Tag: NBA

  • NBA’s headquarters ready in March

    NBA’s headquarters ready in March

    Barring any last-minute change, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) will open its 12-storey  headquarters in Abuja in March.

    Its President, Mr. Augustine Alegeh (SAN) who made this known,said the building, which was started by his predecessor, Mr. Okey  Wali (SAN), had a lot of challenges.

    He said: “The land, which was acquired by Olisa Agbakoba (SAN) was revoked by the officers of the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) and  Wali had to retrieve the land.  Wali, a consummate Bar man, did the basement floor before the end of his tenure.”

    The building, which has just been roofed, was awarded at the cost of N2 billion and the NBA  is not indebted to the contractor. The NBA President praised Wali for the early completion of the building, and for accepting to chair the Building Committee and that committee had done a lot to see that the building was completed on schedule.

    The two underground floors of the building will serve as parking lots, the building  has three parking levels  and  is located at plot 1101 Cadestral  Zone in the Central Business District of the Federal  Capital  Territory . The last three floors will serve as offices for the NBA while the remaining floors will go for rent.

    The NBA chief said the NBA was looking for 100 lawyers who can  pay N10million each and have their names recorded in the roll of honour in the building.

    He said the meeting rooms and the conference rooms are still available for sponsorship and to be named after their sponsors.

    He said: ‘’We have offered  the family of a foremost lawyer the  Auditorium, for them to pay and have the auditorium named after their father, but if they don’t want  to do that,  we will give it to another person.

  • Alegeh: why NBA has not prosecuted fake lawyers

    Although the Stamp and Seal policy of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has thrown up a large number of  fake lawyers in the branches across the country, the association has not been able to  begin criminal proceedings against those found not to be genuine lawyers in the court of law.

    NBA President, Augustine Alegeh  disclosed last week during a meeting held in Lagos with judicial editors to mark the end of the year 2015.

    Alegeh said the over 1,000 fake lawyers were discovered when they applied to be issued with the instruments and the secretariat could not find their names in the roll call of lawyers at the Supreme Court.

    He explained that the fake lawyers would not have been discovered if their application for the Stamp and Seal had come through the branch executives, especially since some of the fake lawyers happened to have been actively involved in NBA activities and have always paid their practice fee and others as and when due.

    While admitting that what the fake lawyers did amounted to criminal acts, the NBA President lamented that the association has not been able to begin  criminal proceedings against them because  the executives  were still trying to clear the challenges created by the judgement  of the Supreme Court on the new policy.

    He denied claims that the apex court judgement on the new policy was conflicting, explaining that what the second judgement of the court did was to confirm the earlier one and to give further clarification to the judgement.

    He however, assured that all those discovered to be fake lawyers would not go scot free but would be made to face criminal proceedings in the court, even after he must have left office in August.

    He said his successor would have to cue into his vision and go ahead with the process of prosecution especially since the Supreme Court has bought into the Stamp and Seal policy of the NBA by making it mandatory that all pages of applications and other processes must bear the seal of the legal practitioner who filed them.

    Alegeh disclosed that stakeholders in justice sector are already holding various meetings to review the 46 bills passed by the 7th National Assembly on the eve of their departure in May last year.

    He said stakeholders will work on the different areas of the bills, after which they would be represented to the new Senate for their deliberation and passage before they would be presented to President Muhammadu  Buhari to assent his signature.

    The NBA president explained that the meeting of the stakeholders became necessary because it would be illegal and unconstitutional for the sitting president to assent to bills that were passed under the former president.

    He said for instance that stakeholders have already held a meeting on the Administration of Criminal Justice Law 2015 which according to contained a lot of flaws and duplicated some offences.

    He said the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) was controversial because there are many versions of the bill prepared by different interest groups as against what is contained in the original bill.

    He berated senior lawyers who have taken to commenting on their cases that are on-going in the court,  pointing out that the NBA would henceforth view such conduct as an offence.

    “We would prefer that senior lawyers don’t speak on their on-going cases in court on the television. If at all they must do it, they must first de-robe before they can discuss the matter in general terms without going into submissions made inside the court”, he emphasised.

     

     

     

  • Osinbajo, Fashola for NBA Lagos dinner

    Osinbajo, Fashola for NBA Lagos dinner

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo (SAN) and Minister of Power Babatunde Fashola (SAN) are among dignitaries expected at the 2015 annual dinner of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) in Lagos.
    The event, which holds today at the Shell Hall, MUSON Centre, Lagos, is part of the Bar’s year-end tradition to foster unity among members and to honour those who distinguished themselves in the profession.
    The branch will also honour lawyers recently conferred with the rank of Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN).
    Lagos State Chief Judge, Justice Funmilayo Atilade will be the distinguished guest.

