Tag: Judges

  • Buhari, AGF to court: Dismiss suit challenging arrest of judges

    Buhari, AGF to court: Dismiss suit challenging arrest of judges

    President Muhamadu Buhari, the Director General, Department of State Service (DSS), Lawal Daura and others have faulted a suit challenging the recent arrest of some judges by the DSS.

    The suit by a lawyer, Olukayode Ogungbeje, seeks to among others to restrain the Federal Government from taking further steps in connection with corruption allegations raised against the judges.

    Other defendants in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/809/16 are the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the National Judicial Institute (NJC)

    In their notices of preliminary objection and counter affidavits to the suit, the defendants queried the competence of the suit and prayed the court to dismiss it for lacking in merit.

    Of the six defendants, the IGP and the NJC have not reacted to the case.

    In a joint preliminary objection by President Buhari and the AGF, filed by their lawyer, Chiesonu Okpoko, they argued that the plaintiff, who claimed to have filed the suit on behalf of the affected judges, lacked locus standi (legal right) to approach the court.

    They argued that there was no dispute between the plaintiff and the defendants to warrant his filing the suit.

    The President and the AGF added that “the applicant’s suit as constituted and conceived is a mere academic exercise and raises hypothetical issues”.

    They also argued that before the plaintiff could invoke the judicial powers of the court as enshrined in section 6(6) (b) of the 1999 constitution, he must show how his civil rights and obligations were affected or would be affected by the act complained of.

    In the notice of objection, the DSS and its DG asked the court to strike out suit for lack of jurisdiction.

    They argued that, “the applicant in this matter has no locus standi to institute this suit; and

    “That this court lacks jurisdiction to hear and determine this matter as the applicant in this suit lacks the legal capacity to institute the matter.”

    It a counter-affidavit filed with their objection, the DSS and its DG argued that should the court proceed to restrain then from further taking steps against the arrested judges, it would be tantamount to preventing the agency from performing its statutory duties.

    The counter-affidavit deposed to by a litigation officer at DSS, S. Azer, stated in part, “That granting this application is tantamount to preventing the respondents in this matter from exercising their statutory responsibilities.”

    Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the Federal High Court, Abuja has adjourned hearing of all applications and the substantive suit to December 14.

  • CJN: why we asked judges under probe to step down

    CJN: why we asked judges under probe to step down

    Attorney-Gen. ‘insists on trial’

    Amina Augie, Ejembi Eko join Supreme Court

    Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud Mohammed yesterday explained why the National Judicial Council (NJC) directed judges under probe for criminal allegations to stop sitting pending when their innocence is established.

    The CJN, who is the Chairman of the NJC, explained that the council’s decision was informed by the insistence of the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami (SAN), on prosecuting the judges arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    He said the Judiciary, being a responsible arm of the government, chose not to interfere with the AGF’s exercise of his statutory powers to prosecute.

    Justice Mohammed, who will retire on Thursday, spoke in Abuja yesterday while swearing in Amina Augie and Ejembi Eko as Justices of the Supreme Court.

    He said the Judiciary was mindful of the powers ascribed to each organ of the state under a constitutional democracy. He said the Judiciary was resolute in upholding its independence by adjudicating with utmost fairness and justice as prescribed by the Constitution and the law.

    Said the CJ: “A common thread that runs through all Judiciaries is that judicial officers are traditionally accorded the highest dignity and respect by all. This is because justice is rooted in confidence and where confidence in our judges is undermined and independence eroded, it is the nation that ultimately suffers most while true democracy is fatally undermined.

    “Certainly, the decision of the National Judicial Council at its last meeting reflects our desire to preserve this independence. Hence, we proclaimed to the world that any judicial officer that is standing trial will cease to perform judicial functions.

    “The council took this stand following communications it received from the Hon. Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice that he was embarking on the prosecution of the affected judicial officers for the offences disclosed against them from the evidence on the ground.

    “We must not forget that we operate a constitutional democracy, which clearly prescribes the powers accorded to each organ of the state.

    “I therefore wish to state without fear of contradiction that the third arm of government will remain resolute in its commitment and resolve to uphold its independence and to adjudicate with utmost fairness and justice as prescribed in our Constitution and law.”

    Justice Mohammed, who noted that Justice Augie and Justice Eko were joining the Supreme Court bench “at a time when there are a lot of challenges”, said he trusted their capacity to cope.

    The CJN urged the new Justices to, more than ever before, “firm, honest and steadfast in the discharge of your duties, while striving to emulate the greats of this court by enthroning the rule of law and respect for our courts.

    “I charge you to continue to be diligent in the discharge of your duties. You must remain blind to personality and status and remain the hope of all men, whether common or uncommon.

    “Hence, the integrity and impartiality of our court must not be in question or compromised. I am confident that, with the institutions and initiatives that we have put in place, the Nigerian Judiciary will evolve to meet the high standards demanded by our citizens,” the CJN said.

