Tag: Falana

  • $6 billion arms scandal: Suspects detention is legal – Falana

    $6 billion arms scandal: Suspects detention is legal – Falana

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN) has said that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) did not commit any illegality for detaining suspects arrested in connection with the $6 billion arms scandal.

    Falana, in a statement titled, “$6 billion arms gate: suspects’ rights not violated” issued Sunday contended that “the detention of the suspects is in strict compliance with the rule of law”.

    He was reacting to criticisms against the commission and the government that the detention of the suspects by the commission was an act of illegality.

    The erudite lawyer drew the attention of the critics to sections 293-299 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015 (ACJA) which stipulate that a suspect arrested for an offence which a magistrate has no  jurisdiction to try, shall within a reasonable time, be brought before a magistrate court for remand.

    He stated that “the order which shall be for a period not exceeding 14 days may be further extended provided that if the investigation is not concluded within 28 days the court may summon the appropriate authority to show cause why the suspect should not be unconditionally released.

    “Suspects who are remanded in custody are at liberty to ask for bail or apply to the appropriate high court to secure the enforcement of their fundamental right to personal liberty. In view of the clear and unambiguous provisions of the law it is misleading to insist that a magistrate court lacks the power to grant the application filed by the EFCC for the detention of the criminal suspects.”

    He recalled “last week, some of the principal suspects implicated in the probe of the $2.1 billion and N643 billion arms gate were nabbed by the Economic and Financial Commission.  Pursuant to the ex parte orders validly issued by the courts the suspects have since been detained for the purpose of investigation. But in a desperate move designed to divert the attention of the Nigerian people and the international community from the grave allegations of reckless and criminal diversion of the public funds earmarked for arms procurement to prosecute the war on terror, some reactionary politicians have accused the Buhari administration of engaging in impunity for detaining the suspects beyond 48 hours without trial.

    He also recalled that a senior lawyer had said that “a magistrate court has no power to issue a holding charge warrant.”

    But Falana urged the Muhammadu Buhari administration to ignore the reckless campaign of calumny of certain people  who have lost their sense of shame pointing out that as far as they are concerned the suspects should be left alone to enjoy their loot while soldiers are losing their precious lives due to lack of adequate weapons.

    He rather counseled the federal government to ensure that all individuals and corporate bodies indicted in the criminal diversion of public funds are made to face the full wrath of the law.

    “The anti graft agencies should disregard the cheap blackmail, speed up  the investigation and charge all indicted suspects to court while the courts are enjoined to conduct the trial of the suspects under the ACJA which requires that the trials be conducted day by day. The federal government should open a dedicated account to warehouse the recovered loot with a view to using the fund to provide equipment for the armed forces, create jobs for our army of unemployed graduates and fix our dilapidated public schools, hospital and roads.

    “However, it is pertinent to correct the error in respect of the extent of the amount of money involved in the arms gate. The well publicized $2.1 billion is the foreign component of the loot. The actual amount stolen is $2.1 billion and N643 billion. The total missing fund is $6 billion.

    “In the light of the earth-shaking and ear-aching revelations oozing out of the EFCC to the effect that a handful of individuals cornered and shared the huge fund earmarked for the procurement of military hardware to prosecute the war on terror all the convicted military officers and soldiers who have been convicted including the 70 who were sentenced to death should be released forthwith.

    “As I have repeatedly maintained the soldiers were committed and sentenced to death for asking for weapons to fight the terrorists. They were ordered to fight with unserviceable equipment on the ground that there was no money to purchase new weapons. In the process, the well-equipped insurgents routed and massacre thousands of the country’s ill-equipped soldiers due to the diversion of the fund set aside to purchase equipment. The suspects must bear full responsibility for committing such grave crimes against humanity.

    “Consequently, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, 2011 we have applied for a certified true copy of the report of the arms procurement panel with a view to ensuring that some of the  suspects are prosecuted by the Special Prosecutor  of the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity,” he added.