     

  • NBA Abuja holds law week

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Abuja branch will hold its 2015 Law week and annual dinner tomorrow at the International Conference Centre (ICC) Abuja.

    The branch chairman ,Mr. Elachi Agada, said NBA President Augustine Alegeh (SAN), Attorney-General of the Federation Abubakar  Malami (SAN)  and Chief Judge of the High Court of Federal Capital Territory,  Justice I. U. Bello will present good will massages.

    Dr. Alex Iziyon (SAN) will present the keynote address on: Integrity, Specialisation and Consistency: The Cornerstones of a successful Legal Career.

    Justice H. Y. Baba, Chief A. S. Awomolo (SAN), Chief Kanu Agabi (SAN), Chief Joe-Kyari Gadzama (SAN) and Justice Jude Okeke will be session chairmen.  An Annual Law Dinner and end of year party will hold on Friday.

     

  • NBA advocates use of electronic voting machine

    NBA advocates use of electronic voting machine

    The Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to consider the electronic voting machine for future elections.

    Chairman of NBA’s Election Working Group on the Kogi State elections Mr. Dafe Akpedeye (SAN) made the suggestion in a post-election report on the conduct of the exercise yesterday.

    It said the machines would further enhance the credibility of future elections.

    The group urged the National Assembly to amend the Electoral Act, 2010,  to give Presiding Officers discretion to create separate queues for the elderly during election.

    Akpedeye hailed the commission for  a free and fair election in the state devoid of rancour.

    He advised  stakeholders, especially political parties, to carry out more effective civic education to increase the level of involvement of the electorate in future elections.

    The statement reads:” Some senior citizens had a hectic time standing and waiting  although they were allowed in some instances to have the first go. Some of them could hardly withstand the harsh weather and the surging crowds in some polling units.

    “The creation of a separate queue for senior citizens will encourage them to remain engaged with the electoral process and continue to perform their civic responsibilities.

    “The Independent National Electoral Commission should accelerate the process of constituency delineation. Also, some of the Polling Units are located in front of or too close to residential buildings despite the availability of schools and other public places.

    “The location of some of these polling units in front of or very proximate to people’s houses does not make for secrecy of the votes and independent electoral action by voters.’’

    It said “INEC needs to deploy adequate officials who can take decisions in each polling unit for future elections.”

  • Elections: NBA seeks use of electronic voting machine

    Elections: NBA seeks use of electronic voting machine

    With the success recorded by card reader machines, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has urged the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to consider using electronic voting machine for future election in the country.

    ‎Chairman, NBA Election Working Group on the Kogi state gubernatorial elections, Mr. Dafe Akpedeye (SAN‎) made the suggestion in a post election report on the conduct of the exercise in the state issued Wednesday.

    ‎It said that the use of such machines will further enhance the credibility of future elections being conducted in the country.

    The group also urged the National Assembly to amend the Electoral Act 2010 to give Presiding Officers the discretion to create a separate queue for the elderly ones during election.

    Dafe ‎ commended the commission for a free and fair election in the state devoid of rancor and also urged stakeholders, especially political parties to carry out more effective civic education to increase the level of involvement of electorates in future elections.

    The statement reads in part:” Some senior citizens had a hectic time coping with standing and waiting on the queue even though they were allowed in some instances to have the first go. Some of them could hardly withstand the harsh weather and the surging crowds in some of the polling units.

    “The creation of a separate queue for senior citizen will encourage them to remain engaged with the electoral process and continue to perform their civic responsibility.

    “The Independent National Electoral Commission should accelerate the process of constituency delineation. Also, some of the Polling Units are located in front of or too close to residential buildings despite the availability of schools and other public places near such dwellings.

    “The location of some of these polling units in front of or very proximate to people’s houses does not make for secrecy of the votes and independent electoral action by the voters.

    The report also stressed the importance of moving polling stations away from residential houses and other awkward locations to schools and public places.

    “INEC needs to deploy adequate officials who can take decisions in each polling unit for future elections,” it added.

    The Kogi State Gubernatorial Election was held on the 21st of November, 2015. The election was conducted in all the 21 Local Government Areas of the state.

    An approximated number of over 1,390,883 voters were registered to vote while 2,548 polling units and 2,803 voting points were used by the Independent National Electoral Commission.