  • Senior lawyers hail NJC’s decision on judges under probe

    Senior lawyers hail NJC’s decision on judges under probe

    The National Judicial Council’s (NJC) decision that judges under probe should step down has received commendation from some senior lawyer, who said it was the right step to take at the moment.

    Ahmed Raji (SAN), Ifedayo Adedipe (SAN), Beluolisa Nwofor (SAN) and law teacher Wahab Shittu said the decision by the NJC would further strengthen public confidence in the judicial process and save the affected judges from unnecessary embarrassment.

    Raji said: “There is nothing wrong with that. I think it is to infuse public confidence in the judicial system. That they have been asked to step down did not mean they have been sacked or suspended.

    “What the NJC said is: ‘don’t sit.’ That is not suspension. And it did not mean that they have been sacked. It is a normal procedure in civil service. It is called interdiction.”

    Adedipe said: “Ideally, because the judiciary occupies a peculiar position in our society, there is a higher expectation of morality on its part.

    “So, if any judge, for whatever reason, is or even tangentially, accused of a conduct that is incompatible with his status as a judge, I think he should stay aside and have the matter investigated and concluded before starting to sit.

    “I believe that decision by the NJC is a correct decision. My view is that our society is in this problem because we have not been applying the right sanctions as at when due.

    “If a judge is accused of bribery or what have you, I think the proper thing for him to do is to recuse himself pending the resolution of the case. It does not mean that he has been found guilty, but you are setting a standard for the society.”

    Nwofor said: “To me the decision of the NJC on the issue is a right one. Never mind that the Senate President and some other politicians, who are accused of one offence or the other, have refused to step aside.

    “The Judiciary should show good example. It should be ahead of the other two arms in showing the proper way things should be done.”

    Shittu said the NJC’s directive would engender integrity, confidence in the judiciary and adjudicating processes.

    He said the decision of the council should, however, not be misconstrued that it was trying to protect the judges.

    He said: “The NJC’s decision has nothing to do with the presumption of innocence of the indicted judges in respect of their investigation and trials.

    “It is a correct decision to take in the circumstances because justice is rooted in public confidence. I don’t think it would be healthy for litigants to appear before justice who are under investigation.”

    Shittu added: “What the NJC has decided should not be interpreted as  amounting to suspending the judges, but it should be seen in the light of suspending the sittings of the judges because their remunerations and other prerequisites will still be  paid.

    “But what is suspended is not the person of the judges, but the sittings and other judicial functions, while they still retain their salaries and other entitlements.”

    The law lecturer advised that it was important and useful to maintain an open mind in respect of what was unfolding.

    “I think it would be prejudicial to rush into hasty conclusions about the guilt or innocence of the affected judges. What we should insist upon is that they should be treated fairly in line with the rules until we get to the root of this matter.

    “The trial process should be speedily and what the government itself is doing should not be misunderstood in the light of the fact that government is fighting corruption and not fighting the judiciary. Since corruption itself belongs to all human strata of the society, an attack on any institution should not be seen as a direct attack on that institution.

    “The judiciary will always remain and the principles that the judiciary subscribe to in term of fairness, impartiality, independence and all the fine attributes of the judiciary will remain. Those who are likely to collapse are those who are found wanting in the discharge of their functions. The judiciary can never be rubbished.”

     

  • NJC bars judges under probe from further sitting

    NJC bars judges under probe from further sitting

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) has barred judges currently being investigated for criminal offences from further presiding over cases and performing other functions relating to their offices pending when their innocence was established.

    NJC made the decision at its 79th meeting held in Abuja between Wednesday and Thursday.

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President, Abubakar Mahmud (SAN) had while speaking at a function in Abuja last week, suggested that judges recently arrested by the Department State Services (DSS) be made to step down until their cases were determined.

    The NJC responded, claiming it lacked the powers to order judges, against who allegations were made without any evidence provided to back such allegations, to cease to serve.

    The council was however silent, in a statement it issued yesterday, on the reason for its sudden change of mind.

    Part of the statement signed by NJC’s Acting Director, Information, reads: “Council decided that Judicial officers shall not be standing trial for alleged corruption related offences and be performing judicial functions at the same time.

    “Council however decided that it will ensure that judicial officers, who are being investigated for alleged high profile criminal offences do not perform judicial functions until their cases are concluded,” it said.

    The statement added that the NJC “at its 79th meeting held on the 2nd and 3rd day of November 2016, commenced implementation of specific aspects of the National Judicial Policy which came into force in April 2016 and was launched on Monday 24th  October, 2016.

    “During the Meeting, Council set-up a Transparency and Anti-Corruption Policy Implementation Committee as follows:

    *Hon Justice E. O. Ayoola, CON (Rtd Justice of the Supreme Court) – Chairman.

