Instead, she filed a notice of preliminary objection, urging the court to, among others, dismiss the suit on the grounds that the plaintiff (Okonkwo) had no cause of action and that all aspirants in the primary election were not made parties to the suit.

    After entertaining arguments from parties on the objection filed by Mrs. Ekwunife, Justice Quadri fixed August 3, 2017 for judgement. But, before judgment could be delivered, Okonkwo brought a motion, challenging Mrs.  Ekwunife’s locus standi to be joined as a party in the suit.

    Okonkwo argued that since the Court of Appeal had held that Mrs. Ekwunife was not validly nominated to contest in the election and as such sacked her from the senate, she could no longer be heard in relation to any dispute about the primary.

    He urged the court to first decide his later motion before its reserved ruling on Mrs. Ekwunife’s objection.

    In a ruling, Justice Quadri upheld Mrs. Ekwunife’s counter argument to the effect that Okonkwo’s request about dealing with his motion first amounted to arresting the court’s judgment.

    The judge proceeded to give his ruling on Mrs. Ekwunife’s objection and refused it. But, rather than proceed with the case, Justice Quadri withdrew. Okonkwo also appealed the judge’s last ruling.

    But, before the Court of Appeal could decide his appeal, Okonkwo withdrew it and, instead went back before the Federal High Court with a motion on notice filed on June 20, 2017 asking the court to among others, enter judgment in his favour.

    In the motion, Okonkwo stated that parties, “on May 18, 2017, agreed that the court hear the suit as originating summons by readopting their processes together with the motion on notice filed by the 4th defendant, challenging the jurisdiction of the court.

    “That by this agreement, all the parties do no longer wish to call oral evidence as per the judgment of the Court of Appeal in appeal No: CA/A/173/2016 by Obiora Okonkwo.

    “That on the same May 18, 2017 the 1st and 2nd respondents (PDP and Adamu Muazu) withdrew all their defence and processes they filed in the suit and submitted to judgment in favour of the plaintiff/applicant vide their affidavit of facts filed.

    “There must be an end to litigation and the end for the litigation for the validly nominated candidate of the PDP, who won the PDP primary election and National Assembly election will end by entering judgment in favour of the plaintiff/applicant upon the admission of his claims by the 1st and 2nd defendants/respondents and by implication, the 4th defendant/respondent, who has no locus standi to activate the jurisdiction of this court, and she is also relying on the same documents withdrawn by the 1st and 2nd defendants/respondents.

    “The 3rd defendant/respondent (INEC) is a neutral party, which has not filed any counter-affidavit opposing the claims of the plaintiff/applicant.”

    The judge to which the case was reassigned to, Justice John Tsoho decided Okonkwo’s fresh motion on December 13, 217 and granted some of his reliefs.

    Justice Tsoho held that Okonkwo was validly nominated by the PDP in its primary election of December 7, 2014 for Anambra Central Senatorial district held at the Ekweme Square, Awka.

    The judge ordered the Senate President to forthwith, inaugurate Okonkwo to take over the Anambra Central Senatorial District seat in the Senate. He also ordered that the certificates of return earlier issued to Ekwenife (if there is still anyone left) be withdrawn and a fresh one be issued to Okonkwo by INEC.

    Every interested party to the Anambra Central Senatorial seat appeared to have been thrown into a quandary of sort since the December 13 judgment.

    While asking INEC to issue him a certificate of return, as ordered by Justice Tsoho, INEC is unsure whether to proceed with its January 13, 2018 planned rerun election, which it scheduled shortly after the November 20, 2017 judgment of the Court of Appeal Abuja.

    INEC has since applied to the Federal High Court, asking Justice Tsoho to review his decision. While the court is yet to fix a date for the hearing of INEC’s fresh application, Umeh is of the view that Justice Tsoho is on his own and should not be taken serious. He said he was working towards the January 13 rerun election.

    Okonkwo’s understanding of the whole scenario is contained in a letter of December 14, 2017 written by his lawyer, Sebatine Hon (SAN) to INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmood Yakubu.

    Part of the letter reads: “we are counsel to Dr. Obiora Okonkwo, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate that won the party’s nomination to contest the March 2015 election for Anambra Central Senatorial District but was unlawfully and wrongfully denied the ticket, which ticket was handed to Chief (Mrs.) Uche Ekwunife.

    “He is hereinafter referred to as ‘our client,’ and we hereby write on his instructions. Aggrieved by that clearly unlawful decision of the PDP, our client took out an originating summons in December 2014, challenging the actions of the PDP.

    “Joined as defendants in the suit were PDP, then chairman of PDP, Alhaji Adamu Muazu, Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and Chief (Mrs.) Uche Ekwunife.

