Tag: Judiciary

  • Buhari must address rot in judiciary

    Buhari must address rot in judiciary

    Patrick Tolani is a lawyer with Vale Partners, Lagos. He is also the Chief Executive Officer, Centre for Charity Aid and Development Foundation for Africa, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) based in the United Kingdom. In this interview with ADEGUNLE OLUGBAMILA, Tolani speaks on the judiciary under outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan. He also speaks on the incoming Muhammadu Buhari administration, urging it to work to earn public trust.

    Would you say the judiciary was corrupt under outgoing President Jonathan?

    Anybody on the street can attest to that. I don’t need special knowledge in law to know that one of the legacies of the Jonathan-led government is impunity. The government did not consider any sector or institution as important as far as their ambition is concerned. From military, police, judiciary, just name it; everything was bastardised. If there are no problems with the judiciary, why will successive chief justices be talking about corruption and bad eggs in the system? A system of impunity and corruption was created by this system, and everybody keyed in. When the functionaries in the judiciary know there is no room for corruption, they will sit up.
    When Nigerians know there is a systemic corruption, people will be corrupt. When they know the environment is not conducive for corruption, they will sit up. That is why all we need from the incoming government is strong leadership, strong institutions, and strong values. A minister took N20 billion to fly a private jet all over the place and when the National Assembly summoned her, she refused to go. Is that not impunity? The incoming leadership must not give room for selective judgment.

    Following the victory of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the elections, there have been mass defections, especially from the Peoples Democratic party( PDP) to the APC. Are we not foreseeing a gradual emergence of a one party state?

    It’s a bad development. Again, it’s a product of the political system we have operated for years. All it shows is that the political class are full of jobbers. They are not interested in the masses, governance or development. During the APC primaries, it was clear Buhari had no money to share to delegates unlike some of his other contenders who did; yet he still won. Six weeks to the election provided an opportunity for Jonathan to share as much money as he could never share, yet he lost. Now if people are trooping from PDP to APC and they get there only to find out there is nothing for them that serves them right because Buhari had said there was not going to be any opportunity for anybody and I want him to stick to that. With that, Buhari would have established a cultural change of self-seeking in the political climate of Nigeria.
    However, the opposition should not be left struggling to survive. The new government must provide facilities, probably grants to support them to they can maintain their structures and not just a winner-takes- it-all sort of thing.

    For the first time in Nigeria, an opposition party defeated a sitting government. What do you think made this possible?

    The new government rode on the back of the ‘change’ slogan and I think it was wise for them to pitch into the mood of Nigerians that desperately wanted a change. I’ve always maintained that we need to do a lot of work to define what change means. For me, if you look at the trajectory of change over the years, there is nothing new about it. It always gets to a point in this country when people become tired of the leader they have and, therefore, crave a change. When Gen. Muhammadu Buhari became the military Head of State through a coup detat in 1983, I was old enough to know many people were tired of the Shehu Shagari-led government. Unfortunately, Buhari’s dictatorial tendency eventually eroded public confidence. I also remember that the Abacha regime was also brutal and dictatorial forcing Nigerians to seek a change. I recall that during that time, I was being detained alongside Femi Falana for organising a labour workshop. But when Abacha died, everybody jubilated.

    Are you convinced then that this change is desirable?

    It was clear the Jonathan administration lacks focus. The government is overwhelmed with Nigerians’ problems and is not interested in solving them. Second, those who are a part of that the government were not interested in listening to anybody but themselves and that got people frustrated. Now I will be very reluctant to say Nigerians voted for Buhari out of sheer love. When the APC gets into government, that is when their trial period begins and, therefore, they need to earn Nigerians’trust on time.

    In other words, expectations are high?

    Very high! The incoming government does not have a long time to prove they can actually meet the needs of Nigerians’. Nigerians will be very impatient with them and they cannot give the excuses that ‘we did not cause the problems’. Once they mount the saddle, they need to start tackling the problems immediately and woo Nigerians. To them, it is a test period, and it won’t be long for Nigerians to predict if they would fail or not.

    So, what are the key areas they need to work on?
    I’ve read the APC manifesto and Buhari’s promise to deliver within his first 100 days of his administration. However, let me put the achievements in two categories – the concrete or life-changing measures, while the other is the perception measure.
    Let me deal with perception first. I don’t care how much you talk about the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), if all those figures don’t translate to life-changing things, they are useless to the public. So, it will take them a little bit of time to win perception. But there are concrete areas. First, is power. It is easy for a Nigerian to say ‘I used to have light a day in a week before, now it’s four days in a week under the new government’. That is a measurable achievement that connects and resonates with the people. Another is employment. I mean sustainable employment generation, and not merely hiring people to sweep the street. Consistent power supply and employment are interwoven.

    Can you shed more light on why one can translate to another?

    When you generate more energy, there is power, and the production capacity of companies will increase. So, companies can increase their capacity and, then, employ more people. I was somewhere in Niger Delta some years ago, some young people were empowered with equipment in an attempt to encourage them to go into entrepreneurship. But I was saddened that some of them later sold the equipment bought for them because there was no light to power them. So, energy is critical. Second, the incoming government must devote serious attention to diversification of the economy. The oil industry has got lots of potential that we are not tapping into. For example, I still cannot understand why we are still importing fuel in this country when we can make our refineries work and also have modular refineries.
    I’ve carried out a research on oil theft and artisanal refining in Nigeria. The general notion of the people is that they should be able to have the opportunity to leave the creek and stop artificial refining that destroys the environment and actually do this business in a legal way. If we can reduce how much fuel we import by having small modular government-supported refineries, one, we will have more supply of fuel in the country therefore reducing the amount of money we spend on fuel abroad. Two, it will generate employment for those people and three help the environment because these people are no longer producing and throwing the waste away.

    But Nigeria is being seen as a country with endless opportunities for infrastructure, how valid is this?

    We have a huge opportunity for public infrastructure. The government must concentrate on infrastructure, such as roads that are labour-intensive. Look at the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway that is under construction. Those who are assisting in pouring sand, carrying water and all that are probably not in one employment or the other before. And when the road is fully constructed, it will reduce accident, car damage, and people will get to their destination on time.
    We have the rail system that still needs to be built and it is a huge capital investment that involves a lot of personnel. I, alone, will be happy that we borrow money to build rail lines. Those are sustainable investments for the future. If the trust is there, and the infrastructure work, all the outsourcing that we give to India can actually come to Nigeria. All these fraudsters and yahoo boys can actually be employed to run call centres. For instance you pick a phone in the UK and you are making an enquiry but the person picking the call is in India because it’s cheaper for those companies to pay people in India to outsource it to that company than to do it in the UK where the labour law are very stringent. I’m not encouraging a breach of labour law, but all I’m saying is that the tight labour rules in those countries like UK now makes it is imperative for us to have comparative advantage over them. But this is what Nigeria has missed for many years because we don’t have the infrastructure to do such things.
    Another area is farming. Now there are modern equipment that support greenhouse farming in Nigeria. It will one one hand generate electricity on solar panels, and on another, we can begin greenhouse farming programs operating underneath the solar power. Then we can plant as many crops as possible that can meet our food insecurity challenges. For a government seeking legitimacy, those are the kind of things they should do.

    Boko Haram, abduction and other elements of insecurity are on the rise, yet the outgoing government seems helpless. What is your take on this?