  • NBA, CAC partner on reform of archaic laws

    NBA, CAC partner on reform of archaic laws

    The Nigerian Bar Association Section on Business Law (NBA-SBL) has backed moves to amend the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) Act.

    The section’s Vice-Chairman, Mr. Olumide Akpata, said it would work with CAC on reforms and in amending outdated aspects of the law.

    The commission has said from January 1 next year, it would no longer accept physical filing of documents, as everything will be done online.

    Apata spoke in Lagos at a sensitisation workshop jointly organised by CAC and NBA-SBL to enable lawyers interface with CAC for better service delivery.

    He said: “That law needs a little bit of a reworking just to bring it in tandem with current practices. I think there’s work going on in that direction.

    “One of the things we want to do with this collaboration is to look at the laws and identify areas we think need amendment and work with them to present them to the National Assembly and see to those amendments being passed into law.”

    According to Apata, there are “loads” of areas that need amendment, an example of which is the share capital a company must have before it can do certain type of businesses.

    “It is not only a CAC problem but a regulatory one. In other countries of the world, you don’t have those kinds of issues where somebody says you must have N10million share capital before you can register a company,” he said.

    Apata thinks lawyers should go beyond incorporating companies for business owners, who he believes can do it themselves with the new CAC online platform.

    He said: “We want to move away from a situation where all a lawyer does is set up companies. In the world today, and that’s just the reality, a man who intends to set up a business should be able to sit down in the comfort of his office or his study and set up one.

    “So, we need to adapt and find out ways of ensuring that we’re able to still be of service to the average businessman. There must be ways in which we’re needed.

    “I don’t think we should ever consider ourselves or set ourselves up as an impediment to people being able to set up their own businesses. Nigerian lawyers are smart enough to make the best of the situation.”

    Co-Chair of the SBL-CAC Joint Working Committee, Mr. Moyosore Onigbanjo (SAN) said incorporating a company should not be a herculean task.

    “We’re concerned with the ease of doing business. We feel that Nigeria should be a leader in terms of its economic might in Africa. Nigeria should also be the leader in terms of the ease of doing business. That is why we convened this workshop to iron out areas practitioners and stakeholders have issues with.

    “The main issue is that the CAC, which it has demonstrated, should be able to do business online, so that I don’t have to go to Abuja to conduct business. I don’t have to go to Alausa or Yaba where they have offices, that I can sit in my room and get my business done,” he said.

    CAC Registrar-General, Bello Mahamud, represented by his Special Adviser, Alhaji Garba Abubakar, said with the launch of the Companies Registration Portal (CRP) in February, businesses can be registered online.

    “While the commission has taken a giant step in providing a comfortable platform that will enable customers pay every filing fee to the Treasury Single Account with the CBN without difficulty, it has ensured that any complaint arising from this new filing regime is treated with utmost dispatch,” he said.

    According to him, previous software had several limitations, including inability to make online real-time payment, which he said have been addressed.

    Speaking with newsmen, Abubakar said with the reforms, the commission’s nodal offices in Enugu, Lagos, Kaduna, Kano and Port Harcourt have commenced start-to-finish registration of companies. Customers need not to go to Abuja for certificates.

    “The thinking is that everything you want to do with CAC, you have to do it in Abuja, but that has changed. Whatever you can get in Abuja, you can get it in Lagos and most of our offices outside Abuja.

    “People can process their registration in Lagos without having to come to Abuja. They can get their certificates within the same 24 hours that we process in Abuja.”

    Announcing some of CAC’s new policies, he said: “One is the collaboration with the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) towards integrating electronic stamping of documents into the registration portal. Some of the post-incorporation modules in the company registration portal will come into place in January.

    “The third one is that from January 1 next year, every customer that wants to deal with CAC must do it electronically. We’ll not accept physical filing of documents in our offices,” Abubakar said.

     

     

  • NUEE petitions NBA over PHCN liquidation

    Electricity workers under the aegis of National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) have petitioned the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) urging it to prevail on its member, Mr. Joe Gadzama (SAN) to allow due process on labour issues agreed upon between the Federal Government and the unions in the power sector in the privatization of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN).

    NUEE in the petition to NBA General Secretary claimed that Gadzama was insisting on liquidating PHCN despite the fact that the contractual agreement, which he was relying on to liquidate PHCN allegedly expired on October 18, 2015, without renewal.

    NUEE in the petition through its General Secretary, Mr. Joe Ajaero read in part: “Our worries stem from five basic issues viz: The so called Contractual Agreement which he (Gadzama) is laying claim to liquidate PHCN expired on the 18th of October, 2015. However, he served his notice of liquidation on the 23rd October, 2015. It becomes a mystery the source of his power to liquidate PHCN.”