    *Hon Justice Kashim Zannah, Chief Judge of Borno State – Member.

    *A. B. Mahmoud, SAN, President Nigeria Bar Association – Member.

    “Section 6 of the National Judicial Policy aims at putting in place multifaceted strategies and guidelines that will ensure transparency and eliminate corruption in the Judiciary.

    “It seeks, amongst other measures, to provide a platform and opportunity to citizens who profess factual and credible knowledge of information on the nature and modalities of corruption in the judicial system to ventilate such.”

  • Seven accused judges are entitled to fair hearing – CJN

    Seven accused judges are entitled to fair hearing – CJN

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud Mohammed, has said that the seven judges, like all other persons, are entitled to a fair hearing as stipulated in Section 36 of the constitution.

    The CJN was quoted as stating this in a letter which was sent to Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) in a statement issued on Tuesday in Abuja by Mr Timothy Adewale, SERAP Senior Staff Attorney.

    The letter, dated Oct. 26, 2016, was signed by H. S. Sa’eed, Senior Special Assistant to the CJN.

    Mohammed’s remark was in response to SERAP’s request that he as Chairman of the NJC, should take over the cases of the seven judges from the Department of State Service (DSS).

    The CJN stated that there were clear constitutional provisions relating to the power of any individual, institution or arms of government which must be adhered to.

    He said that the NJC could neither handover corrupt judges to law enforcement agencies for prosecution nor recover proceeds of corruption.

    He also explained that the NJC could merely make actionable recommendations upon its findings as it had always done.

    Mohammed said that in the exercise of its constitutional mandate, the NJC had enacted the Judicial Discipline Regulations, 2014.

    This, he said, was to ensure that petitions are received, investigated and addressed as appropriate.

    According to SERAP’s report, 64 judicial officers have been disciplined in the last five years.

    The CJN maintained that “the seven Judges, like all other persons, are entitled to a fair hearing as stipulated in Section 36 of the constitution.

    “As such, it will be presumptive and indeed pre-emptive to sanction the said judges without exhausting the proper procedure for their removal,” Mohammed stated.

    He expressed delight with SERAP’s dedication to justice, fairness and justness, stressing that it was the collective responsibility of all to tackle any perceived challenge facing the Nigerian judiciary.

    The CJN also stated that with the support of well-meaning Nigerians and SERAP, a transparent, fair and equitable justice system would be attained.

    Mohammed urged SERAP to continue to strive to support and entrench good governance in the country. (NAN)

  • Buhari: I’ve never asked anybody to induce judges

    Buhari: I’ve never asked anybody to induce judges

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday dismissed insinuations that he asked anyone to induce judges to pervert the course of Justice.

    He also said he had nothing to do with the travails of more than 12 judges, including two Justices of the Supreme Court.

    The President made the clarification through a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu.

    Those under investigation by the Department of State Service (DSS) are two Supreme Court Justices Sylvester Ngwuta and Inyang Okoro; the suspended Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Ilorin Division, Justice Mohammed Ladan Tsamiya, who was picked up in Sokoto; Justice Adeniyi Ademola( Federal High Court); the Chief Judge of Enugu State, Justice I. A. Umezulike;  Justice Kabiru Auta of Kano State High Court;  Justice Muazu Pindiga (Gombe State High Court);  Justice Bashir Sukola and  Justice Ladan Manir, from the Kaduna State High Court.

    Of the nine judges, the NJC has recommended sanctions for Justice Mohammed Ladan Tsamiya; the erstwhile Chief Judge of Enugu State, Justice I. A. Umezulike; and Justice Kabiru Auta.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission( EFCC) is investigating the following judges of the Federal High Court: Justices Mohammed Nasir Yunusa; Hyeladzira Ajiya Nganjiwa; Musa Haruna Kurya; Agbadu James Fishim; Uwani Abba Aji; and Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia.

    Justice Okoro had claimed that a Minister approached him and said the President was interested in the outcome of the election petitions in Akwa Ibom and Rivers states.

    But the President yesterday said he had never approached any judge to win his cases between 2003 and 2011.

    The statement said: “President Muhammadu Buhari would be the last person to authorise anybody to induce a judge to pervert the course of justice.

    “Despite his personal familiarity with some court judges, the President had never used that familiarity to seek favours from them from 2003, 2007 and 2011 when he was challenging the fairness of the presidential election results, from the lowest to the highest courts in the land during the periods in question.

    “As a politician, Buhari had never once ever suggested to his lawyers to approach any judge for assistance to win his cases. The President lives by this principle and has never deviated from it.”

    On the fate of the Judges facing corruption allegations, the Presidential Media Aide said: “The President doesn’t tell Courts how to do their jobs and that anybody accused of corruption is protected by law to defend their innocence.

    “The  purpose of the law is to punish the guilty and acquit the innocent. The law protects the rights of  everyone.