    I’ve done a lot of research on security but I’m piqued about how bad our security situation has gone. My first argument is that as a country, we don’t have a security strategy. It was only about a year ago that the Office of the National Security Adviser was talking about security strategy. When you say security, what comes to mind in a very pedestrian environment like Nigeria are things like kidnapping and Boko Haram; but there are more security issues that should worry any government than that. On the forefront is the security of lives and property, employment and even food security.
    For instance, we are all focused on Boko Haram but we have not been able to predict what will happen at the Niger-Delta. Free money will stop for the elements in the Niger Delta who are getting around President Jonathan by saying all sort of provocative things simply to show that they are relevant. What about those stealing oil? If this government can have the will to summon them, what will they do?
    Assuming there is drought or flooding, what happens? What about the interplay of forces in the international environment? What about ISIS that adopted Boko Haram. Then, how do you protect the sovereign integrity of Nigeria? So there must be holistic approach to security which the government must formulate.

    Despite President Jonathan’s defeat, some people still believe his administration performed, blaming his lieutenants for his problems. Is that so?
    I listened to President Jonathan’s campaign during the election, when he claimed his government established 12 new universities, refurbished the railways, and all that. I felt our president does not even know what he has done; and this is because the philosophy of public management in Nigeria is not based on result -oriented system. The people working in the public sector see themselves as merely going to the offices daily without any particular target to meet. The ministers are in the government without target to meet. And there is no monitoring, reporting or evaluation system. But we can change to a performance-based public service, which is in tandem with our budgetary system. The critical performing department of the government should get more money. Those who underperformed should get less money but after sometime, the minister should be removed.When I say result, I mean impact-based result, I mean basic things that affect the common man on the street – food, electricity, shelter as well as quality and affordable education.

  • CJN: judiciary won’t succumb to politicians’ manipulation

    THE Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Mohammed, yesterday assured that the judiciary under his watch will not succumb to the manipulation of some politicians to truncate the nation’s democracy

    He said the leadership of the judiciary was aware of plans by some “unpatriotic citizens” to use the courts to stop the electoral process, warning judges not to yield themselves as tools to desperate politicians.

    The CJN spoke in Abuja yesterday at the swearing-in of Justice Ishaq Bello as the Acting Chief Judge (CJ) of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    Justice Bello replaces Justice Ibrahim Bukar, who retired yesterday as the court’s CJ on attaining the mandatory retirement age of 65 years.

    “Permit me to use this opportunity to again assure all Nigerians that, under my leadership, the Judiciary remains resolute and committed to do its constitutional duty during this election period.

    “We will not be swayed or distracted from the course of justice in any election matter that is before or comes before the justice system.

    “It bears reminding to all heads of courts that you are primarily responsible for the preservation of our nation’s democracy.

    “I strongly advise all judicial officers not to allow any party or politician to use the courts to truncate our nation’s democracy.

    “We are aware that some unpatriotic citizens may wish to use the courts to stop the electoral process, and I wish to warn in clear terms that we shall not be used as a tool for the breakdown of law and order in our beloved country,” the CJN said.

    He urged Justice Bello to work hard and improve on the pace of justice dispensation in the court.

    “I note with particular concern the number of corruption cases that are pending before the FCT High Courts and the number that have been returned by the Supreme Court to the trial courts.

    “It bears reminding that posterity does not wear a human face in its judgment.  I counsel you to ensure that your work remains like sterling silver that becomes more valuable with age.

    “I therefore urge you to be proactive in seeking out ways to improve justice delivery especially as pertains to the case disposal rate in the FCT High Court of Justice.

    “Hence, I urge to work cooperatively with the other heads of court and indeed all Judicial Officers in order to ensure cohesiveness and synergy in your resolve to uphold the dignity of the Judiciary,” the CJN said.

    Earlier at the valedictory session held for him at the High Court of the FCT, Justice Bukar thanked God that he retired with his head high.

    He noted that for the 33-year history of the court, he remained the only CJ of the FCT High Court to retire honourably, and honoured with a valedictory court service – a development also noted by the CJN in his speech.

    Justice Bukar thanked his brother judges for their support during his about two-year tenure, having been sworn-in in 2013.

    Justice Bello praised his predecessor and pledged to sustain the legacy of performance left by the retiring CJ.

  • Osinbajo blames judiciary for corruption

    Osinbajo blames judiciary for corruption

    A book, For the love of their nation-Lawyers as agents of change in Nigeria, was presented in Lagos last week. It profiles some eminent lawyers and their contributions to national development, reports ADEBISI ONANUGA.

    Lawyers filed out last week to honour a judicial correspondent, Mustapha Ogun-sakin, at the presentation of his book, ‘For The Love of Their Nation: Lawyers as agent of Change”, which held last Friday at the Airport Hotel, Ikeja.

    The book features  collection of interviews on prominent judges such as the late Justices Kayode Eso, and Chukwudifu Oputa; and retired Justices of the Supreme Court such as Justice Odemwingie Uwaifo, and Justice Adesola Oguntade. Other judges such as Judge Bola Ajibola (SAN), Justice Yahya Jinadu, Justice Nkem Izuako, and Justice Samuel Ilori were also featured among others.

    Speaking at the occasion, the All Progressives Congress (APC) Vice Presidential Candidate, Professor Yemi Osinbajo said the nation’s judiciary system should be held responsible for the high rate of corruption in the country. He, therefore, urged lawyers to take the lead in stamping out the menace.

    Osinbajo, a former Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Lagos State said the administartion of justice in the country needs to be reformed to  successfully  prosecute corrupt individuals and move the country forward.

    According to him, the country has suffered a lot of set back as a result of corruption. “The  judical system as presently administered has failed to curb this bad trend, especially at the national level.                                                                                                                                   “There is a lot of impunity in the country. Many people are losing faith in the ability of administration of justice system and indeed, the government to observe the tenet of the rule of law. We must return to observance of the rule of law and to holding government and its officials accountable for what they do. That can only come from exemplary leadership.

    “ No one is in doubt that a nation can do little if the judiciary is not functioning. Our legal system has not been reformed at the national and state levels, but more importantly at the national level. The frustration to reform came from the Federal Government and when you fail to reform the system, corruption increases,” he noted.

    Osinbajo also decried the delay in the administration of justice system. “The masses have lost interest in the judiciary because delays in administering justice  are on the increase making people to lose faith in the system.  We must deal with law reforms and with a new government like All Progressives Congress(APC), at the centre, there will be change.”

    He also blamed the elite, and religious leaders for failing to take responsibility in ensuring that corruption is wiped out in the country. He urged lawyers to take the lead in stamping out corruption.

    “ Lawyers must regard themselves as agent of change. The Nigerian elite must hold themselves accountable for the present state of the nation. There is no privilege that does not come with responsibilities. We must hold ourselves accountable for the direction the country is going. If leaders of both Christians and Muslims show responsibilities in their various communities, we won’t have the level of corruption we have in the country today.

    “The way of leadership can only be taken seriously by challenging what is going on in the country. Our country is going sour and without solving the issue of corruption, we cannot move forward,” he said.

    Osinbajo said his nomination as Vice Presidential Candidate to General Muhammadu Buhari for the Presidential race  was part of God’s plan to salvage the country.                                                                                                                     Professor Osinbajo commended the author for writing the book, which he said came at the appropriate time.

    He continued: “For instance, our external reserves  has been depleted and this is caused by corruption and has resulted in the fall of our currency. Impunity is evident in governance, which is caused by the elites who have abandoned their responsibilities. We must all work together to stop corruption.”

    Mr Dele Adesina (SAN), who reviewed the book, said lawyers are supposed to be the vanguard for the fight against corruption and other vices militating against the country.