  • Falana, others form new group to fight  for justice, accountability in Africa

    Falana, others form new group to fight for justice, accountability in Africa

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), and eight other African personalities on criminal law have formed a new group, the Africa Group for Justice and Accountability, to fight for justice and accountability on the continent.

    The Africa Group for Justice and Accountability is an independent group of senior Africa experts on international criminal law and human rights.

    Its members include political figures, members of international and domestic tribunals and human rights advocates.

    The group will support the efforts to strengthen justice and accountability in Africa through domestic and regional capacity building, advice and outreach as well as enhance cooperation between Africa and the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    The formation of the new group, which was launched last week alongside other activities of the ICC Assembly of States Parties, in the Hague, was announced by the Berlin, Germany-based Wayamo Foundation in a statement yesterday.

  • Falana to Saraki: stop attending CCT with senators

    Falana to Saraki: stop attending CCT with senators

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), has urged Senate President Bukola Saraki to stop attending the sittings of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) with other senators.

    The frontline lawyer noted that it was illegal and unlawful for the Senate President to suspend Senate’s sittings whenever his case was to be heard at the CCT.

    Besides questioning the political will of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to fight corruption and impunity in the country, Falana said the action of the Senate and its President was an assault on the nation’s collective morality.

    In an address, titled: As Corruption Fights Back, delivered on Monday at the investiture of Mr. Dare Oseni as the 2015/2016 President of the International Association of Lions Club, Lagos Isolo Lions Club, at Samkoll Graden, Idimu, Lagos, Falana noted that Saraki violated Paragraph 1 of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers.

    The paragraph states that a public officer shall not put himself in a position where his personal interest conflicts with his duties and responsibilities”.

    Falana stressed that Saraki violated the paragraph by suspending Senate’s sittings to enable him to attend court sittings in company of fellow senators.

    He said: “If this morally despicable behaviour is not halted, the distinguished senators may soon resolve to appear in the various courts in the country in solidarity with other members who are facing terrorism and corruption charges.

    “As the Senate President, Dr Bukola is required to preside over the affairs of the legislative house in the discharge of its constitutional duty of making laws for the country. Attendance at court sittings in solidarity with any criminal suspect is certainly not part of the constitutional responsibilities of the senate.”

    The frontline lawyer averred that it was wrong to allow public servants facing corruption allegations to remain in office in the course of the trial.

    He said the proper thing was for such officers to step aside, pending when they would be cleared of such allegations.

    According to him, paragraphs 303, 404 of the Federal Government Public Service Rules (Corrected Version 2008) stipulates that when a public officer is charged to court with a criminal offence he/she shall be interdicted and cease to report for duty until the determination of the case.

    Falana noted that this contradicted what he called the misleading impression by some lawyers that public officers accused of corruption could not be asked to step aside.

    He said: “During the period of interdiction the public officer concerned shall be entitled to 50 per cent of his/her entitlements provided that if he/she is discharged or acquitted, the officer shall be immediately reinstated and receive his/her full entitlements which have been denied him/her during the period of interdiction.”

     

  • How to prevent herdsmen, farmers clashes, by Falana

    How to prevent herdsmen, farmers clashes, by Falana

    Activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has suggested ways to prevent clashes between farmers and herdsmen.

    He said states which have large livestock populations should take advantage of the Land Use Act to acquire land for the establishment of grazing reserves.

    According to him, in view of the increasing incident of cattle rustling, security measure should be put in place to police the grazing reserves.

    Falana said the grazing reserves will be phased out gradually and replaced with ranches and abattoirs.

    “Since the Federal Government is obligated to protect the life and property of every citizen, urgent steps should be taken to avert further killings and destruction of farmlands by herdsmen,” Falana said in a statement.

    He said he would take legal action against the Federal Government should it fail to take steps to prevent civil disturbances.

    “If the Buhari Administration does not discharge its constitutional duty by stopping the unwarranted civil disturbances, we shall not hesitate to pray the Federal High Court to compel it to act responsibly in the circumstance by ensuring the protection of the fundamental rights of every farmer to life and property.

