Tag: judicial system

  • We need to rethink the judicial system

    We need to rethink the judicial system

    Sir: A young boy, Segun Olowookere, was sentenced to death by hanging for stealing a fowl and eggs in Osun State, Nigeria. For 14 years, he languished in prison until the Governor of Osun State intervened on December 17 to grant him a pardon. He was sentenced alongside Morakinyo Sunday, an accomplice, with whom he allegedly committed the crime using weapons.

    I have read thoughts justifying that crimes of armed robbery are punishable by death and how the case above ended is very worrisome. However, this tragic case shows the dysfunction and moral failings of the Nigerian judicial system, where those entrusted with upholding justice often become its greatest threats. It is unthinkable that judges, lawyers, and court officials are the greatest threats to the justice system in Nigeria.

    This piece does not suggest that the judge, in the case above, was induced to jail the young Nigerians. It only points to the systemic abnormalities in our judiciary. The pattern is distressing, with an alarming number of judicial officers indicted for misconduct over the years. Even in 2024, judges continue to face sacking, warnings or forced retirement for unethical practices. These are facts that are public knowledge but often ignored.

    In Foundation for Investigative Journalism (FIJ)’S report, “a 2023 observation by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS) found that judges were Nigeria’s biggest bribe recipients, collecting N721 billion in cash bribes.”

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    Returning to the case of Segun Olowookere, the question remains: how does the nation compensate for the 14 years stolen from his life? How does it repair the damage done to his family, his future, and his dignity? This is not just about Segun. It is an indictment of a system that fails its citizens, especially the most vulnerable. Without systemic reforms and accountability, similar injustices will persist, leaving more lives irreparably damaged. How many more individuals like Segun Olowookere are languishing in prisons, forgotten by society and trapped in a system that prioritises punishment over justice? How many innocent lives are wasting away due to the negligence, corruption, and inefficiency of the judicial system? And how many judicial officers continue to enrich themselves at the expense of the innocent, feeding fat on the blood of vulnerable Nigerians? How can we claim to uphold the rule of law when the very custodians of justice betray its principles?

    It is high time the Nigerian legal system dropped that colonial wig and other antiquated symbolic remnants; let us think for ourselves, a justice system that truly serves the people, rooted in fairness and equity.

    •Matthew Alugbin, PhD,Edo State University, Uzairue

  • Lawyers advocate synergy to restore confidence in judicial system

    Lawyers advocate synergy to restore confidence in judicial system

    The Chairman, Caretaker Committee of The Nigerian Bar Association(NBA), Eti-OSA Branch, Olawale Ajia, has appealed to stakeholders to sustain a synergy to arrest the rot and restore public confidence in the judicial system.

    He said this at the inaugural meeting of the first elected executive committee that took place at the Justice Christopher Segun Courthouse, Ado-Badore Road, Ajah, Lagos.

    He added that six executive committee members were elected, while the other four posts vacant will be contested for at a by-election very soon.

    The event was a culmination of stakeholders’ effort in helping the public to get better dispensation of justice. According to Ajia, access to the court is not only costly and restricted, corruption and perversion of justice has caused loss of confidence in the judicial system.

    He said: “The first and most effective step is to rejig the perception and attitude of Nigerians at all levels about our country and what we owe her in the overall interest of the present and future generations.

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    “The bar in particular needs to pay more attention to improving the welfare of young lawyers in order to discourage the resort to unprofessional conduct in the desperate bid to make ends meet,” he added.

    The First Chairman-Elect, NBA, Eti-Osa, Adewale Sanni, said that bringing up the new branch is an actualisation of a long dream and expectation for the community and its members, that justice would come closer to the people.

    According to him, justice has been achieved partly by having a court branch in Eti-Osa, so people don’t have to travel far and wide to have their matters adjudicated.

    He further added that the aim is to rectify what is amiss and not necessarily antagonising anybody when it comes to speaking up for the people and lending them a voice as the newly elected chairman.

    “My word to the government is to say that we would interact with them, collaborate with them, because that is best way to go. When we have frictions, we’ll say so respectfully in such a way that would carry everybody along. The aim is to rectify what is amiss, it’s not necessarily antagonising anybody.“ he said.