    “Lawyers are expected to wage unrelenting war against arbitrariness, high handedness, wickedness of man to man, corruption, injustice, mi-governance and social vices, which have become the order of the day.

    “They have a role to bring about the Change from tradition to modernity, from authoritarianism to democracy, from slavery and lawlessness to law and order and due process, thereby moving the society forward,” he said.

    He noted that the country has produced many lawyers, both dead and alive, who have fought for the survival of the country such as the late Gani Fawehinmi (SAN), the late G.O.K Ajayi (SAN), the late Alao-Aka-Bashorun (SAN), the late Chief Rotimi Williams (SAN), Chief Wole Olanipekun, Professor Yemi Osinbajo(SAN),Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), and many others.

    Adesina  described the book as a “literary work of great significance”. He pointed out that  the author’s knowledge of justice system made him an authority even though he is not a lawyer.   The duo of Hassan Fajimite, who represented Prince Lateef Fagbemi (SAN) and a Lagos lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, who represented Femi Falana (SAN) at the book presentation noted that the author, Mustapha Ogunsakin, has used his profession to assist the law profession with the publication of the book. They said the author deserved accolades for his views of judges, erudite lawyers and other legal icons mentioned in the book.

    Ogunsakin described the book presentation as a day of fulfillment and gave glory and adoration to God for the day.

     

     

     

     

  • Judiciary workers threaten legal action

    Judiciary workers threaten legal action

    The Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) has vowed to institute a legal action against state governments that have not implemented the Federal High Court, Abuja verdict that granted financial autonomy to the judicial sector.

    JUSUN President, Comrade Marwan Mustapha Adamu, made the threat after an emergency meeting of its national officers, saying the union has notified its lawyers to approach the court to freeze the accounts of defaulting states.

    Speaking on the union’s ongoing strike in some states in the country, Adamu said the strike will continue alongside the intended court action, stating that the suspension of the strike in Enugu, Niger, Kogi, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Kebbi, Delta and Bayelsa followed compliance of union’s demands by the governments.

    JUSUN suspended its nationwide strike recently following a memorandum of understanding reached with the Federal Government, but directed state chapters not to do so until an understanding is reached on the implementation of the court judgment.

    Adamu lamented the decision by the Jigawa State Government to withhold the January salary of its members, saying that the union would use all legal channels available to challenge intimidation of its members and ensure that Nigeria’s labour laws are respected.

    “States facing various threats and intimidation from their state governments, including non-payment of salaries, are to continue with the struggle as the union, among other opinion is considering taking appropriate legal action to address each case on its merit.

    “State branches are not to submit the struggle to the whims and caprices of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) chairmen, such as in Abia which has arrogated to themselves the power to determine conditions for suspending the strike. Any strike suspended without due process shall be nullified by the national headquarters of JUSUN.

    “The union remains focused and will take all appropriate legal steps to enforce its resolutions on the strike for the implementation of the constitutional provision of judiciary autonomy confirmed by the court judgment of 13th January, 2014,” he said.

  • Role of legislature, judiciary in environmental governance

    This is the implication of the  provisions of section 4 (7a) of the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    A comparative study of the National and State Legislatures, in the discharge of the enormous powers bestowed upon them by the constitution since the inception of the current democratic experiment, clearly shows that whereas the National Assembly has been very assertive and proactive, most State Legislatures, regrettably, have allowed themselves to be completely emasculated and castrated by the state governors who, in several instances, have been very over-bearing in the way they conduct the affairs of their various states, (Odey,

    2013:2).

    In simple terms, the legislature performs three basic Roles namely: Law

    Making, Representation and Oversight. The Legislature oversight the executive arm of government which include the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), to ensure that government is held accountable to the people from where it derives its sovereignty.

    However, the differences is that environmental governance requires that policy makers, decision – makers and practitioners (Le NESREA & NOSDRA) have full knowledge of the environmental factors within and around their municipalities. In environmental management and  governance, knowledge of the international regional, national and local environmental priorities is critical. Coupled with an in-depth understanding of the legislative requirements (Le the constitution, National Environmental Management Act, Disaster Management Act, National Health Act; Municipal System Act etc); municipalities should be  able to translate national policy tools at a local level; and put them into practice by designing environmental sector plans, by-laws and management system for implementation, compliance monitoring and enforcement.

     

  • Judiciary workers suspend strike

    Judiciary workers suspend strike

    •JUSUN denies alleged manipulation by AGF

    Lagos State judiciary workers will resume for work today following the suspension of their 25-day  industrial action.

    Sources said the union leaders under the umbrella of the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) met at the weekend on the strike.

    They also met with officials of the state government led by the Attorney General, Mr. Ade Ipaye.

    At the end of the meeting, JUSUN’s state chairman Emmanuel Abioye sent a text message to Ipaye informing him of their decision to suspend the strike.

    Ipaye, in a text message sent to The Nation yesterday, gave insight into the meeting held by the two parties.

    The text message reads:  “At a meeting with JUSUN, we made it clear that Lagos State already had a Judiciary Self Accounting  Law since 1995, which is being implemented to date with the judiciary getting its recurrent vote as first line charge on the consolidated revenue fund once a month.

    “We explained that capital fund cannot, however, be transferred monthly as it has to be accumulated and used for many projects programmed for simultaneous implementation. Besides, projects are better managed by the Ministry of Works, which was set up to serve all arms of government.

    “In the end, our position was that Lagos State was already implementing the provisions on autonomy of the judiciary. JUSUN promised to go and look into these. Now, they have resolved to suspend the strike”.

    Meanwhile, the General Secretary of  JUSUN, Isaiah Adetola distanced himself yesterday from a statement alleging threat to his life and manipulation of the union by the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke (SAN).

    The statement, which was widely circulated in the social media last week, claimed that Adetola was opposed to the move by Adoke and the Federal Government to manipulate JUSUN’s leadership and exploit the strike by the union for political gains.

    Speaking at the JUSUN’s National Secretariat in Abuja last week, Adetola said he was embarrassed by the statement, “authored by some enemies of the union with the intention to divide it and distract it from the struggle for the independence of the Judiciary”.

    He urged everyone to disregard it.

    JUSUN President Marwan Adamu said the union decided to suspend the strike in federal courts alone because the Federal Government gave assurance to always release funds standing to the credit of the judiciary when due.

    He said the decision to sustain the strike in state courts was because the states were unwilling to give similar pledge.

    Marwan denied the allegation that his union was being manipulated by external forces for political gains.

  • ‘Judiciary’s financial autonomy non negotiable’

    ‘Judiciary’s financial autonomy non negotiable’

    The Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) has said the strike by members of the union is an outcome of the government’s disregard for a judicial pronouncement by a court of competent jurisdiction.

    The Union said it is a product of a chain of broken promises by the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (AGF), state governments and other appropriate government agencies.

    The Union, in a statement signed by the General Secretary, Dr. Peter Ozo-Eson, said over a year ago, a Court of competent jurisdiction entered a judgment in favour of JUSUN by directing the AGF to deduct money and pay the National Judicial Council as part of the process of directly funding the Judiciary, which in the Union’s view further strengthens the nation’s democracy.

    He said: “It needs no stating that for the development of our democracy, we need strong institutions, a truly independent Judiciary in de jure and de facto terms. Since the judgment, as many as seven Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) with government (arising from countless meetings) have been signed”.

    The statement said that in spite of serial breaches by government and its agencies, JUSUN had continually displayed remarkable understanding and uncommon maturity. According to the secretary, the direct funding of the Judiciary is a constitutional right, which has been further strengthened by a judicial pronouncement.