    “At the same time, we shall equally ask the court to compel the Federal Government and state government with large livestock populations to establish grazing reserves and ranches,” the lawyer said.

    Falana said farmlands have continued to be destroyed due to the state’s failure to address the problem.

    “Once again, I call on President Buhari to address the bloody clashes which occur regularly between farmers and Fulani herdsmen in the various parts of the country.

    “Through the negligence of the state, the country has continued to witness the reckless killing of innocent farmers and the destruction of farmlands.

    “Farmers, like other citizens, are entitled to the protection of the right to life and property. To halt such wanton killings, the primitive movement of thousands of heads of cattle from the north to the south should be stopped without any further delay,” Falana said.

    The Senior Advocate of Nigeria also wants the government to call security agencies to order, saying conflicting investigation reports can hamper prosecution.

    He said: “On May 4, 2012, a gang of gunmen invaded the residence of Mr. Olaitan Oyerinde, the then Personal Assistant to the Edo State governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomole. In the presence of his wife and young children, Mr. Oyerinde was gruesomely killed. A few days after the tragic incident, the Nigeria Police Force addressed a press conference in Benin where a set of suspects were paraded before the media and admitted their ignoble  role in the criminal enterprise. Based on the investigation which had been conducted into the matter, the Police Authorities concluded that it was a case of paid assassination.

    “Nigerians were assured by the Police that the suspects would be promptly charged to court.

    ‘’Shortly thereafter, the State Security Service addressed another press conference in Abuja and paraded another set of criminal suspects. The suspects also ‘confessed’ that they were solely responsible for the barbaric murder of Mr. Olaitan Oyerinde.

    “The DSS which claimed to have investigated the incident stated that it was a case of armed robbery. Regrettably, the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation was unable to reconcile the two conflicting versions of the same incident.

    “As I did point out at the material time, the irresponsible conduct of both law enforcement agencies was capable of exculpating the actual culprits. Thus, by creating sufficient doubt in the mind of the trial judge both security agencies had clearly compromised the prosecution of either of two sets of alleged killers of Mr. Oyerinde.

    “A similar ugly scenario has just been re-enacted in the case of the criminal gang that abducted Chief Falae last month.  In separate press conferences both the Police and the SSS claimed to have arrested the two sets of suspects who abducted Chief Falae.

    “Both security agencies gave divergent versions of the abduction saga. Notwithstanding that the suspects arrested by the Police have since been charged to the High Court in Akure, Ondo State, the SSS should hand over the suspects in its custody to the Police without delay.

    “The Attorney-General of Ondo State should ensure that the prosecution of the suspects who kidnapped Chief Falae is not bungled by the security agencies.

    “It is high time the Federal Government called all law enforcement agencies in the country to order with a view to preventing them from toying with the security of the Nigerian people by engaging in meaningless competition and overzealousness.”

     

  • Falana writes bank over retirees’  entitlements

    Falana writes bank over retirees’ entitlements

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), has threatened to sue Unity Bank Plc if it fails to pay the entitlements of over 300 workers disengaged about five months ago.

    In a petition, which was sent  through their lawyer, Falana, the discharged staff contended  that the moment their appointments were terminated, “your management deliberately for unjustifiable reasons refused to pay their exit benefits and entitlements, including all previously accrued entitlements prior to the termination of their employment without offering any explanation for the delay till date, in flagrant disobedience to the extant labour laws.”

    The threat of legal action is contained in a petition dated September 11, , signed  by Dare Falana (of the Falana and Falana Chambers) on behalf of the retirees and sent to the Managing Director  of the bank.

    While claiming that the bank paid some monies early September to a few of the affected  workers, it pointed out that the payment fell short “of the total benefit and entitlements due to those who were paid, while the rest were not paid.”