    “The President doesn’t have any powers to force any court to convict anybody who is innocent. In a democratic society that cannot happen without resistance by the people.”

     

  • Don’t link Buhari to Judges’ arrest-Presidency

    The Presidency at the weekend advised journalists and other Nigerians to stop linking President Muhammadu Buhari to the legal travails of some recently arrested Judges in the country.

    According to a statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, President Buhari would be the last person to authorize anybody to induce a Judge to pervert the course of justice.

    He pointed out that the President had never used his personal familiarity with some court Judges to seek favours from them in 2003, 2007 and 2011 when he was challenging the fairness of the presidential election results, through the lowest to the highest courts in the land.

    The Senior Special Assistant also explained that, as a politician, Buhari had never once ever suggested to his lawyers to approach any Judge for assistance to win his cases.

    According to him, the President is living by this principle and has never deviated from it.

    On the fate of the Judges facing corruption allegations, he said the President doesn’t tell Courts how to do their jobs and that anybody accused of corruption is protected by law to defend their innocence.

    The purpose of the law, he said, is to punish the guilty and acquit the innocent, noting that the law projects the rights everyone.

    Malam Garba Shehu said the President doesn’t have any powers to force any court to convict anybody who is innocent, arguing that in a democratic society, that cannot happen without resistance by the people.

  • Lagos CJ charges customary court presidents, judges to be fair to all

    Lagos State Chief Judge, Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade Wednesday charged judges of the customary courts to be fair and sincere to parties in the dispensation of justice.

    Justice Atilade gave the charge at the opening of a retreat/workshop organized for customary court presidents and judges by the Lagos State Judiciary Service Commission (JSS) and held at the Public Service Staff Development Centre ( PSSDC) , Magodo, Lagos, with the theme “Attaining excellence in the dispensation of justice”.

    Justice Atilade said: “judges must display utmost fairness and candor in the discharge of your duties.

    “Part of the purpose for setting up the customary courts is to do substantial justice to contending parties without recourse to the rigours , harshness and technicalities of the common law,” she stressed.

    She also admonished them to dispense justice with utmost sincerity and equity and not to assume jurisdiction over matters in which they have been precluded by the law and powers and functions of their courts.

    Rather, she advised them to be mindful of the fact that their role, as judicial officers, is to ensure justice within the sphere of their jurisdiction.

    ” You need to conduct yourself always in a manner befitting of your status and in accordance with the ethics and standard required of you,” she said.

    The Chief Judge remarked that the two day retreat was to enhance the human capacity and equip the requisite skills of the judges, and make customary courts vibrant and more responsive at the grassroots.

    She reminded the judges that the “people are watching and will not fail to keep watch over every step you take, your actions and inactions”.

    The Executive Secretary of Judicial Service Commission (JSC), Mrs Ayodele Odugbesan, in her address after the retreat, expressed confidence that the judges would have been well trained and equipped to carry out their duties as required by the law.

  • Are judges above the law?

    Are judges above the law?

    The current debate, in Nigeria, as to who is supreme between the judge and the law is significant because it will indeed move the country forward. We have already heard the two contenders and their supporters. We take the National Judicial Council as the first contender, while the federal government of President Muhammadu Buhari is the second contender. So you can justly say that it is a dialogue between the executive arm of government and the judiciary.

    Now lets’ briefly summarise their position. As I can gather from the press, the position of NJC is that judges are sacred cows, if not demigods. They can do no wrong. And if per chance they transgress, we have an internal procedure to deal with that. This in-house discipline in the most extreme case of corruption attracts dismissal or retirement of the earring judge. So that he will go home safely to enjoy the sweat of his labour. NJC calls its powers: EXCLUSIVE CONSTITUTIONAL DISCIPLINARY POWERS OVER JUDICIAL OFFICERS, (See THE NATION, October 14, page 45.)

    On the contrary, the position of the government seems to be that judges are bound by the laws of the land, which they administer to others. If there are grave allegations bordering on criminality levelled against a judge, the normal laws of the land, which they administer, prevail over in-house discipline. Now, many lawyers have spoken including the NBA either for or against both parties.

    Leaving sentiments aside, I believe the issue at stake is a serious one because it bothers on the RULE OF LAW, DEMOCRACY AND JUSTICE. This issue touches the foundation of our existence as a nation. It is not just the dignity or otherwise of the judicial officer.

    It would appear from the opinions expressed that many in our society have not fully embraced the idea of a democratic government whose anchor point is the doctrine of the Rule of law and Equality before the law. We are still operating a caste society while the rest of the world, including India and the United States, are tearing them apart. We cannot talk about isolating and insulating judges from the law of the land which they apply to others. Equality before the law is the foundation of a democratic society and of the Rule of law. Without this, democracy becomes just a label.