    “We, therefore, call on the AGF and all the Attorneys-General of the states to respect this judgment. It is saddening that these law officers are seen to be breaking the law in such a brazen manner and at a time like this,” he said.

  • Future of judiciary, by lawyers

    Future of judiciary, by lawyers

    With elections coming up next month, all eyes will be on the judiciary, which will handle post-election cases. How will the election tribunals acquit themselves? Ensuring that they live up to expectation will be a major challenge for Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud Mohammed,who assumed office last November. Lawyers argue that his management  of the tribunals and other vital issues will determine how the judiciary fares in 2015. PRECIOUS IGBONWELUNDU reports.

    THE handling of post-election cases may turn out to be the baptism of fire for Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud Mohammed, who assumed office last November following the retirement of his predecessor,  Justice Aloma Mukhtar. Lawyers and politicians hope that Justice Mohammed will ensure that election tribunals are not put under pressure.

    To some analysts, Justice Mukhtar enforced discipline in her time by dealing with judges who were found wanting. They recall that some judges were dismissed, retired, suspended or warned for misdemeanours.They also noted the improvement and upgrading of courts and infrastructure as well as landmark judgments that helped in strengthening the judiciary, all under Justice Mukhtar’s watch. Will things be better under Justice Mohammed?

    What should be done to ensure that justice is done without fear or favour in 2015 and beyond?

     

    Lawyers’ expectations

    Arguing that lawyers should ensure free and fair elections next month, Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) president Augustine Alegeh (SAN) said: “We must individually and collectively shun any action that may negatively affect the 2015 general elections. Our development and advancement as a nation are dependent on the leaders that we elect as well as the entire electoral process.”

    A maritime law expert, Mr Mike Igbokwe (SAN), urged the CJN to speed up justice delivery, especially in admiralty cases, and to focus on workers’ welfare.

    His expectations from the CJN and the judiciary include: “Taking all reasonable steps to ensure speedier administration of justice than we have now as justice delayed is justice denied; and ensuring the empowerment of the  judicial officers and staff to discharge their duties effectively and efficiently, thus avoiding denial of justice by delaying justice.”

    He said the universal principle that admiralty matters must be expeditiously heard and determined must be encouraged.

    “Since 1999 when election matters started rising and taking the attention of the judiciary, the hearing and determination of admiralty matters by the trial and appellate courts had gradually been relegated to the background,” Igbokwe said.

    For Dr Joseph Nwobike (SAN), the judiciary has an important role to play in the settlement of election cases.

    “As expected, members of that arm of the government at all levels would face a myriad of pressures and temptations from the political class and their beneficiaries.  I advise the CJN to find a framework that would insulate these judicial officers from opportunities to pervert justice.

    “A well thought-out and implemented framework would deepen the independence of the judiciary and drive the democratic process towards a more rewarding and sustainable end. It will also be important for the other agencies of government charged with law enforcement to collaborate with the Judiciary in this regard.

    “Considering the level of which the politicians have heated up the polity along primordial and religious lines, the opportunity to pervert justice is now more prevalent than before.

    “It is for this reason that all willing and unwilling hands must be put on deck to ensure that the fabric of modern Nigeria is not distorted this year,” Nwobike said.

    Constitutional lawyer and author Mr Sebastine Hon (SAN) said Justice Mohammed would deliver.

    “Without mincing words, I would quickly say that the CJN has a track record of avowed humility, intertwined with professional courage and unrivalled sagacity in the discharge of his functions on the Bench. I have no single doubt that he would take our Judiciary to the next level.

    “I have always said that it is Herculean to reform the judiciary in Nigeria, no thanks to the institutional and statutory impediments that have laid lethal land mines on the pathway. In other words, without a complete overhaul of our constitutional and legal framework, it will amount to merely paying lip service to carrying out reforms in the Judiciary,” Hon said.

    According to him, as the head of judicial arm of government, the CJN should throw his official weight behind enacting legislation that would enhance sound justice administration in the country.

    ”One crucial area he should focus his energy on is in the sphere of dispensing electoral justice. He should synergise with the President of the Court of Appeal to ensure that aggrieved persons from the various election exercises who approach the courts go home satisfied that justice has been done in their various legal disputes. This will go a long way in stabilising the entire system and avoiding bloodbath.

    “There should also be more transparency and objectivity in the appointment and discipline of judicial officers. More competent private hands should be employed as judges as against the current ‘promotion’ exercise, where once a judicial officer attains seniority by dint of being the first to be appointed among his colleagues, he is promoted to the next higher court regardless of his competence and professionalism,” Hon said.

     

    New performance assessment criteria needed

    Hon also urged the CJN to revisit the performance assessment criteria for judges and justices.

    His words: “Currently, I understand that rulings and judgments delivered on interlocutory matters do not count in the performance indices set up by the CJN’s predecessors. Yet, out of every 100 cases, about 99 have interlocutory issues to contend with; and at times, such interlocutory applications which keep rearing up as the need arises, take months and years to be settled one way or the other!

    “Mind you there is settled law that no court of law should ignore any interlocutory application no matter how unmeritous it might be! Again, judgments in consolidated suits and appeals are reckoned as one instead of the two or more suits/appeals that have been consolidated!

    “Yet, each of such consolidated suits/appeals has its facts and different papers are filed for each of them! The net is that half-baked justice is being dished out to litigants just because the judges qua justices are operating under these onerous and irksome conditions of service. The CJN should please revisit this issue urgently.”

    Hon also wants an enforcement of the two Federal High Court judgments which ruled in favour of financial independence for the judiciary.

    “The CJN as the head of the judiciary, the Attorney-General of the Federation as the official leader of the Bar, the various State Chief Judges and Attorneys-General, the NBA led by Augustine Alegeh, all Senior Advocates of Nigeria, all Judges, Magistrates, lawyers, the press and indeed all Nigerians should stand up in unison and insist that these judgments are implemented without further delay!

    “This will solve most of the problems we are facing today. Everybody should support this noble cause please, and urgently too,” Hon added.

     

    Task before state courts

    A human rights group, Access to Justice (AJ), believes not much has changed in the administration of justice, particularly in the judiciary, in spite of the remarkable efforts and leadership of the former CJN.

    The group said this is because Nigeria is yet to develop the systems and procedures that drive change on their own, and support stronger accountability of judicial and court staff at both federal and state levels.

    The group, through its Executive Director Mr Joseph Otteh, said: “The immediate past CJN was exemplary in creating the kind of leadership that was responsive and exemplary. But she is no longer there! We hope her successor can demonstrate that kind of astute leadership. No. We should not hope, and that’s the problem.

    “We should by now, have the rules, reforms and the framework that guarantees this: a framework that institutionalises a different way of doing things, a different way of running the judicial system and which ensures that different actors in the administration of justice deliver expected performance results and do so transparently and accountably.”

    According to Otteh, with a new CJN in the saddle, there is a new opportunity to reinvent the approach adopted to fix the old problems to get them right from the foundation, and ensure that those at the states can be mobilised to follow suit.

    “Why should courts be constantly accused of sabotaging the anti-corruption war because of the interminable delays (seven, eight years and still counting in some cases) encountered in concluding those cases in spite of new powers conferred on them by the amended Constitution?

    “We need to see more reforms at the state level, stronger oversight and accountability of lower courts judges and court staff. Corruption is still a major issue in the courts, and Justice Mukhtar and Justice Amina Augie have lamented this.

    “Performance and case management measures should be introduced to improve performance levels and ensure court users have a meaningful and efficient time in court,” Otteh said.