    It was also alleged that the bank failed in the “payment of staff leave backlog, full value for number of years in service, interest earned on funds set aside/invested and a host of other entitlements which currently constitute over 60 per cent of expected gratuity payment from the bank in contravention of collective agreement and antecedents thus undermining the welfare of its retirees.”

    The petition added: “An employee whose appointment is terminated and has leave days outstanding or accrued as at the date of termination, shall have the days commuted to cash.” It wondered why the bank was not disposed to paying them their leave bonus.

    The petitioners alleged that the benefits and entitlements of affected top management staff were paid, while those of the lower cadre staff were left unattended.

    They added that since the management claimed that it invested the funds set aside for the payment of their outstanding benefit to yield interest, the retirees “are at a loss as to why the investment has not been recalled for their use.”

    They urged the bank to urgently  address the demand of the entire staff affected in the disengagement exercise, failure, warning that otherwise litigation would be instituted against the bank.

    However, in its response to the petition, the bank through its legal officers, Alaba Williams and Hamisu Sani, Head, Legal Services Department and Legal Services respectively, denied any wrongdoing, maintaining that it places premium on meeting its due obligations to deserving ex-staff of the bank in accordance with its policies.

    In its five paragraphs letter, the bank requested the lawyer to verify the petitioners’ claims so it can do the needful, if need be, emphasising that as a socially responsible organisation, it is ready to settle the entitlements of every individual with genuine claims.

    “To assist our investigation, please make available the schedule of amounts of entitlements each of your clients have been paid, what each of them claims to be outstanding and the parameters for their calculation and expectations,”, the letter  added.

     

  • Falae: How to stop kidnapping, by Falana

    Falae: How to stop kidnapping, by Falana

    Against the backdrop of the recent kidnap of former Secretary to the Government of the Federation Chief Olu Falae, Lagos lawyer Femi Falana (SAN), condemns the threats by some Yoruba leaders that Southwest would secede from Nigeria. He offers tips on how to solve the menace.

    In October 2010, a traditional ruler and a college provost were abducted in Ekiti state by a gang of kidnappers. While the bandits  were taking the victims to a hideout in Delta state a fatal accident occurred at Kabba in Kogi State. Both victims were killed while the kidnappers were seriously injured. The criminal elements were promptly arrested by the police and charged to court by  the Kogi state state ministry of justice. Although the trial court ordered that the kidnap suspects be remanded in prison custody  they escaped last year during a violent attack on the Lokoja prison by unknown gunmen.

    Shortly thereafter, the wife of the Speaker of Osun state was abducted in Osogbo. She was later found by a vigilante group in Ogun state. In Lagos, the former chairman of Ejigbo local Council Development Area, Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan was abducted. He was released upon the payment of a ransom of N15m. Since then several persons have been kidnapped and released upon payment of ransom negotiated by their family members. Notwithstanding such incidents of kidnapping the south west zone was considered relatively safe. But the crisis of insecurity of life and property in the region became exacerbated  after the 2015 general elections following the retrenchment of hundreds of armed political thugs and the escape of a number of prisoners at the prisons in Ado Ekiti, Akure  and Sagamu in the last couple of years. The few kidnap suspects who were arrested were not charged to any court by the police while the prison management did not declare any of the prison escapees wanted.

    No doubt, the kidnap of Chief Olu Falae, a former secretary to the federal government in his farm in the outskirt of Akure, Ondo state last month added a new dimension to the kidnap saga in the region. Embarrassed by the development  President Mohammadu Buhari directed the Inspector-General of police, Mr. Solomon Arase to secure the release of the Chief.  Barely 24 hours later Chief Falae regained his freedom after the payment of ransom by his family. Upon his dramatic escape from captivity Chief Falae disclosed that his abductees spoke “good English”. Based on such disclosure it is doubtful if the criminals who kidnapped Chief Falae are Fulani nomads. However, Chief Falae announced last week that his farm had been invaded and taken over by a group of Fulani nomads. In a classical display of impunity the Nigeria Police Force has failed to dislodge the lawless group.