    “In the course of the trial, however, counsel to the PDP and the PDP chairman; counsel to INEC and Counsel to Chief (Mrs.) Uche Ekwunife, all submitted to judgment, as per the claims in the amended originating summons and the motion for judgment filed and served on them by the plaintiff (our client).

    “It is instructive to note that the motion on notice sought for consequential orders, including an order that INEC should forthwith issue our client with a certificate of return and that he should be immediately sworn in as Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “In the course of the hearing on Wednesday, 13th December, 2017, all defence counsel again conceded and submitted to judgment; hence the Hon. Justice John Tsoho of the Federal High Court, Abuja entered judgment for our client as per claims in the amended originating summons as prayed in relief 3 of the motion on notice.”

    The letter referred to the two judgments of the Court of Appeal and said they merely voided Mrs. Ekwunife’s candidacy, but did not void the election held on March 28, 2015.

    It added: “The Court of Appeal, in that decision also held that the APGA candidate, Chief (Sir) Victor Umeh, could also not be declared winner of the said election, since he did not poll the highest number of votes.

    “Therefore, that the Court of Appeal did not nullify the March 28, 2015 election into Anambra Central Senatorial District, but merely held that Hon. Uche Ekwunife could not prove her due nomination by the PDP.

    “Now that the Federal High Court in suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/1092/2014 has held that our client was duly nominated candidate of the PDP in that election; and in view of the settle case law that it is a political party as opposed to a candidate that wins an election, our client should, as ordered by Justice Tsoho J., be issued a certificate of return forthwith, to enable the senate leadership inaugurate him as Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    Umeh however provided a contrary argument. He noted that Justice Tsoho’s judgment was given about three weeks after the Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja had instructed INEC to within 90 days conduct the Anambra Central rerun with the exclusion of PDP as directed by its Enugu Division which quashed Uche Ekwunife’s election on December 7, 2015.

    Umeh was optimistic that INEC, as a responsible agency, would not obey the high court ruling against a subsisting Appeal Court decision.

    He added: “The Federal High Court judgment did not make any reference to the Court of Appeal judgment that nullified the election. It did not make any reference to the Court of Appeal judgment delivered on November 20 that ordered INEC to conduct the rerun election within 90 days.

    “It did not say INEC should ignore those Court of Appeal decisions. What it simply said was that it delivered a judgment on who was the candidate of PDP between Ekwunife and Okonkwo.

    “That was the judgment and he (Justice Tsoho) proceeded to make fallacious orders that Obiora Okonkwo should be sworn in. Sworn in on the basis of which election? An election that has been nullified?

    “If the election had not been nullified, and he comes to the conclusion that Okonkwo was the rightful candidate of PDP, yes, he can order that Okonkwo should be sworn in.

    “But in the present case, the election in question has been destroyed by the Court of Appeal judgment delivered on December 7, 2015, which nullified the election. And that is why the seat has been vacant till date.

    “So, Okonkwo is not going there to replace anybody because there is nobody there. The election has been voided by the Court of Appeal, which is the final court vested with the authority to adjudicate over National Assembly matters. And that was what the Supreme Court judges told Ekwunife on February 10, 2017. They told her that they don’t have any authority to tamper with the judgment of the Court of Appeal; that the judgment is final. So, the election remains nullified forever.

    A High Court cannot pretend that it is treating a pre-election matter and fail to recognise the fact that nobody can be winner of a nullified election. There is nothing for Okonkwo to claim because the election does not exist anymore. It has been invalidated,” Umeh said.

    Is there still a live election?

    Umeh’s argument that the election that Okonkwo seeks to inherit has long been voided is supported by two recent developments.

    First is the finding of the Court of Appeal in its judgment of November 20. The second is the observation by Justice Olasumbo Goodluck of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in a judgment given few days before Justice Tsoho’s decision.

    In the November 20 judgment, Justice Tinuade Akomolafe-Wilson, who read the lead judgment, said: “Where a court nullifies an election and orders a fresh election, a political party which participated in the annulled election, at whose instance the election was nullified, cannot field a new candidate to contest in the fresh election.

    “This is because the fresh election does not entail an entirely new process; rather it takes the place of the annulled election, because the period of nomination of candidates has lapsed.”

    Justice Akomolafe-Willson noted that it was not the case of the 1st respondent (PDP), at the trial court, that it be allowed to substitute a candidate for Ekwenife, who had defected from the PDP, but for the “erroneous notion that the court-ordered rerun election, scheduled by INEC for March 5, 2016, entailed an entirely new process whereby it is entitled to conduct fresh primaries and nominate a new candidate.”