    The human rights group identified what it described as two other sticking points: the situation in Rivers State, and the need for the Bar to fulfil its role.

    The role of the Bar

    The Rivers crisis, AJ said, is deplorable and needs urgent resolution.

    “The leadership of the judiciary and the Bar must make this a priority. The Rivers people have suffered innocently as a result of the impasse,” the group said.

    According to AJ, it is time for the Bar to fulfil its role as a major driver for change. “For too long, the Bar has remained a ‘consumer professional community’ and ipso facto, a victim of poor leadership.

    “Lawyers face tremendous hurdles discharging their professional duties, face constant extortion, appear in courts that many times do not sit and give no prior notice, and bear the brunt of a loss of public confidence in the justice system.

    “At best, the Bar has been a reactive stakeholder and voice in the administration of justice. The Bar can, and should do better. It can and should catalyze good policy-making and enforcement by the leadership of the judiciary at both the centre and in the States. This could be a 2015 priority,” Otteh added.

    Former Anambra State Attorney-General, Peter Afuba said the judiciary performed fairly well last year, urging the new CJN to sustain the tempo.

    He said: “The immediate past CJN came up with lots of reforms that improved productivity of judicial workers across the country. I expect the trend to continue with these reforms. The judiciary will be faced with a lot of challenges this year with the general elections coming up soon.

    “There will be a lot of election petitions and so, I expect that these challenges will be handled dispassionately and justice dispensed without fear or favour, so that at the end of the day, the Nigerian masses will see that justice has been done and their faith in the system restored. This will make the aftermath of the elections acceptable and conducive.

    “If petitions are handled as should, there will be stability in our country in this trying year. The judiciary has a crucial and delicate role to play this year and I expect it to do so without fear or favour.”

    Chairman, NBA Ikeja Branch Mr Yinka Farounbi urged the judiciary to prepare adequately for the challenges of the elections. “Like Caesar’s wife, it is required of it to be above board. The head of the institution should consciously constitute men and women of proven integrity to head the various Election Tribunals across the country.

    “The independence and neutrality of the body will go a long way in assuring the citizens of this country that it is worth of being relied on.

    “I equally advise that the welfare of other judicial workers should be taken into account with view to commanding their respect and loyalty. The issue of the embarrassing strikes or threat of same should be rigidly addressed. The institution is too important to always be involved in strikes,” Farounbi said.

    The Tiger Branch’s chief also wants to see more use of information technology. “All over the world the IT is the real thing now. I thus urge that our courts should be computerised at whatever cost. Writing in long hands should be discouraged and done away with.

    “I urge the CJN to call all the stakeholders in the institution and finally agree and set the guiding rules in the appointment of a Chief Judge. What is presently playing out in River State should not be allowed to repeat itself in any other state again.

    “The judiciary should examine itself and flush out the bad eggs therein. This done, the people will repose more confidence in the system,” Farounbi added.

    Lagos lawyer Theophilus Akanwa said: “I expect a judiciary totally free from corruption; a judiciary with an improved speed in dispensation of justice; a judiciary that will be IT compliant and an independent judiciary with the focus of delivering justice without fear or favour.”

    A lawyer, Dr Fred Odutola, said in 2015, justice must not just be done, it must be seen to have been done, adding: “Let our judges act unfettered by the executive and or the legislative arms of the government.

    “The hope of the common man before the courts must not be slaughtered on the altar of undue influence over the judges. Judges should pronounce judgment without their ‘hands being tied’. They should remember that they will still give account before God, the ultimate judge.”

    Odutola also wants to see a swifter justice delivery, as ‘justice delayed is justice denied. “A situation of adjournment and adjournment until the litigants start to die is undefendable. Many times, the courtesy is not even there for the Court Registrar to phone or email the counsel that the court would not sit, only for the counsel and litigants to travel to court and be told to take another date as the court would not be sitting,” he said.

    The judiciary, Odutola said, must be financially independent, as well as review  antiquated laws.

    “Let the Judiciary have its budget, managed by it and not wait for salary from the executive. Let it not be a situation of ‘He who pays the piper dictates the tune’. Allegiance of the judiciary should be to God and the common man in the building of a virile Nigeria and nobody, not even the leaders should be above the law.

    “The CJN should catalyse the review of obnoxious laws and fines, some dating back to the times of Mungo Park. Fines in lieu of times in jails should be punitive and commensurate with the offences committed.

    “A situation where someone who has embezzled billions of naira of pensioners would be asked to pay a fine of N750,000 is unexplainable to the layman. This makes people cast aspersions on the judges as taking bribes, whereas, the judge cannot conjure fines not stated in law,” Odutola said.

    A member of the Ogun State Judicial Service Commission, Mr Abayomi Omoyinmi, said the judiciary should improve on speedy dispensation of cases especially criminal matters.

    “It must also avoid situations where conflicts in decisions, pronouncements and judgments are beginning to be noticeable in our justice system in the recent times.

    “Priority should be given to appointment of more magistrates and judges where necessary as the population is growing. This will bring confidence in the people in the hope that justice is not delayed. The autonomy of judiciary is also essential in the times ahead,” Omoyinmi said.

    For Mr Ikechukwu Ikeji, there is the need to revisit the mode of judges’appointment and to closely monitor their social engagements.

    Also needed, he said, are strict regulation on participation of judges in social activities, review of the CJN’s constitutional powers regarding the membership of, and appointment into, the National Judicial Council (NJC), stricter regime on discipline for erring judges, improved conditions of service, computerisation of the recording processes, less executive interference and quick dispensation of justice.

    “It goes without saying that today most of the judges appointed are so appointed by reason of who they know not necessarily their competence. Moreover, the appointment of judges should be by means of an advertised notice in national media, which will lead to a strict examination and interview process devoid of favouritism, tribe or religion.

    “Often times, we find that real brilliant lawyers never get the opportunity to be appointed judges rather you find family, friends and relations being given the opportunity. This of course leads to a fallen standard of justice dispensation.

    “Regarding social functions, it is common sight to see our judges shamelessly socialising with all manner of people including politicians and businessmen who surely would have some form of litigation at one time or the other before the judges or the colleagues of the judges.

    “These social interactions whittle down the resistance strength and level of our judges and should either be outlawed or regulated. You easily see judges in family birthdays, memorials, weddings and so on. This does not augur well for the mindset of the judges as to guarantee their neutrality.

    “Again, in this age, you still find our judges engaged in long hand recording of proceedings. The result is that most judges lose the meat of the cases while trying to catch up with the presentations of counsel. The recording system of the courts ought to be computerised as obtained in some jurisdictions and in very few courts in Nigeria.

    “Another fetter on the judiciary is the awesome power of the CJN to appoint members of the NJC. This means that 75 per cent of members of the apex administrative body are bound to follow the thought pattern of the CJN. This is worrisome and ought to be reviewed,” Ikeji said.

    For Mr Yemi Omodele, besides the need for quicker determination of cases through refusal to grant frivolous adjournments, court infrastructure also need to be improved.

    “A situation where lack of power supply makes a judge not to sit is bad. Also, impromptu seminars/conferences, meetings/appointments that make a judge not to sit cause set backs for cases. These areas should be addressed.

    “2015 is an election year in Nigeria. Definitely I expect the judges who will handle those cases to do their jobs according to their oath of office and law. They should do the work without having sympathy for any candidate or political party. They should not think of incumbency or not. They should work based on the facts and evidence placed before the court/tribunal.