    Instead of calling on the security agencies to enforce the law by arresting and prosecuting the group, some Yoruba leaders threatened that the southwest region would secede from Nigeria if Fulani nomads are not banned from entering the region! It is unfortunate that the senior citizens, who issued the threat did not address the legal implications of their demand. It ought to be pointed out that every Nigerian has a constitutional right not be expelled from any part of the country. Leaders of the various ethnic groups should be worried over the involvement of educated young men and women in the menace of kidnapping throughout the country. Chief Falae is likely to be pained that the illegal occupation of his farm  by a criminal gang may degenerate to civil disturbances between Yoruba farmers and Fulani nomads.

    More so, that Chief Falae was at the 2014 National Conference where it was unanimously agreed by delegates that “In the long term cattle routes and grazing reserves be phased out to lay emphasis on ranching “ and that states which have large livestock populations should “endeavor to maintain grazing reserves.” It was further resolved that “an integrated development and livelihoods modernization program should be designed and implemented to address the issue of settling nomadic herdsmen into settled communities based on established cattle ranches with fodder development technologies, and including abattoirs, processors and other businesses along the livestock value chain.” The recommendations have been ignored by the Federal Government.

    It is on record that not less than 10,000 heads of cattle are consumed in the south west daily. Majority of the heads of cattle are brought in malnourished having been made to walk hundreds of kilometres from the northern part of the country. Instead of issuing threats, the Yoruba leaders  ought to have mobilised the Southwest state governors to set up ranches and abattoirs for the production and distribution of meat in the region. For instance, through a PPP arrangement a modern abattoir, the largest in Africa, was built in Ibadan, Oyo State in 2011. But due to some inexplicable reasons the state government has refused to allow the abattoir to function. The Ekiti state government once had a ranch. It was established by the Adekunle Ajasin government in the second republic. But it has since collapsed due to lack of maintenance. This is not the time to resort to diversionary or escapist solutions to man made problems. The ruling class should be compelled to address the challenges of establishing livestock, grazing reserves, ranching and modernization of pastoralist or nomadic livelihood in line with the aforesaid recommendations.

    In conclusion, the police should move speedily to dislodge the armed bandits who have seized Chief Falae’s farm.  The Yoruba leaders should consult with the Southwest governors  with a view to addressing the increasing wave of insecurity of life and property in the region. All prison escapees should be declared wanted and fished out by the police. Governments should embark on massive creation of jobs for the army of unemployed youths. In addressing the crisis of policing the country, state and local governments should be allowed to set up security outfits. Since northern governors are worried over cattle rustling their southern colleagues should link up with them with a view to having a holistic approach to the establishment of grazing zones, ranches and abattoirs. Unless these measures are adopted the country will continue to witness insecurity of life and property.

  • Falana to Buhari: Review cases of convicted soldiers

    Falana to Buhari: Review cases of convicted soldiers

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to review the cases of officers and soldiers convicted by military tribunals in relation to the fight against Boko Haram.

    In a statement issued in Lagos on Friday, Falana said this has become necessary since the immediate past Chief of Defence staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh, has admitted that the armed forces he led lacked the equipment to prosecute the war on terror.

    The rights activist remarked that it was gratifying that the Buhari administration and the Chief of Army Staff have decided to reinstate 3,032 dismissed soldiers.
    “However, we urge the Federal Government to extend the commendable gesture to several officers and soldiers who are currently standing trial.

    “The trial should be terminated while the courts-martial are dissolved forthwith. In the same vein, the cases of those who have been convicted ought to be reviewed with a view to pardoning them in the interest of justice and fair play,” Falana stated.

    He recalled that the immediate past military authorities put several soldiers on trial for demanding for equipment to prosecute the war on terror and that 70 of the soldiers were convicted and sentenced to death while scores were jailed by courts – martial.

    He argued that since the demand of the soldiers was legitimate, the military hierarchy could not justify the spurious sentences.