    She said it was unfortunate that the trial judge fell into a grave error by predicating her judgment on the ground that Ekwenife defected from the PDP. She added: “On the whole, having resolved the main issue in this appeal in favour of the appellant, this appeal is meritorious and it is allowed.

    “The decision of the trial Federal High Court delivered on 29 February, 2016, is hereby set aside. Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) (2nd respondent) is ordered to conduct a fresh election in Anambra Senatorial District within 90 days from today with the participation of the appellants (Chief Victor Umeh and APGA).”

    On December 5, this year, Justice Goodluck gave a judgment in suit No. FCT/HC/CV/1110/2015 filed by Barrister Chukwunweike (Chike) Maduekwe, who claimed to have been an aspirant in the 2014 PDP primary for Anambra Central Senatorial district.

    His main claim in the suit was for the refund of the N4.5m he paid to the PDP for the expression of interest and nomination form. He said the party failed to hold a primary and so, he was entitled to a refund.

    In her judgment on December 5, Justice Goodluck agreed with Maduekwe that PDP did not hold a primary and consequently, ordered the party to refund N4.5m to the plaintiff.

    The judge said: “It is hereby declared that the 1st defendant [PDP] is not entitled to retain the N4.5m paid by the plaintiff as the PDP Senate Expression of Interest EO1 and nomination form when the 1st defendant refused, failed and or neglected to conduct the primary election to elect its flagbearer for Anambra Central Senatorial District.”
    A similar confusing scenario also presented itself in the case over Kogi East Senatorial district. After spending over three years in court, with several court decisions, the situation is not yet clear who the actual winner is. Each party is claiming victory.

    Like the Anambra Central case, this one also arose from a primary of the PDP held on December 7, 2014 at Idah Township Stadium, Kogi State. Retired Air Marshal Isaac Alfa claimed to have won the primary, but that the party substituted his name with that of Attai Aidoko.

    On December 19, 2014, Alfa filed a suit before the Federal High Court in Abuja to challenge what he saw as unlawful substitution of his name. The Federal High Court, in a judgment on April 18, 2016, held in his favour, to the effect that he was the authentic candidate of the PDP for the Kogi East Senatorial seat.

    Based on the Federal High Court judgment, Alfa proceeded to contest the National Assembly as the PDP candidate and won, while Aidoko appealed the judgment at the Court of Appeal, Abuja with a notice of appeal dated April 20, 2016.

    On December 14, 2016, after Alfa had assumed office as the Senator representing Kogi East, the Court of Appeal gave its judgment in the appeal by Aidoko, marked: CA/A/260/2016. The appellate court set aside the April 18, 2016 judgment of the Federal High Court on the grounds that the trial court wrongly assumed jurisdiction and that the suit was wrongly commenced.

    The Court of Appeal said among others, that pleading ought to have been filed at the court bellow and that the suit was not the type to be commenced by originating summons. It did not direct that the case be remitted to the lower court for re-trial, but instead, ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to issue fresh certificate of return to Aidoko.

    Alfa appealed the Court of Appeal’s decision at the Supreme Court, in appeal marked: SC/1088/2016.

    The Supreme Court delivered its judgment on the appeal by Alfa on June 16, 2017 and ordered among others, that the case be heard afresh by the Federal High Court.

    The apex court agreed with the aspect of the Court of Apeal that facts in the case was contentious, requiring that parties file pleadings and call oral evidence. Based on the Supreme Court judgment, Alfa refiled his case before the Federal High Court via a statement of claim on August 23, 2017.

    While hearing was about to commence afresh before the Federal High Court, Aidoko filed an application, requesting that three questions, which he raised on his own, be referred to the Court of Appeal for determination.

    Although Alfa objected to the application and the trial judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba found the application to be unnecessary, he allowed it and referred the questions to the Appeal Court as requested by Aidoko. And on December 18, this year, the Court of Appeal gave its decision on the questions referred to it by Aidoko, marked: CA/A/818/R/2017.

    Justice Abdu Aboki, in the lead ruling of the court’s unanimous decision, found that the three questions by Aidoko did not satisfy the conditions which must exist before the Appeal Court could give its answer under Section 295(2) of the Constitution.

    Justice Aboki said: “I have carefully gone through the three questions referred to this court for interpretation, the first question, in my view relates to the effect of the finding of this court which has not been set aside by the superior court (Supreme Court), whether it is binding on the parties and the courts.

    “The second question relates to rule of practice of the courts, relating to the doctrine of stare decisis and the third question relates to whether the Federal High Court has any jurisdiction to entertain and grant the reliefs sought before it.