    “I suggest that the CJN should ensure that people appointed to the magistrate/High Court bench are seasoned private practising lawyers. Practising lawyers know a lot in terms of litigation and going to the bench will surely assist in performance. I also state that counsel with clean records be appointed to the bench.

    “Seminars, meetings, ceremonies and others for the judges/judicial workers should be fixed for weekends, closing hours/holidays so that it will not affect court work. The principle of integrity should be maintained,” Omodele said.

    According to him, the CJN should also bring an end to incessant strikes by judiciary workers.

    “Workers in the legislature hardly go on strike, so how come judicial workers go on strike often? The welfare of the judicial workers must be improved so that they will be willing and ready to work. This will guard against corruption in the judiciary. The judicial workers could be given house and car loans as an encouragement,” Omodele added.

    For Mrs Gloria Egbuji, a lawyer, the judiciary should remain “upright and  unbiased in their judgments and ensure that judgements delivered in record time because justice delayed is justice denied.”

     

     

  • Oyo assembly confirms state CJ’s appointment

    The Oyo State House of Assembly has confirmed Justice Ladipo Abimbola as the substantive Chief Judge of the State.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Justice Abimbola has been in acting capacity since August 6, 2014 following the retirement of Justice Badejoko Adeniji.

    The confirmation of his appointment came at a plenary presided over by the Speaker of the house, Hon. Monsurat Sunmonu (APC), Oyo East/West, after a recommendation from the House committee on Petitions and Judiciary, as presented in a report on the floor of the house by the chairman of the committee, Hon. Azeez Adesope.

    This followed the adoption of the recommendation by the committee which was moved by the Majority Leader of the house, Hon. Oyeniyi Oyediran, and seconded by the Minority Leader, Hon. Adetunji Rafiu, before it was adopted by the entire house.

    In their separate comments, lawmakers representing Iwajowa and Ibadan North II state constituencies, Hon. Adeniyi Farinto and Hon.Segun Olaleye, described Justice Abimbola as a man of integrity whose appointment would foster a rapid transformation of the judicial system in the state.

    ‎Abimbola said: “A greater challenge has been vested on me, so I should not be seen jumping around in celebration. It is actually the end of my tenure that will determine whether to celebrate or not.”

    On the congestion of court cases, Abimbola said that: “I have set up a committee to look into that and we have spoken with relevant agencies as regards that.

    “One of the reasons responsible ‎for the congestion is absence of witnesses in court.

    “With other measures that have already been put in place, things will change and criminal matters will be treated as fast as possible,” he summed.

  • How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing the Judiciary (2)

    How sabotage, blackmail, undue delays are killing the Judiciary (2)

    In this concluding part of a report on the judicial system, JOSEPH JIBUEZE provides more evidence of how other factors aside sabotage, blackmail and undue delays contribute to the snail speed of the justice system. 

    Apart from delays caused by abuse of legal technicalities, other factors contribute to denial of justice in criminal cases.

    Justice Yetunde Idowu, one of most senior judges of the Lagos State High Court, said a justice system that is remote, unaffordable, slow or incomprehensible to ordinary people effectively leads. to injustice.

    “The rule of law in itself is collated with economic growth and investment, and an effective judicial system promotes better livelihoods for all people,” she said.

    The judge said cogs in the wheel of justice include financial and budgetary constraints; lack of adequate institutional reforms and modernisation; low investment in information and communication technology; lack of political will and commitment to a better society; use of archaic and outdated laws, procedures and processes that are riddled with loopholes.

    Other adverse factors, she said, are lack of public trust and confidence in the system; corruption due to lack of accountability and transparency; inadequate courts; indiscipline, among others.

    According to a former Lagos State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Prof Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), failures in criminal justice are not only a significant disincentive to foreign investment, but constitute a burden on the cost of doing business.

    To him, interlocutory appeals on practically any issue have remained a major hindrance to early disposition of cases, especially as it almost always involves a stay of proceedings at the court appealed from.

    Osinbajo pointed out that relative to Nigeria’s population, the number of convicts per capita is extremely low.

    “This may either mean that Nigerians are an incredibly law abiding people or that their custodial sentences are not frequently used or that the criminal justice system has quite significant problems. Russia with a population of only 3million higher than ours has almost 20 times as many convicted prisoners as Nigeria,” Osinbajo said.

    The professor of law said interminable delays reduce the chances of ever concluding cases in a satisfactory manner. Witnesses lose interest. Investigating police officers are transferred outside of the states where the offences were committed. Judges are also transferred and cases start de novo.

    A frontline lawyer, Chief Afe Babalola (SAN), said corruption in the judiciary and the incompetence of some lawyers and judges do not help the situation.

    An ill-prepared lawyer will seek an adjournment at the first opportunity, and a judge who lacks the intellectual capacity to adjudicate a case will indulge such lawyers and adjourn even the simplest of rulings.

    Babalola said: “If a lawyer lacks the necessary competence for the prosecution or defence of any given case, he unavoidably becomes a hindrance and liability to the course of justice which under normal circumstances he is supposed to serve. The law reports are replete with cases that were painfully lost by nothing but the ignorance and incompetence of lawyers.”

    He said there had been several instances where lawyers frustrate the hearing of court cases, especially when they know they have weak defences.

    “Some go to the extent of writing false letters stating that they were otherwise engaged in the Court of Appeal or Supreme Court when in fact they had no case pending in those courts. Such conduct is clearly unbecoming or unworthy of any lawyer,” Babalola said.

    For judges, it is not surprising to see some of them who preside over criminal cases sit by noon when courts ought to resume by 9am. Some exhibit crass laziness.

    According to Babalola, before a judge can dispense justice, he must possess the necessary judicial qualities of integrity, deep knowledge of the law, honesty and a sense of justice itself. Unfortunately, many of them, he said, lack such qualities.

    At the heart of incompetence is corruption, which is manifest in the process of appointment of judges.

    “It must be realised that a knowledgeable but corrupt judge is a great peril to the administration of justice. He is bad if not worse than an honest but an incompetent judge,” Babalola said.

    Besides, he said there are cases in which judges for reasons best known to them personalise issues and frustrate the exercise of the right of appeal by litigants by their refusal to release records of proceedings or their judgments. Others, he said, lack courage and succumb to undue political influences.

    According to Babalola, poorly trained and inefficient court officials are also a cog in the wheel of justice.

    “Some court registrars in Nigeria have become so infested with the virus of corruption that they deliberately frustrate the doing of justice in our society,” he said. Some officials, he added, deliberately omit to list cases for hearing. The sad effect is the the judiciary has lost its fear factor.

    A former Lagos State prosecutor, Fola Arthur-Worrey, said: “The courts have lost authority. Today people write petitions against judges and then the judges will hands-off the cases.

    “Unfortunately for us, we don’t seem to understand the implications of weak institutions; we don’t understand the signals it sends to citizens and to the rest of the world. A country is only taken as seriously as its law and justice systems are managed.”

    Most courts are burdened with antiquated physical and legal infrastructure that renders them extremely slow and inefficient. Many judges must take their own notes in longhand while, in the words of one judge, they “sweat and choke” in stiflingly hot courtrooms – hobbling the speed of any proceedings. The judiciary, including appellate courts, also strains under the burdens of an excessive caseload.

    A judge of the Delta State High Court, Justice Roli Harriman, said only a few states, such as Lagos, have any form of electronic recording of proceedings.

    Majority of courts, she said, still use archaic equipment and judges write longhand, which is later reproduced by typists.

    “The use of longhand and typewriters obviously tend to delay justice,” she said.