  • Disband courts-martial, says Falana

    A Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), has urged the military authorities to  disband the two courts-martial sitting in Lagos and Abuja and discharge the soldiers on trial.

    Falana said there is no legal or moral basis for their continued existence. To him, those who set  them up have admitted that they led a military that was neither equipped nor motivated to confront the well-equipped enemy.

    He, however, argued that the former Chief of Defence  Staff (CDS), Air Chief Marshal  Alex Sabundu Badeh, has questions to answer regarding the Chibok girls’ abduction, mutiny and demobilisation of the troops under the alleged false claim that the Federal Government had reached a truce with the Boko Haram sect.

    The Lagos lawyer recalled that between September and December last year, two courts-martial which sat in Abuja, convicted and sentenced 70 soldiers to death.

    “The  soldiers who were charged with mutiny had complained of lack of equipment to fight and the failure of the military authorities to pay their operational allowances.

    “The allegation of the diversion of the troops’ allowances was confirmed by the military authorities who removed the General Officer Commanding  the 7th Infantry  Division of the Nigerian Army based in Maiduguri, Borno state at the material time,” Falana said.

    According to him, the soldiers’ conviction  embarrassed the Federal Government. This, he said, explains why  the immediate past Chief of Army Staff, General Kenneth Minimah  refused to confirm the findings of both courts-martial contrary to Section 22 of the Armed Forces Act.

    “Thus, by refusing to confirm the findings, General Minimah deliberately  denied the convicted soldiers  the right to challenge their conviction at the Court of Appeal in line with the provisions of the Constitution and the Armed Forces Act,” Falana said.

    The Senior Advocate noted that the military authorities decided to dismiss other soldiers accused of committing  similar offences in the course of prosecuting the war on terror in order to avoid further embarrassment.

    “In view of the injustice which characterised the exercise, we had pleaded with the authorities to review the exercise and  pointed out that the decision to dismiss 1000 young men who had been trained  to handle weapons  was a threat to national security. Our appeal fell on deaf ears.”

  • Between Sagay and Falana: the law, the people and the social cannibalism of corruption (1)

    Between Sagay and Falana: the law, the people and the social cannibalism of corruption (1)

    The first thing we do is kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2

    Doctors are just the same as lawyers; the only difference is that lawyers merely rob you, whereas doctors rob you and kill you too.
    Anton Chekhov, Russian dramatist

    On Saturday, July 13, 2013, I gave a public lecture at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA) under the auspices of the Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism. The lecture was titled “The Freedom of Information Act and the Dictatorship of Corruption and Mediocrity”. In the extensive research that I conducted before writing and delivering the lecture, I came across many facts, figures and statistics that both depressed and enraged me to no end. Of these, no item among my discoveries was as depressing and infuriating as my finding that a Sub-Committee of the House of Representatives had issued a comprehensive report on the oil subsidy mega-scam of 2011 in which the names of all those who had wrongfully and illegally benefitted from the scam had been published, together with the astronomical sums that each of these Nigerians had looted. I swear that before conducting that research for my lecture, I had been completely unaware that the names of the mega-scam looters were known, that they were not shadowy figures who had forever disappeared into the night of personal anonymity and legalistic oblivion. But together with my astonishment that these men and women were known and indeed meticulously identified, there was also my greater frustration that they had all without exception tied up the cases pertaining to their prosecution in the law courts by all manner of so-called “interlocutory injunctions” and “stay of execution” writs. That was in the year 2013. Two years later, the cases are still tied up in the law courts and not a single one of the men and women indicted in that oil subsidy mega-scam has either paid a kobo back or gone to jail. Their lawyers and the judges before whom their cases are being tried have seen to that; they have provided what seems to be a permanent and impregnable juridical cover and protection for these men and women whose looting of our national coffers has caused untold suffering and hardship to millions of Nigerians. In this context, the law may be said to be the last refuge, the last redoubt of the looters who, as human vampires, are sucking the blood from the economic arteries of our national commonweal.