    “It is trite law that reference, on a question as to the interpretation of the Constitution, to this court is not simply done as a matter of course, for mere asking sake. The question must be as to the interpretation of the Constitution or application of the Constitution.

    “In the instant case, it cannot be said that all the three questions relate to the interpretation of the Constitution. In the instant case, the reference questions, having been found not to have arisen from the proceedings of the Federal High Court, the further question as to whether it involves a substantial question of law does not arise.

    “The earlier judgment of this court, which went on appeal to the Supreme Court was no longer valid in view of the fact that all courts bellow are bound to follow the decision and order(s) of the Supreme Court.

    “In the instant case, the failure of the applicant (Aidoko) to establish all the three vital necessary pre-conditions for a proper determination of reference questions is fatal to the application. This application lacks merit, it fails and it is accordingly dismissed,” Justice Aboki said.

    Justices Peter Olabisi Ige and Emmanuel Akomaye Agim, who were on the panel agreed with Justice Aboki.

    Justice Ige particularly noted that Aidoko’s application to the Court of Appeal was an attempt to frustrate the execution of the Supreme Court order that the case be re-heard by the Federal High Court.

    He said: “In an apparent bid to stall and delay the hearing of the suit herein, as mandated by the Supreme Court, the applicant herein, brazenly brought a most reckless and bizarre application before the lower court, asking the lower court to refer, what the applicant, in his imagination, perceived to be constitutional questions to this court.

    “To my mind, the applicant has exhibited great disdain and contempt for the Supreme Court’s decision aforesaid. All he is out to do is to circumvent and render the judgment ineffective and frustrate the hearing de novo (afresh) ordered by the Supreme Court.

    “The lower court has ably stated the decision of the Supreme Court. This court as well as the parties are duty bound to obey and ensure the enforcement of the Supreme Court’s decision aforesaid. This court will not be a party to the intransigence of the applicant to truncate the decision of the Supreme Court.,” Justice Ige said.

    Since the December 18 ruling by the Court of Appeal, both sides to the dispute have been claiming victory. While Alfa’s supporters interpreted the ruling to mean that the Kogi East Senatorial seat has now become vacant, Aidoko’s supporters think otherwise.

    In his reaction to the ruling, Aidoko argued that his seat has not been declared vacant by the Court of Appeal. He added that at no point did the issue of candidacy or vacant seat come up in the ruling by the Court of Appeal.

    Why the confusion? What way out?

    A senior member of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Abuja, Abdulkarim Yunusa the confusion arises because cases are not determined on time. He argued that if cases were promptly heard and dispensed with by the courts, the confusing scenarios would not be witnessed.

    As a way out, he said; “For me, the way to go is for the courts to always ensure that cases do not get unnecessarily held down in court. When a judge recuses himself from a case, he should give reasons.

    “You don’t just withdraw from a case by merely citing personal reasons. What constitutes personal reasons? Judges should be firm and committed to their responsibilities. That to me, will save litigants from ala this confusion, the psychological trauma and waste of scarce resources,” Yunusa said.

    A senior law lecturer, Professor Josiah Chukwuma blamed that inability of the judges to connect with their environment for the confusion that mostly greet courts’ pronouncements. He noted that most judges have detached themselves from the society and interpret the law in abstraction.

    He cited the 2012 decision by Justice Abubakar Talba of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in the criminal trial of John Yakubu, who pleaded guilty, in a plea bargain arrangement, to be involved in the theft of billions of naira in pensioners’ funds.

    Prof Chukwuma noted that the public outrage generated by the judge’s decision to give Yakubu an option of N750,000 fine, which later earned the judge a year’s suspension by the National Judicial Council (NJC), was because he did not consider the effect of his decision on the society.

    He said, where judges are mindful that they operate in societies inhabited by rational minds, they will learn to allow the interest of their societies and the possible impact of their decisions on such societies, reflect in their interpretation of the law.

    Prof Chukwuma said: “It is high time judges are reminded that they are able to sit comfortably in their chambers and dish out decisions because the society is at peace. Where the society is in turmoil, no one is immune to its negative impact.”

  • ‘AMCON at the mercy of the courts’

    Jude Nwauzor, Head, Corporate Communications, Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON)in this interview with Ibrahim Apekhade Yusuf sheds more light as why the corporation has been unable to recover lingering N5trillion unpaid loans and debts by some selected individuals. Excerpts:

    Abroad most of the Asset Management Corporations recorded a measure of success but the reverse is the case in Nigeria. Take the raging controversy over the inability of AMCON to recover N5trillion from its debtors.