    From the beginning of time, a choice had to be made between man and the law. The Greek Philosopher, Plato, realizing the predilections of man preferred philosopher kings to rule. But when later in life he realized, there were few and far between, he cast his vote on the law. His disciple, Aristotle, having examined the matter in greater detail, said something which has been quoted for thousands of years: “He who bids the law rule, may be deemed to bid God and reason rule, but he who bids man rule, adds an element of the beast; for desire is a wild beast, and passion perverts the minds of rulers, even when they are the best of men. The law is reason unaffected by desire”.

    One of the most able men the English legal system had produced was Francis Bacon. He was a philosopher, scientist, scholar, and above all the Lord Chancellor of England. Bacon was the son of a judge. Yet as the Lord Chancellor, allegations of corruption trailed him. The Lord Chancellor is our equivalent of the Chief Justice of Nigeria, yet the English people did not sweep those allegations under the carpet, as would be done in Nigeria. There was proper investigation and a 23-count charge drawn up. He was tried. And he admitted his guilt and pleaded for leniency. He was not shown any leniency. He was imprisoned in the Tower of London and fined £40,000 in 1621, and stripped of all titles. Bacon was openly disgraced and thus began the era of a sane judiciary for England. His father’s mansion was sold to recover the fine. That is the rule of law. The judges in England became aware that if this could happen to the Lord Chancellor then. The book called Famous Trials reports this and other cases.

    Condoning or shielding corruption is the worst thing you can do to a country. The image of the judiciary is not and cannot be enhanced by shielding corrupt – judges. Today, many Nigerians including the corrupt ones prefer to run away from the country to other lands where they can dwell in safety. Why is this so? Law and order has broken down. The rule of law index is almost zero as published by the World Bank.

    For many decades I have practiced law in Nigeria in many jurisdictions. I have seen very good judges, the not too good, and the ignorant. Who can impeach the character of great stars life Chief Judge Okokon Ita of Cross River State Judiciary or Chief Judge, Edet Robert Nkop of Akwa Ibom Judiciary. A good judge carries his dignity and respect with him everywhere, even when they are no longer on our planet. See all the tributes written about JIC Taylor. They continue to live.

    In jurisprudence, there are two schools of thought regarding this matter. The first is positivism, otherwise called mechanical jurisprudence. They believe the judge is next to God. He can do no wrong. He applies the law mechanically without his human side intervening. But the second school, called the Realist Movement, headed by judge, Jerome Frank, demur. Frank in his famous book – Courts On Trial, discloses that judges are human, and that much harm is done by the myth that merely by putting on a black robe and taking the oath of office as a judge, a man ceases to be human.

    He continues: “Experience discloses that those corrupt judges make the greatest pretence of the purely mechanical working of the courts, through the application of rules, when they decide cases. Then we see that the judging process, in the case of his decisions, actually began with conclusions, which were brought and paid for, and that the rule and facts were deliberately chosen by him, so as dishonestly to justify predetermined purchased decisions”.

    The book ends on this note: “Democracy must indeed fail unless our courts try cases fairly and there can be no fair trial before a judge lacking in impartiality and disinterestedness. For in a democracy, the courts belong not to the judges and the lawyers, but to the citizens, (Courts On Trial, 411, 413, 429 (1950).

    In some states in Nigeria, what do we find? The husband is the Chief Judge while the wife is the Chief Registrar of the court, making the judiciary a family property. Do we not find lawyers who run errands for judges and collect money for them? The papers have reported so much of this even among senior lawyers. When we talk about corruption, there are many facets. My experience in Nigerian courts shows that much work needs to be done to give our people a true sense of justice. Judicial corruption will not vanish overnight because of our complex system of doing things. Sometimes the fight for corruption is TARGETED and very SELECTIVE. But if every judge is made to know that there is no hiding place, they will be circumspect, and over time, we will have a sane society. A corrupt judge is worse than Boko Haram. He is like a housewife turned prostitute. She has renounced her wedlock by conduct and loses all respect even among those that paid the bribe.

    The dignity of the judicial office is inherent. Those who do well live with their dignity and even when they are gone, their glory never depart.

     

    • Afangideh, an expert in Comparative Law writes from United States of America.

     

  • ‘NJC can’t probe criminal acts by judges’

    Prof Bolaji Owasanoye is the Executive Secretary of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), a seven-man think-tank with the mandate to drive the anti-corruption crusade. A two-time Director of Research at the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS), he is the first person to be conferred with the institute’s Taslim Elias Distinguished Professor of Law. Owasanoye has taught at the Lagos State University (LASU), NIALS, University of London School of Oriental and African Studies (as professorial research associate) and University of Pretoria (as visiting professor). He has consulted for the World Bank, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and International Labour Organsation (ILO), among others. In this interview with JOSEPH JIBUEZE, he speaks on how Nigeria can win the war against corruption and sundry issues.