    If the language I am using here seems too emotive, too sensationalistic, I plead guilty to the charge. Even more, I plead guilty to the charge of deliberately clothing myself in a long tradition of savage linguistic and literary critique of lawyers and the law as moral cesspits wherein some of the most unscrupulous and cynical professionals can be found. This is the context that makes the extraordinarily ferocious attack on lawyers in Shakespeare’s Henry VI, Part Two, that supplied the first of the two epigraphs to this piece seem not too harsh, not too extreme: “The first thing we do is kill all the lawyers”. This was said by a character in that play against the background of a looming uprising of the people against centuries of oppression by their social superiors in which lawyers had played a significant role in maintaining the legal infrastructures and practices of a dog-eat-dog social order. I quote the words here in the hope, the wish that the lawyers and the judges who have for long prevented the men and women bleeding our country and its resources dry may perhaps get a glimpse of the sentiments that some of the world’s greatest literary minds have expressed about them and their kind.

    The second epigraph from the great Russian dramatist, Anton Chekhov, seems a tad gentler in its critique of lawyers and the legal profession on the same count of being always prone to acting as accessories to cynical, merciless robbery: “Doctors are just the same as lawyers; the only difference is that lawyers merely rob you, whereas doctors rob you and kill you too”. However, if we juxtapose this ludic and playful Chekhovian quote with the one from Shakespeare’s play, we can see that lawyers, like incompetent and conscienceless doctors, kill too. They “kill”, not directly and interpersonally but by the indirect and epiphenomenal effects and consequences of the legalistic protection and cover that they give their clients, the looters who, it seems, can never be successfully prosecuted in the law courts of the land.

    If all this talk about “killing” seems unwarranted in its application to lawyers and judges that are, after all, merely practicing their lawful profession (no pun intended), please consider the N2.53 trillion naira that was looted in the oil subsidy mega-scam; consider too, the fact that thanks to lawyers and judges, not a kobo of that loot may ever be recovered; and finally, consider the number of lives that could have been saved or made richer and more fulfilled if a fraction of that N2.53 trillion naira had been productively spent to create jobs, build roads, improve hospitals and clinics and raise the quality of teaching in our primary and secondary schools. And indeed, there are no literal cannibals anymore, if ever they existed as a distinct social or “tribal” group; what we have now and have aplenty, thanks to many of our best trained lawyers and judges, are social cannibals who have not the slightest inkling that they are “killing” hundreds of thousands, millions through the sense of total protection that they feel when they loot, and loot, and loot yet again.

    At this stage, it is perhaps time in this discussion to bring into our conversation two lawyers who indeed recently have had much to say on these issues. Moreover, they are eminent, progressive and patriotic lawyers. These are none other than Professor Itse Sagay and Mr. Femi Falana, SAN. In an article published in The Nation on Sunday, July 19, 2015, titled “Politics, Public Service, Morality and Integrity in Nigeria”, Sagay more or less admitted that the law and the manner in which it is applied in our law courts at the present time make it near impossible to recover stolen loot and put an end to rampant corruption. Indeed, so sanguine was Sagay on this point that he was quite willing to go as far as to suspend the protection of the individual rights (of looters), if any headway is to be made in the struggle to recover stolen loot and curb corruption in our society. Perhaps it is best to hear directly from the Professor himself on this point:

    “There will a need to amend our laws to strengthen the state at the expense of individual liberty at least for a short while, if we are to get to redemption point. All legal provisions permitting preliminary objections to prosecutions for corruption must be repealed from our laws. The power of any court to issue an order of injunction against a trial for a crime, particularly corruption, should be repealed. Interlocutory applications, in cases concerning corruption, should be banned.

    You cannot read such words from the pen of a lawyer who is also a teacher of lawyers and still repeat, like a robot, the savage indictment from Shakespeare, “the first thing we do is kill all the lawyers”! For in the struggles against the social cannibalism that is at the root of the corruption that has penetrated so deep into the political, economic and juridical order in our country, some of the most eloquent voices have, in fact, been that of lawyers. As everyone knows, Sagay and Falana have been frontline professional and intellectual activists in those struggles.