    Everywhere in the world, global standards, no Asset Management Corporation (AMC) exists in perpetuity. There is always a timeline given to any AMC by any government within which they should finish resolving their assignments and move on, which is the reason why some AMCs have closed. A repository of it is what you find may be in their central bank, where you can make any reference to what their assignments is all about, i.e., their websites and all. In the case of Nigeria, when AMCON was set up it was given a timeline. But the first six years which I could say was the period when you could easily harvest the low hanging fruits. Those early years of AMCON was a period when they had the low hanging fruits very easy to pluck and harvest all of them. What we have now are what we call the big ticket loans, which is the heavy loans. And as you know the obligors are no ordinary Nigerians because I don’t think there is any ordinary Nigerian that will go to bank and take N100billion worth of loans.

    My MD, Ahmed Kuru refers to the current crops of debtors that owed nearly 80% of about N5trillion, 350 of them, he calls them ‘monsters.’ Why are they monsters? These people have money, they have businesses that are still flourishing, and some of them still do contracts for the federal government and get paid and yet still owe AMCON. Some of them have the money to pay but they would look you in the face and say, ‘we’ll not pay, do your worse!’

    And they also have the financial arsenal to engage in court for the rest of the lifespan of AMCON. A good number of them are represented by Senior Advocates of Nigeria and respected lawyers who understand the tentatics of law and how law can be manipulated and delayed. That’s the point my MD was making at that Judges’ Conference. He said that the way it is now, most loans and debts in the book of AMCON are the ones we cannot resolve except through the panel of the courts. And once a case goes into the court, you and I do not have control over it. So AMCON would just have to wait until the court decides that ok, go and enforce, take over this property. So the court now dictates the rate of recovery.

    But the other AMCs you cited, when they take over your assets, they have the right to sell without recourse to the obligor. And if the obligor now is interested in the property, he can now run to the AMC and have a meeting with the AMC and say please don’t sell it, take this amount of money let me have my property. But in Nigeria when AMCON mopped up the non performing loans, most of the assets that landed in our boat didn’t have collaterals without encumbrances that would give you easy access to sell. So when people ask us all these assets you’re gathering why are you not selling? It’s difficult to sell because of a lot of factors. The economy is not as healthy so a lot of people who ordinarily would like to buy are illiquid so they can’t buy. That’s one. Now let’s say company A owes B, and B has made all entreaties to A to no avail and A decides to go to court in Lagos since it cannot take the laws into is hands by selling the assets belonging to B outright. Before you know it, company B goes to court in Abuja and gets an injunction that company A cannot touch company B, so they are tied there. You know when a situation like that comes up, company A can no longer come and talk to company B, because the matter has gone to the courts. So that’s my MD keeps saying that the collaboration and the support of the judiciary, the legislature is very important at this time of AMCON’s lifespan. There is need for expediency in the judicial process. It shouldn’t be a time when a case will go to court and in the next four years, it’s still moving from one court to the other.

    But some school of thoughts hold the view and very strongly too that AMCON as an undertaker if after several years cannot fulfil its core mandate as a debt recovery agency in the country, that calls to question its continuous existence…

    No, that assumption is wrong. AMCON is not an undertaker. If AMCON were to be an undertaker we won’t be discussing Arik, Aero, Delta Steel, etc. These are entities that were dead and brought back from the life, resuscitated. I saw the recent ratings of airlines in Nigeria, Arik was number two. They didn’t consult us and l’m sure our people at Arik didn’t know they were doing any survey to rank the performance of the airlines across the country. But they’re number two in every measurement of aviation practice. That’s the same Arik that would’ve closed in two weeks if we hadn’t intervened.  So that expression undertaker is not so because in most instances what AMCON was supposed to do is to stabilise and liberalise the economy and that was why they recapitalised the 22 banks.

    Apart from that they also provided financial accommodation. All these were meant to liberate the economy. Very good intentions but of course, the inability to resolve the outstanding loans after seven years, is because the country is so complex and difficult. There are AMCs that have seamlessly operated in other climes, but it’s not working like that here and that’s why this current management of AMCON has been engaging the executive, legislature and the judiciary to understand that there is need to actually give all kinds of support to AMCON if they want it to realise or to resolve this humongous debts we have.

    So far what form of rapprochement are you enjoying from these various arms of government?