    Are you disappointed that the judges accused of corruption have not stepped down?

    Once they are arraigned, the proper thing to do is for them to stop sitting, because in the eyes of the public it’ll be as if they are in fact sitting as judges in their own courts even though the cases are not before them. It will not be in consonance with practices elsewhere. More importantly, it helps to safeguard the integrity of the institution. There’s nothing stopping the judges from saying: I want to clear my name. Until I have done so, I don’t want to sit. Unfortunately, that culture is lacking in our society. But we must also recognise that we’ve adopted a culture of dispute resolution that uses the courts and we’ve placed the judges on a high pedestal. Judges are called ‘My Lord’ because they’re next to God. We deify them virtually. No matter how young a judge is, we bow and show reverence to him. All of that culture needs to be preserved.

    What about arguments that they are presumed innocent?

    Once you have a situation whereby a judge is arraigned and is docked today, and tomorrow the judge sits and others bow before him – there’s something wrong with that. But if that judge clears his name, it reaffirms and reinforces the position that he has the integrity to continue to preside. This is just the principle behind it. It is not strange in the profession. It’s happened in other countries; there’s no reason it shouldn’t happen here. The fact that it happens in other areas and people don’t step down – we should not equate them to judges, because those people don’t have the power of life and death. Judges do. That’s why we fear and revere judges. Once they step out of that arena of integrity and respect, a different rule ought to apply.

    What’s your take on calls for the reform of the NJC?

    The composition of the National Judicial Council (NJC) is constitutional. However, having tried and used that mechanism for a while now, we can see the weaknesses. I think there’s a need to have an infusion of more members of the Bar in the NJC, and independents who are not judicial officers. Others have written that the NJC, as it is, is too pro-Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN). In other words, the power of the CJN to identify and nominate almost 50 per cent of the members does not make for a very healthy institution. Going forward, this should be one of the areas of reflection towards strengthening the organisation.

    How can this be done?

    This will involve bringing in more representatives from the Bar, not nominated by the CJN and not just nominated by the leadership of the Bar, but people who are widely elected by the profession itself so that we don’t transfer what we regard as the wide powers of the NJC leadership to the Bar and then they put their friends and cronies and we still don’t achieve anything. If we must reform NJC, then the NBA must have a representation in the NJC that is very robust. The way they select members must also be democratic so that people don’t just put their friends there, which won’t serve any purpose.

    What about NJC’s disciplinary powers?

    Looking at the jurisdiction of the NJC, recent happenings have shown that its capacity to deal with everything affecting judges is somewhat limited. It’s easy for NJC to deal with things like petitions against judges, that they are not sitting, or that they engaged in misconduct, abused their powers or did not follow statutory or constitutional guidelines about certain things. But if it’s a much more serious allegation of criminality, the NJC does not have the power to investigate. The present approach involves inviting the petitioner and the judge and then asking: ‘Did you collect money from this guy?’ Naturally, nobody will say ‘yes’. They’ll deny it. And that’s the end of the power of the NJC to investigate.

    What is the best solution?

    In situations where a judge is accused of committing a criminal act, my humble view, with recent happenings, is for the NJC to allow a statutory agency to investigate. The NJC could refer the case to a law enforcement agency if it’s something the NJC doesn’t have the capacity to deal with. If a judge is accused of amassing wealth, where’s the NJC’s capacity to investigate it? If a judge is accused of having assets all over the world, the NJC does not have the capacity to investigate that. It ought not to be writing to law enforcement agencies all over the world asking them to give it intelligence reports about a certain person. This is the job of other anti-corruption agencies through which Nigeria operates mutual legal assistance provisions. So, the clear, obvious, rational, logical thing to do is for the NJC to refer such issues to the relevant agencies. The majority of judges are honest and hard working; working against the grain of poor infrastructure and poor remuneration and they bear it with equanimity. The few not acting in accordance to their oath are the ones who denigrate the system. So, clearly, what has come out in recent times shows that the capacity of the NJC to deal with this thing is obviously limited and it needs to work with other agencies of government to solve that problem.

    Do you agree with suggestions that the CJN should not be the chairman of the NJC, to avoid conflict of interest? 

    There are arguments for and against. Personally I don’t see anything wrong with the CJN being chairman of the NJC. He or she would be the leader of the judiciary in the country. But what we need to do is to balance the composition. There’s nothing wrong in having an NJC that has representations from the three arms of government. If we have a situation where the CJN is accused of impropriety and the matter is sent before the NJC, then the CJN should not preside over that meeting. That body should appoint somebody to act as chairman so that the CJN won’t be a judge in his own case. There is need for a lot of independents who won’t rubber-stamp the CJN’s views.

    Do you think the judiciary should account to Nigerians how it spends its funds, and can failure to do this lead to corruption?