    Another factor, the judge said, is that little use is made of software designed for case management and legal research. This lack of tools leads to judges adjourning till further dates rulings they could otherwise have delivered immediately.

    “Apart from a few states, the acquisition of this software is not on the priority list of governments,” Justice Harriman said.

    Delays, the judge added, even start from the filing process.

    “I am hoping a time would come when e-filing will take centre stage in the judiciary, a time when lawyers can, with a registered access code, file their processes and make payments online,” she said.

    Besides, it will not be out of place if court registries accept Point of Sale (POS) payments.

    Lack of courtroom technology, such as video conferencing, is also a challenge. In criminal cases, a greater number of adjournments are due to investigating police officers being transferred to other locations or being sent on other assignments. Some witnesses are also reluctant to come to court.

    “If their evidence can be taken through video conferencing, then this would eliminate the delay,” Justice Harriman said.

    The physical state of some courts also does not help speedier justice delivery. Some courts do not have air conditioning, and some courtrooms are like cubicles.

    For instance, in the Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos, courtrooms used by Justice Okon Abang and Justice Mohammed Idris, two of the busiest judges, for instance, are so small that lawyers take turns to go in for their cases.

    Several of the lawyers who make it inside, stand during proceedings waiting for their turn. Majority stand outside the door, straining to hear their cases called. Others flee for fear of suffocation. The consequence is that the judges could easily get tired in such working conditions.

    In some states, lack of adequate number of courtrooms force judges to share spaces, alternating sitting times. This leads to unsecured storage of court documents, leading to “loss” of case files, and provides room for corruption.

    “The bad shape of court buildings does not only reflect poorly on the relevance of justice sector institutions, but also prevents them from working effectively. It is also true that those working in these buildings get affected by the lack of a somewhat dignified working environment. Most importantly, decrepit infrastructure and dysfunctional design exacerbate delay and affect the quality of work done,” Justice Harriman said.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and former External Affairs Minister, Mr Odein Ajumogobia, believes delays have unfortunately become a recognised and accepted strategy in escaping justice.

    “It obviously serves the defendant well when he has no defence or simply needs to buy time to answer a complaint and is therefore only interested in putting off the anticipated final decision by the court for as long as possible,” he said.

    According to him, the most common causes of delays and abuse are the preliminary objection (the outcome of which is appealed up to the Supreme Court); frivolous arguments and false affidavits; longer adjournments due to full dockets; lack of strict adherence to time limit provisions and scheduling (with no severe and deterrent cost); poor service of court processes (with parties claiming they were not ‘properly’ served); frequent amendment of processes (which foist adjournments and further amendments); abuse of the right of appeal, and lack of enough punitive costs which, to Ajumogobia, should be in millions of naira for deliberate time-wasting.

    EFCC chairman Ibrahim Lamorde said the commission is helpless regarding the causes of delays.

    “You have to know where the responsibility of the EFCC starts and ends. When we take people to court, our duty is to prosecute them. But some of these accused persons/ suspects are taking advantage of the criminal laws.

    “The unfortunate aspect for us is that when such criminal proceedings are delayed, you start having witness fatigue. Some of the witnesses would have died and some officers transferred,” Lamorde said.

    He expressed regrets that some cases filed by EFCC against suspects, including politically exposed persons eight years ago, are still pending.

    He added: “We have cases we filed since 2006; we have been going in and out of the Supreme Court because of applications here and there.

    “We cannot change what is obtainable at the court because the laws of the land allow people to go to court. Some people are delaying cases to the detriment of the people of Nigeria and the affected states.

    “The outcome of these cases would have definitely defined what people will get. These funds to be recovered ought to be used for the development of these states,” Larmode added.

     

    Experts seek way out

    Falana said the gross abuse of judicial process is encouraged under the criminal legal system. This, he said, must change.

    On deliberate abuse of injunctions, Falana said: “The dangerous practice calls for an urgent review of the criminal justice system in the overall interest of the society.

    “If the trend is not stopped, other people accused of engaging in armed robbery and terrorism may soon be asking for interim, interlocutory or perpetual injunctions to stop the state from investigating or prosecuting them.”

    The human right lawyer described as painful the fact that the lawyers involved in the prosecution and defence of the cases that have lingered endlessly are Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs).

    “The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) owes the legal profession a duty by calling lawyers who frustrate the prosecution of corruption cases to order. Trial courts are also enjoined to report such lawyers to the Disciplinary Committee of the NBA for appropriate actions,” Falana said.

    To him, judges too must be bold and strong in the face of such intimidation, and should punish unscrupulous for contempt in facia curia (in the face of court).

    He condemned what he called the seeming indifference of the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) to the criminal abuse of the judicial system.

    “While the Federal Government is clearly complicit in some of the abuses suffered by the criminal justice system, at other times the AGF merely stands aloof, and watches our common humiliation as a modern state, which is what those conducts amount to.

    “As the legal precept posits, ‘justice delayed is justice denied’; and in this instance, both an accused and the state deserve to have a speedy and transparent trial at all times.

    “A situation whereby the poor are daily railroaded to prison while criminals who are rich and powerful are allowed to breath the air of freedom has to stop. Judges should, therefore, desist from conferring immunity or granting perpetual injunctions restraining anti-graft agencies from investigating and prosecuting politically exposed persons.

    “In a display of class solidarity with the ruling class, the EFCC charges the rich accused of looting the treasury with money laundering while the poor are charged with stealing.

    “Since the penalty for money laundering is two years or payment of fine while stealing attracts seven years imprisonment, the discriminatory treatment of the two sets of criminal suspects should stop in the interest of justice and fair play,” Falana said.

    The rights activist also wants strict adherence to the new practice directions of the Federal High Court, the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court that require accelerated hearing of cases pertaining to corruption and terrorism as well as appeals arising from them.

    For instance, the trial of such cases is required to be conducted day by day at the Federal High Court. Regrettably, the practice directions are not being adhered to by all the relevant stakeholders. Hence, corruption cases are adjourned for all manners of reasons contrary to the letter and spirit of the law.

    Also, in view of the presumption of innocence in favour of accused persons, the prosecution should stop opposing applications for bail on frivolous grounds, Falana suggested.

    In other words, the prosecution and the defence counsel should agree on the conditions to be attached to bail to enable the defendants to stand trial.

    However, where the parties are unable to reach an agreement, the trial judge should impose bail conditions. The procedure, Falana believes, will go a long way to accelerate the trial of criminal cases.

    “To arrest the undue delay in the prosecution of criminal cases, I suggest the introduction of front-loading and Pre-trial Conference. The prosecution should go beyond making available to the defendants the proof of evidence. There should be sworn statements of all witnesses which should be served on the defendants in line with the current practice in civil cases,” Falana said.

    Babalola said since looting of public fund by office holders is a serious wrong against the society, the government must show the will to prosecute offenders rather than shield them.

    “It would be incompatible with justice for the government to neglect or refuse to bring appropriate criminal charges against public officers who have been indicted simply because they have apologised or have resigned from their posts,” he said.

    Besides, there is the urgent need to weed out unethical behaviours, ineptitude resulting in low productivity, mal-administration and lazy, incompetent judges, Babalola said.

    He also called for a comprehensive review of the conditions of service of judges, including salaries.

    “Judges should be well paid, properly housed and well equipped with modern verbatim recording machines, trained stenographers, photocopiers, regular power supply and air conditioning,” he said.

    Justice Harriman wished for a time when evidence can be displayed electronically in front of the judge; when witnesses or counsel can be allowed to demonstrate or annotate situations or scenarios by using a fingertip directly on a monitor; when live video presentations of witnesses who cannot be physically present for a trial or hearing can be conducted; and when lawyers can create their own slide show presentations to enhance their arguments.