    I would say it’s very cordial. But it wasn’t always there. You know sometimes agencies of government work in silos. But since the coming of this administration there have been a lot of efforts aimed at pulling agencies together. And that’s what informed the TSA and all kinds of policies so that we can all streamline our operations. Earlier this year, the presidency also set up an interagency committee. The objective was to make sure that all these agencies of government work in synergy. Let me site an example everybody knows. So that, if an Ifeanyi Ubah, owes AMCON and goes to the Federal Ministry of Housing to go and get a contract, they’ll not give him until he pays his outstanding debts. And if at all they give him, the proceeds of that contract will be paid to defray what he owes. That’s the objective. But you know it takes a lot of technicalities and there’s going to be a lot of harmonisation, a lot  of  education even for people to know that if AMCON loans are not resolved we all suffer because it’s our collective wealth. What a lot of people fail to understand is that there was a former MD of AMCON, Mustapha Chike-Obi, who was the pioneer. He did his five years and left. This management will serve their tenure and they’ll leave, which is why they’re making every effort to resolve it as much as possible before they leave because tomorrow it may be you as the CEO of AMCON. It’s not a kind of debts you say, let’s write it off. No. You can’t write it off because most of the debtors are capable of recreating Dubai with the kind of wealth they have. If somebody is owing and you go there he can’t feed his family or himself, it’s understandable. But if a man owes you and he’s buying a house in Banana Island, surely you must ask questions. And that is the situation of AMCON. And these monies they collected are depositors’ funds. It’s the money of you and l; it’s the money of the federal government of Nigeria. It’s not an individual’s money neither does it belongs to the MD of AMCON. So when some people come here and say, AMCON why have you not been able to recover your money, l just laugh because they are speaking from the point of ignorance. The problem is actually bigger and beyond AMCON and that’s why my MD is calling for legal support because between you and l if a loan we took over in 2011, and the case has been in court since 2011 till date, and it has not been good, it will be unfair to ask me, when do you think the case would be resolved. It’s not my question; it boils down to our legal system. This problem permeates every strata of the society as such it’s a comprehensive overhaul we have to do as a nation, not just AMCON. Let me also tell you that some of those AMCs you mentioned didn’t take all kinds of assets, they did cherry-picking of sorts. But AMCON was created and mandated to mop up all kinds of dead loans that were in the morgue. And then a lot of people expect miracle. It doesn’t work like that.

  • ‘Courts should stop frustrating lawyers’

    ‘Courts should stop frustrating lawyers’

    Miss Adaeze Anah is the daughter of a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN). She obtained a Law Degree from the Madonna University and runs a firm called The Anah Law Practice. She tells JOSEPH JIBUEZE about her father’s influences and her dreams.

    Nothing can be as frustrating to a lawyer as travelling a long distance, under stressful conditions, only to get to court and be told the judge would not sit.

    If she could, Miss AdaezeAnah would like to prevent such scenarios, which occur regularly.

    “If I had the power to change anything about the judiciary, it would definitely be the culture of going to court only to find out that it isn’t sitting.

    “I think that this has to be halted definitely because it is simply an efficient way to render lawyers unproductive.

    “Sometimes, lawyers travel long distances only to discover that the courts they are scheduled to appear in will not be sitting.

    “Given the fact that this is the digital age, emails can be sent to counsel to notify them of change in a court’s schedule.

    “This will not only save the lawyer’s business time and resources but will help in restoring the confidence of litigants in the administration of justice system,” Miss Anah said.

    Despite the challenges of legal practice, Miss Anah is happy that her father, Mr C.O Anah (SAN), influenced her to study law.

    “My dad is my greatest influence as per my decision to be a legal practitioner. This is not because he asked me to read law or cajoled me in any way, but because he carries on like the practice of law is the noblest thing a person could do, like it is a call to higher purpose.

    “Naturally, I found myself leaning towards studying law. Here I am today,” she said.

    Unsurprisingly, her father, who wanted her to study medicine, is her biggest mentor.

    “It sounds like a cliché but it’s true. This is because I watched him proudly stand up to the tenets of the profession and this was not always as glamorous as the picture most people have of lawyers.

    “It’s a life of sacrifice and constantly answering the call to almost be divine. He does it with so much grace and humility, it seems unassuming.

    “His sophisticated language and gentlemanly manners are not easy to keep up with.

    “He strikes the balance of style and substance so effortlessly that I didn’t realise how much industry it entailed until I launched into legal practice,” she said.

    Anah, who would have been an artist or museum curator if not a lawyer, chose law because she believes it is a discipline that empowers her to effect change, and to fight for social justice and a better world.

    “It is a calling that puts you in a position to affect the course of affairs of people with your actions in some situations, which is both a blessing and great responsibility,” she said.

    The day Anah was called to bar was her most memorable as a lawyer.

    She explains why: “There was a procession from the auditorium in Bwari to where we were to share a meal as newly called lawyers with members of the Body of Benchers.

    “As we walked to the dining hall with all smiles and proud of our accomplishment, people from the sidelines were chanting their expectations of us: ‘speedy justice’, ‘Don’t forget to defend human rights’, “fight corruption o’ etc.