    And indeed, the main point of my bringing Sagay and Falana together in this piece is precisely to try to reconcile what seems to me to be a tension, a contradiction between recent pronouncements of both men on this issue of the seemingly immovable obstacle that the law and its operations in our country pose to the fight against corruption by the new administration of President Buhari. On the one hand, Sagay says laws must be repealed and that we may even have to suspend protection of individual liberty, at least for a while. But on the other hand, Falana says that the enabling acts have now been enacted by the National Assembly and that all that is required now is for the bills to be forwarded to Buhari for them to be signed and made into effective laws. How did I come by this information? Well, Falana himself through an email forwarded to me a speech that he recently gave that contained these claims. The speech was a keynote address that he gave at the 7th Annual Distinguished Lecture of the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (Lagos Chapter) on Tuesday, July 21, 2015. The lecture bore the title, “Involvement of the Nigerian people in the anti-corruption war”. Here’s a relevant quotation from the lecture:

    “While the decision of the Federation (sic) Government not to interfere in the work of the anti-graft agencies is a welcome development, the National Assembly should forward to President Buhari for his assent the Witness Protection Bill and the Whistle Blowers’ Bill. The National Assembly deserves commendation for enacting both laws together with the Administration of Justice, 2015.

    Under the new Act, the granting of stay of proceedings and other delay tactics have been banned in the trial of criminal cases. Accordingly, a criminal trial shall be concluded within 6 months unless there are exceptional circumstances which may prolong any trial beyond that period. Indeed, the elevation of trial judges to the Court of Appeal will no longer lead to fresh trial before other judges as judges will be given the fiat to conclude part heard matters.”

    Have the issues raised in Sagay’s article been resolved by the revelation of the passing of new laws by the National Assembly in Falana’s lecture? And is this a matter to be settled only by and among lawyers? These will be our starting points in next week’s concluding piece.

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Falana slams critics of Buhari’s bailout

    Falana slams critics of Buhari’s bailout

    Lagos Lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has condemned critics of President Muhammadu Buhari’s N713.7 billion bailout to states.

    He said those opposing such moves were against the dictates of the Bible that the labourer deserves his wages, adding that those opposing a good life for the poor masses must have their heads examined.

    Falana spoke yesterday at an interactive forum organised by the University of Ibadan campus unions for the 13 vice chancellorship aspirants at the Trenchard Hall. He lamented that the Federal Government had, in the last seven years, spent over N7 trillion as bailout for the parasitic ruling class.

    The legal luminary urged the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) to question the N1.3 trillion intervention fund promised by the last administration of which only N200 billion had been released since 2013.

    His words: “The labourer deserves his wages and anyone challenging the President’s decision must have his head examined. We should be challenging the over N7 trillion bailout given to the comprador-bourgeoisie in the last five years.

    “AMCON was set to take care of the debt of the rich, who took billions from our banks and could not pay back. In one full sweep, N5.6 trillion was taken over by that institution. In the last five years, N780 billion had been given to the Bank of Industry (BoI) to revitalise our ailing industry but where are the industries? N200 billion as Aviation Intervention Fund, N200 billion as Agriculture Intervention Fund, N100 billion as Textile Intervention Fund, N213 billion to those who bought NEPA but leaving us in darkness.”

    Candidates jostling for the post of the vice chancellor included Professors O.O. Layiwola (Institute of African Studies), O.O. Akinyinka (Pediatrics), F.O. Egbokhare (Linguistics and African Languages), B.O. Fagbemi (Veterinary Microbiology and Parasitology).

    Others are Professors L. Popoola (Forest Resources Management), A.I. Olayinka (Geology), A.I. Oluleye (Industrial and Production Engineering), O.D. Olaleye (Virology), A.E. Falaye (Aquaculture and Fisheries Management) and A.A. Agbaje (Political Science).