    Certainly it can. We support improving the welfare of judges and increasing the judiciary’s financial allocation based on verifiable needs. But it is also important that all the arms of government, including the legislature, must account for the money they collect. It’s public funds. If the executive can account for its expenditure, why can’t the judiciary and the legislature? It will simply help the advocacy for more funding, because if there are gaps in the resourcing, it is easier to make the case. Accountability does not remove from the independence of the judiciary. They develop their budget and decide how it’s going to be spent, but they should account to the public as to how the money was spent. This also applies to the legislature. The Auditor-General of the Federation has constitutional responsibility to audit the accounts of all arms of government. This should be encouraged. There’s nothing wrong with the judiciary publishing a detailed annual account that shows how much was spent on remuneration of judicial officers, the number of judicial officers, how much it spent on infrastructure, how much it has spent on resourcing the courts. It’s then easier to scrutinise such reports. It’s helpful to the image and integrity of the judiciary for it to, on its own volition, audit itself and publish the report so that it can be interrogated.

    How does the plea bargain manual that PACAC has produced address public concerns?

    Plea bargain is not an initiative of PACAC. It’s statutory. What we have done is to create a framework for anti-corruption agencies and the government to take advantage of what is in the law. The lawmakers put plea bargaining in the laws after debates because they found merit in it. The plea bargain framework that we have recommended creates safeguards at every level. It does not say there will be no prosecution. It does not say you will return a little and keep the rest. In fact, it’s the other way round. If you’re about to enter a plea bargain, you have an obligation to put everything on the table. So, if the government finds that somebody who opted for a plea bargain agreement had withheld information, the agreement becomes inoperative.

    What’s the court’s role in a plea bargain?

    Under the law, the judge has the final say. Plea bargain does not exclude the oversight of the court. And it must be in the public interest, which the framework we designed ensures. We have also said that certain categories of cases are regarded as high profile. If it’s a case involving theft of public funds, a politically exposed person, affects the economy or has international dimension even if by a private person, it is regarded as high profile. The standard of plea bargaining for them is higher and stricter. It is not a closet arrangement between the defence and prosecution. First, the agreement will be in writing and it must go before the court. If the court is dissatisfied or feels it is not in the interest of the state, the court can reject it. Plea bargain does not cut off judicial review of some sort. It also requires the approval of the Attorney-General. So, these different levels of scrutiny ensure the state is not shortchanged. The misconception that plea bargain is designed to help the rich escape justice is not true at all.

    Why do some corruption cases still drag despite the ACJA’s provisions for day-to-day trial and no stay of proceedings?

    We think that the judges and lawyers, especially defence lawyers, have not been giving effect to the spirit and letter of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (2015). As a revolutionary legislation it was designed to diminish all of the anomalies in criminal justice administration. But, judges are still tolerant of dilatory tactics of defence counsel. One good example is a judge accepting that different lawyers in a defence team would cross-examine one witness for close to a month. It’s unacceptable and intolerable. It completely undermines the principle behind the enactment of the ACJA.

    What’s the way out of this problem?

    One of the things that must be done is for us to track cases to see whether or not there is compliance with the provisions of the Act. The Act provides for a fixed number of adjournments. There must be reasonable timing. More importantly, it encourages that when a case starts, there’s a case management procedure in which the court would ask the prosecution and the defence how many witnesses they have, how much time they need, and the judge then specifies how many days would be given each team. This eliminates the possibility of cross-examining for three months. Once the case management framework is agreed upon, the judge then looks at his diary and a time-table is drawn and the public has an idea of when a case starts and when it’ll finish. This is what happens elsewhere. But that is not happening. Hardly do we have case management at the beginning, which leaves room for lawyers to continue to use dilatory tactics. This needs to change.

    There was a controversy when the NBA president suggested that the EFCC be stripped of its prosecutorial powers. Do you agree with him?

    Certainly, we do not agree with the NBA because the basis of that recommendation has not been proven or justified. There are many agencies that have prosecutorial powers. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is not the only one. The NBA did not explain to anyone why it singled out the EFCC. The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), the Police, Customs and National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) all have prosecutorial powers. Why the EFCC alone? Second, whatever the mischief NBA thought would be cured by recommending the stripping of EFCC of its prosecutorial powers, will it be solved by creating a single agency and giving it prosecutorial powers? Third, in most democracies, you have multiple agencies that have powers and you don’t want to saddle one agency. All of them are specialised and people who prosecute from those perspectives have special skills.

    Is there anything wrong with having a single agency to prosecute?

    With one prosecutorial agency, you’ll have a jack of all trade, master of none. I think that the NBA did not fully come out with why it made this awkward and surprising recommendation. It needs to justify that recommendation with facts and very credible evidence that takes us forward and not backward. If there are issues with the EFCC, I don’t think we should throw away the baby with the bathwater. It is for the NBA to come up with other solid recommendations towards reforming the EFCC. It’s been found that, because that model of having a separate agency investigating and another prosecuting was not working, it is better to house both investigative and prosecutorial capacities in one agency where they can work together in synergy.