    “It dawned on me that with the pretty wig and gown came big responsibilities. Till this day, that experience guides me and my actions,” she said.

    Does she remember her first day in court? “Yes. It was at the Supreme Court and I was appearing with my seniors.  I remember being in awe of the show of industry by my colleagues and thinking: ‘Wow!’ This is my life now.”

    What is her most challenging case so far? “Having been involved in prosecution before the Legal Practitioner’s Disciplinary Committee, the cases in this genre have a unique impact on me.

    “It constantly puts me in a position where I am always evaluating myself, style and goals.”

    Anah sees herself running a leading legal brand in 10 years, affecting lives positively and taking on what she described as “higher echelons” of success.

    Does she have any regrets? “Being a lawyer has its moments but none of those has ever translated to regret for me. Indeed, every challenge has blossomed into growth and development.”

    Speaking on the challenges young lawyers face, she said one of them was an increasing communication gap with seniors.

    “Lately, the profession has evolved at a speed that is unprecedented. Law firms have evolved from tightly knit offices to firms that bear the semblance of big cooperation; what more, we are still taught that bigger is better,” she said.

    According to her, despite the size of some firms, little attention is paid to issues like succession plan, adequate remuneration of young lawyers, defined organogram, health and pension for lawyers and empowerment.

    “I am of the opinion that the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA)can and should set up a Committee comprising of very respected members of the profession and young lawyers to map out and enforce a system of appraisal for law firms in the area of working conditions and welfare of the juniors as well as office administration.

    “It is my opinion that this will not only give rise to better working conditions for young lawyers, it would also act as  a  viable channel for the transfer of legal traditions, the understanding of it and confidence in it to  the younger generation of lawyers,” Anah said.

    Besides her dad, Anah’s other role models include Mr. E. C. Ukala(SAN), Mallam Yusuf Ali (SAN), Mr Emeka Etiaba (SAN)and former NBA General Secretary MaziAfamOsigwe for their professionalism, forth-rightness, courage and integrity.

     

  • SAN faults states’ funding of courts

    Constitutional lawyer and renowned author, Chief Sebastine Hon (SAN) has faulted the funding of state High Courts, Sharia Courts of
    Appeal and Customary Courts of Appeal by state governments.

    According to the Senior Advocate of Nigeria, funding of state High Courts, Sharia Courts of Appeal and Customary Courts of Appeal by state governments is unconstitutional and exposes these courts to undue manipulation and near-asphyxiation by state governors, thereby compromising the rule of law and due process.

    He said: “By Section 6(1) of the 1999 Constitution as amended, judicial powers of the Federation are to be exercised by “the courts to which this section relates, being courts established for the Federation.” The phrase “to which this section relates” becomes consummated when we look at subsection (5) of that same section – which has listed the mentioned ‘Federal’ courts, including the state High Courts, the Sharia Courts of Appeal and the Customary Courts of Appeal of the various states. This then means that these courts are Federal Courts, established by the Constitution to operate at the state level.

    “To cement this fact, Section 84(1) and (4) of the same Constitution has placed payment of remuneration, salaries and allowances of all judicial officers manning superior courts of record in Nigeria, including the courts hereby discussed, on the doorsteps of the Federal Government. If these courts were mere state courts, the states would have been saddled with the responsibility of paying the salaries and emoluments of the judicial officers manning them.

    Also, section 84(7) of the Constitution provides that “The recurrent expenditure of judicial offices in the Federation (in addition to salaries and allowances of the judicial officers mentioned in subsection (4) of this section) shall be a charge upon the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation.” The phrase “recurrent expenditure” here carries its ordinary, grammatical meaning – ‘that which happens again and again.’ This then means that all year-in, year-out expenditure of these courts are a direct responsibility of the Federal Government! There cannot be any other reasonable interpretation of this subsection, which has decidedly used the words “of judicial offices” (not “officers”). Clearly, therefore, these federal courts operating as state courts (“judicial offices”) are to have their year-in, year-out expenditure drawn directly from the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation.

    “A consideration of other portions of the Constitution will further show the unpretentious intensions of its framers that these Courts herein discussed are Federal Courts. Paragraph 21(e) of Part I of the third Schedule to the 1999 Constitution has vested powers in the National Judicial Council to “collect, control and disburse all moneys, capital and recurrent, for the judiciary.” The word “judiciary” here contemplates, in an inescapable fashion, the courts “established for the Federation” in section 6(1) and (5) of the Constitution. It will be absurd to posit that only the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the Federal High Court and the National Industrial Court are contemplated by paragraph 21(e) – since section 6(1) and (5) of the Constitution has listed all the superior courts of record, including the ones here discussed as belonging to one Federal family.