    “For judges, technology can increase opportunity to control the proceedings, set time limits, and decide matters expeditiously,” Justice Harriman said.

    Eminent professor of law, Itsay Sagay (SAN), believes it is everyone’s duty to save the judiciary from collapse, being the “ultimate source of democracy and rule of law”. He prayed for a return to the past, when it was inconceivable to bribe members of the bench.

    “It was absolutely unthinkable to bribe justices of the past. Even the contemplator will rot in jail. In the 80s, we could predict the outcome of a case. Judges created remedy where there was none. They were not colourless and neutral about justice. They had a philosophy,” he said.

    Prof Sagay also wants a dislodgment of those he referred to as “judicial mafia.”

    “There is a mafia in the judiciary, a mafia that is untouchable, a mafia that decides what happens to us in this country. You cannot tell the truth as far as the mafia is concerned,” he said.

    According to him, the Supreme Court, for instance, is too limited in the choice of those appointed as justices. In his words, “nothing is said about merit, character. They don’t tolerate bringing in fresh faces either.”

    He recalled that in the past top professors of law and academics were appointed to the appellate courts, but not anymore.

    “Now, incompetence is recycled among themselves, so, there is no growth in the judiciary. What prevents excellent SANs from going to the Supreme Court so that the mafia will not continue to control things?

    “Justices should stop hobnobbing with the executive. They should not consider themselves as part of the executive. They must insist on playing their role without fear or favour,” Sagay said.

    Prof Osinbajo called for a fundamental restructuring of the rules. “It is my view that the problems of delay especially require some hard thinking and collaborative interaction between the Chief Justice of Nigeria, the Attorney-General of the Federation and the heads of the National Assembly,” he said.

    These interactions, he added, must address fundamental issues on changing the rules to engage the challenges of Nigeria’s peculiar circumstances.

    “Clearly, there ought to be a more stringent costs regime to prevent dilatory tactics of counsel. Judicial accountability for delays in delivering rulings and judgments must be closely monitored,” he said.

    Prof Osinbajo also wants a limitation of interlocutory appeals, which are often abused.

    “Constitutional amendments providing for the termination of interlocutory appeals at the Court of Appeal is much needed. There need also be clear and definitive intervention by the Supreme Court on notorious and recondite issues frequently deployed to delay trials.

    “Issues of jurisdiction require one clear Supreme Court decision which lays down the principles and the law. Some disciplinary action may be required with the full backing of our courts to check counsel who in the face of clear authorities delay trials by raising such issues,” Osinbajo said.

    A Supreme Court justice, Kudirat Kekere-Ekun agrees with Osinbajo. In addition to “a major attitudinal change,” she said there is the urgent need for constitutional amendment to limit the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction so that interlocutory decisions or cases where there are concurrent findings of fact by the two lower courts and there is no dispute as to the law should terminate at the Court of Appeal.

    Respect for ethics of the profession, which is severely, lacking, must be enforced, she said.

    “Where a client has a bad case, it is unethical to institute an action in court merely to frustrate his opponent and delay the fulfillment of an obligation. The same applies to a defendant who has no defence to an action but engages in all manners of delay tactics, including the ubiquitous preliminary objections on jurisdiction, wasting valuable judicial time and expense,” Kekere-Ekun said.

    Ajumogobia said delays cannot be eliminated as long as deliberate time-wasting is the objective of “gifted and talented lawyers.”

    According to him, justice can only occur when there exists a degree of uniformity, competence and integrity of not just the lawyers and the Bar leaders, but other court officials.

    Ajumogobia said:  “As long as we choose (and it is always a conscious choice by counsel) to deliberately exploit the existence of constitutional lapses or the inevitable and necessary flexibility of procedural rules, curbing delays will remain an illusion.”

    Justice Idowu believes that administration of justice will be enjoyed by people when they are able to use institutions that are quick, relevant and effective in meeting their needs for justice.

    “A functioning justice system requires the effective supply of justice services by state and non-state entities as well as the expression of effective demand by people who trust the system enough to use it,” she said.

    Some judges are easily manipulated by the executive and the corrupt political class. It is not strange to find criminal suspects seeking a transfer of their cases from one judge to the other, all in a bid to get a more pliant, easy-to-manipulate or corrupt judge. The process of appointment of judges, therefore, needs to be more transparent.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and Queens Counsel (QC), Mr Oba Nsugbe, said the secrecy surrounding judges’ appointments must be stopped.

    “We need to make greater efforts to completely demystify the system of judicial appointments in Nigeria from beginning to end,” he said.

    Nsugbe said he once sought to know how to go about applying to be a judge in Nigeria, and to learn about upcoming vacancies, criteria for appointment and the process, but came up with no reliable information.

    He interrogated various official websites for answers, read a number of publications, and spoke to people in the judiciary, and still got no useful information on how to be a judge.

    His words: “The answers never seemed complete or exhaustive. This needs to change. In so important an area, you can never have enough clear, systematic information about what each and every stage entails – exactly what is needed of the applicant, when, who will assess it; how it will be assessed; who will be spoken to; against what criteria, etc. There needs to be more transparency about the appointments procedure. The lack of it acts as a disincentive to many aspiring judges,” he said.

    Another provision in the rules that has caused delays is the principle of a case starting de novo (afresh) where witnesses had been called before a judge is transferred, is elevated to a higher court, or dies and another judge takes over. In such a situation, witnesses would have to be recalled.

    Lagos lawyer Mr Segun Ajibola (SAN) said aspects of this provision needs to be revisited.

    “It’s difficult for a case not to start de novo. One of the functions of the judge is to watch the demeanour of the witnesses before him, not just listen to their testimony alone. He has to see that the evidence being given is given with conviction, and in a manner which portrays the truth.

    “What I will be happy to see is that the aspect of the requirement for trial to start all over as it is in most cases is restricted strictly to aspects which evidence by witnesses have been taken, so that whoever takes over assumes all the processes and procedural steps taken before then.

    “In this country where our approach to things is most times questionable, once you have a witness come in once and give evidence, getting him back most times to repeat most things he has said is a problem. Situations change and influences would come in. Eventually some people escape justice.”

    To lawyers whose stock in trade is to frustrate cases by means foul or fair, Ajibola said: “We need to re-orientate ourselves and appreciate the fact that at the end of the day we’re all losers.

    “It (deliberate delays) may work for you today, because you’re on this side of the law. If tomorrow you find yourself on the other side, and the same thing happens to you, you will lose.

    “Encouraging that kind of approach to administration of justice is something that will do no one no good at the end of the day. It may help in resolving a temporary situation, but in the long run, we’re all losers.

    “Perhaps there is no other country that has as much causes of delays in dispensation of justice as Nigeria. We need to evolve better arrangement which will be in place to curb the excesses of some of us who abuse the process.

    “I think it requires a thinktank approach, as we try to do regarding law reforms, which gave rise to the new Lagos State civil rules that came from the need to fast-track and reduce bottle-necks and roadblocks in dispensation of justice.

    “However, no one process is perfect. Any process designed by man stands to be defeated by the same man. The same man who invented the pencil invented the eraser. We don’t benefit from abuse generally. As far as I’m concerned, we’re all losing.

    “Once we can accept that as a platform, and get people to understand that the failure of one is that failure of all, the sooner we will begin to approach the situation from a standpoint of positive and honest sense of purpose.”

    To many who have already lost faith in the system, true justice will only remain a fantasy.