    Speaking of NBA, are you satisfied with its disciplinary capacity?

    The NBA itself has admitted that there are weaknesses in its disciplinary mechanism. There’s no doubt it needs to be improved.

    Who makes up the National Prosecutions Team?

    In the past, the Ministry of Justice farmed out cases to private lawyers. The result is that many of the cases were never concluded and are still not concluded. It denied the state counsel of any opportunity to gain experience and to learn. In many cases the fees were paid, but government did not get any value for money. So there was need for a paradigm shift, for the state as much as possible to reduce the farming out of cases to private counsel because it was a cesspool of corruption where cases were farmed out to friends. What needs to be done is to build the capacity of in-house counsel. We could have a mixed approach whereby experienced private counsel team up with in-house counsel to prosecute cases. This is what we recommended and that is the model now being used in the national prosecutions team made up of experienced external counsel who will work with in-house counsel so that if for any reason the external counsel decides to go, they don’t go away with the files and there’ll be some institutional memory about the case within the government circle. We’re happy the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) is taking this forward in establishing the national prosecutions team.

    Most judges write down everything during trial, which contributes to delays. Any plan to equip the courts with electronic recorders?

    In the Anti-Corruption Action Plan that we have developed, we have very robust chapters or sections on not only improving infrastructure for the judiciary, but also welfare. We recognise that hardworking judges need to be well remunerated. The work environment must be conducive. The introduction of electronic recorders is just one of the things that have been suggested. In today’s world, we don’t think it is salutary for judges to be taking record of proceedings in long hand. It delays the trial, and it has a deleterious impact on the health of the judge. It’s been said that some judges suffer arthritis due to a long career of writing in long hand. We have recommended significant improvement in the infrastructure that supports the work of judges.

    How can inter-agency rivalries be avoided in the prosecution of corruption cases?

    It must be recognised that as the Chief Law Officer, the AGF has a supervisory role over all prosecutions. We recognise that there are statutes that give powers to other agencies to prosecute, but the AGF has constitutional powers to take over proceedings so that inter-agency rivalries and clashes in court really should not occur. If an agency initiates a case, the AGF has the right to take over. Under the present dispensation the AGF is providing some direction to ensure this sort of thing doesn’t occur.

    Some have said only a revolution can cure this country of corruption. Can the battle be won?

    I think it’s a battle that can be won, but it’s not that we’ll eliminate corruption 100 per cent. I think that you can significantly diminish corruption. There’s no country where there’s no corruption, even some countries that top Transparency International index, but it’s very, very low. Granted, the progress and pace are very slow and extremely frustrating. The people are disenchanted. But if we stay the course, if the government remains focused, and there’s buy-in from the public, it’s not impossible. It’s in our interest. The alternative is chaos and anarchy. Corruption has brought us this low. It’s responsible for Nigeria’s low economic development, low level of our GDP, for us being rated as a third-world country; it affects the growth of our democracy and our reputation. Even for accomplished Nigerians who are internationally recognised, once you identify yourself as a Nigerian, people may sigh and wonder how such brilliant people emerged from such a dysfunctional society. So it’s really in our own interest to fight corruption. I have hope that it can be diminished if we have the stamina, the consistency, the focus, the political will. And if we don’t shift, I think that ultimately Nigeria will win the war against corruption.

    What is the role of citizens?

    The battle against corruption cannot be won except the people buy into it. If the people buy into it, they’re not doing so for President Buhari. We’re certainly not doing what we’re doing because the President wills it. PACAC believes that corruption has a deleterious effect on our economy and wellbeing. Corruption has killed people in their prime from minor ailments that could be treated free elsewhere. Corruption is responsible for high level of unemployment and the almost virtual collapse of the educational sector. It’s responsible for bad roads because people steal the money meant to fix them. It’s responsible for the escalation of kidnapping. We should not assume that kidnappers are happy in that vocation. It’s corruption that led to the stealing of pension funds so that our retirees cannot retire in peace. It’s corruption that is diminishing the capacity of children to take care of their elderly parents. We’ve got to recognise that corruption is a push factor for so many other social vices. If Nigerian citizens join the fight, they’re not necessarily doing the government a favour. We’re actually doing ourselves a favour. We’re creating an environment that is conducive for our own future and for the future of our children. If we’ll take a broader view of what corruption is doing to us, I don’t think that anybody needs to be preached to. We have seen progressively more primitive and prebendal ways of committing impunity. Before, people would make effort to legitimise corruption; these days they don’t even bother. We need to really do a U-turn and recognise that corruption affects all of us in very negative ways. We’re all victims – both the rich and the poor, both those working hard for their money or not – we all have a collective duty to stand together to fight corruption.