    “Complement the above with paragraph 6 of Part II to the third Schedule to the Constitution, which is silent on the disbursement of capital and recurrent expenditure by the various state Judicial Service Commissions. Since, therefore, the courts here discussed are not state courts, state governments have, with respect, no constitutional duty or power to provide for them in their annual budgets. I am again backed by section 81(1) of the Constitution, which mandates the President of Nigeria to lay before the National Assembly in each financial year estimates of the revenues and “expenditure of the Federation” for the next following financial year. The phrase “of the Federation” here agrees with the phrase “courts established for the Federation” in section 6(1) of the Constitution.

    “I decided to bring these salient constitutional truthup for various reasons, first of which is to persuade that this clearly unconstitutional practice of state governments funding these courts should stop forthwith.

    “Secondly, by so funding the courts, the rule of law and constitutional due process is facing a regressive nosedive in the various States – owing to the ‘winner takes all’ attitude of most state governors.

    “Thirdly, the said state governments themselves, operating on very lean budgets, are not even properly funding the said courts, again compromising multidimensionally the rule of law in the states.

    “I, therefore, call on the NJC to collect and collate all capital and recurrent expenditures of these courts from their various heads, make a consolidated budget and present it to the Budget Office for inclusion in the yet to be submitted 2018 Federal budget,” Hon said.

     

     

     

  • NBA backs CJN’s plan on special courts

    NBA backs CJN’s plan on special courts

    THE Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has thrown its weight behind the decision by the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnoghen to create special courts to handle trial of corruption cases.

    Its President Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN) said members of his association have no objection to the CJN’s initiative, but that the special courts and conventional courts should be well-funded and provided with needed materials to enable them function effectively.

    Mahmoud said the objective of the creation of special courts, which is speedy prosecution of criminal cases, can be achieved if attention is paid to the bigger picture of ensuring a functional criminal justice system.

    He spoke in Abuja while inaugurating two committees of the NBA. They are the Disciplinary Prosecution Committee (DPC) and Constitution Review Committee.

    The NBA President said: “There has been a lot of agitation for special court, and as you know, this is not the first time that we will be having a special court in the country. We have had special courts before.

    “Essentially, what is important is that the courts are given enough resources and given nigrostriatal and manpower support to undertake speedy trial of, especially corruption cases. There is a lot of dissatisfaction about the speed of these trials.

    “So, we don’t have any objection to the special courts being set up. But, in addition, we must not lose sight of the wider issues involved in criminal justice administration. We have a new Criminal Justice Act, which came into force in 2015.

    “A lot of innovations have been introduced. NBA is now in the process of organising a summit to really review the progress of the implementation of this Act and see what lessons have been learnt so far and what areas need to be improved. The whole idea, being that we need a more effective and a criminal justice system with improved speed,” Mahmoud said.

  • Supreme, Appeal courts begin annual vacation

    Supreme, Appeal courts begin annual vacation

    The Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal will proceed on their annual long vacation today.

    According to notices pasted on both court’s notice boards last Friday, the Supreme Court is expected to resume on September 18, a day scheduled for the inauguration of the 30 new Senior Advocates named on July 6.

    The Court of Appeal, according to a statement by its spokesperson, Hajia Sa’adatu Musa Kachalla, will resume on September 18.

    The Federal High Court and the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) commenced their vacation on July 10 and will resume on September 11.

    During the vacation, designated vacation judges (at the high court level) will sit on cases requiring urgent attention. Other departments of the courts are kept running during vacation.

    But, the five special task forces constituted by the President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa, in the last quarter of the court’s legal year, has delivered 232 judgments.

  • Protesters storm courts

    Protesters storm courts

    •Prolonged trial of suspects condemned

    Families, associates and supporters of seven persons accused of complicity in the murder of former Ekiti State National Union of Road Transport Workers’ (NURTW’s) Chairman Omolafe Aderiye yesterday protested in Ado-Ekiti what they called “prolonged trial and incarceration.”
    Aderiye was killed on September 25, 2014 in Ado-Ekiti. The Governor Ayo Fayose administration instituted a murder case against the accused after assuming power the following month.
    The protest began at Okeyinmi roundabout around 7:45 a.m. The demonstrators carried placards to the state High Court and Court of Appeal.
    The action, which was peaceful, was monitored by the police and Department of State Services (DSS), to ensure it was not hijacked by hoodlums.
    The protesters alleged that the “prosecution of the accused has turned to persecution” because of their membership of the All Progressives Congress (APC).
    They urged the National Judicial Council (NJC), the Court of Appeal, Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to investigate why the case was stalled at the Ado-Ekiti Division of the Court of Appeal for over one and a half years.