    The Union’s petition dated October 30, 2015 and made available to The Nation, said meanwhile the so called agreement has not been renewed. The statement said although, Gadzama claimed to have met with the employees and their representatives for their Avong’s, such claim is totally false. “We never met with them” Ajaero said.

  • NBA branch denies report

    The Idemili branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has refuted a newspaper story entitled: Anambra State Jusun Strike: Anambra Chief Judge moves to decongest prisons credited to its Provost, Mr. Pat. Agbata and published in a national daily.

    A statement by the branch chairman, Mr. Benjamin Chukwudi Okoko, reads: “Our attention has been drawn to the  story  credited  to the provost of Idemmilli branch of the NBA Mr. Pat Agbata.

    “The NBA Idemilli branch hereby dissociates itself from the story as the comments were neither authorised nor approved by the NBA Idemmilli branch and therefore does not represent the collective position of the branch

    “We acknowledge the good work of the Chief Judge of Anambra State, Justice Peter Nnanna C. Umeadi and his efforts towards alleviating the suffering of the masses in the state.

    “We also call on the Governor of Anambra State,  Chief Willie Obiano to look at the agitation of the judiciary workers in the state with whom the Anambra State government entered into an agreement on the Consolidated Judiciary Staff Salaries (CONJUSS) in 2011 since government is a continuum”

     

  • NBA to probe lawyers’ walk-out on tribunal

    NBA to probe lawyers’ walk-out on tribunal

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) is set to probe the circumstances surrounding Thursday’s walk out by lawyers representing Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki at the Code of Conduct Tribunal .

    Proceedings in the trial ended abruptly after 26 lawyers representing Saraki stormed out of the tribunal citing the tribunal’s refusal of their application to suspend the trial.

    NBA General Secretary, Mr Afam Osigwe, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday in Abuja that the association is interested in ascertaining what transpired at the tribunal before taking a position.

    He said:“We got different accounts in the media and would need the correct details to allow the NBA to react from an informed position.

    “From the accounts we got through the media some said the lawyers walked out while others said they withdrew.

    “So, due to the inconsistent choice of words, we cannot speak on the matter until we get the full and accurate details.”

    The lawyers, Messrs Mahmud Magaji (SAN) and Ahmed Raji (SAN), had withdrawn their services as lawyers representing Saraki at his trial on allegation of false asset declaration before the tribunal.

    They had also staged a walk out with the junior lawyers who appeared with them before the tribunal concluded the case.

    The lawyers openly announced their withdrawal following their perceived dissatisfaction with the ruling of the tribunal on their application for stay of proceedings.

    They said that they were displeased with the decision of the tribunal refusing the application to stay proceeding in the trial pending the determination of an appeal they filed before the Supreme Court.

    Specifically, Magaji had said: “This is a judicial rascality and I cannot be part of this process. I therefore withdraw my representation as the respondent’s counsel.”

    Speaking in same vein, Raji said: “We have pending application before the supreme court.

    “I believe that in the hierarchy of court we have the tail and the head and the tail cannot dictate for the head as we have seen here.

    “I also withdraw my services as lawyer to the respondent.”

    A cross section of lawyers in Abuja are displeased with the walk out describing it as a “disgrace to the bar”.

    Mr Nnanna Oketa said young lawyers were highly disappointed with the conduct of the senior advocates, adding that the action was more political than judicial.

    “The truth is that what transpired yesterday (Thursday) at the Code of Conduct Tribunal is to say the least degrading of our profession; it was terrible and should not be associated with lawyers.

    “Lawyers are expected to conduct themselves appropriately with the highest level of decorum when they are in court.

    That is not how we are trained and we hope that does not happen again.

    “The truth is that, if your prayer is not granted by the court, there is a window of appeal if you are not comfortable with the ruling of the court,” he said.

    Oketa stressed that lawyers and citizens alike must be properly guided by the rules of court in their conduct before the court and a judge.

    Another legal practitioner, Mr Anthony Ekuma, said the action of the senior lawyers was “most unruly”.

    “What they have done is a violation of Section 30 of the Rules for Professional Conduct for Legal Practitioners 2007 as amended.

    “With due respect to the learned seniors, they should know that notice of appeal does not constitute a stay in the hearing of a trial before a court,” he said.

    Ekuma also condemned the action of the tens of Senators who accompanied Saraki to the tribunal.

    The Senator had reportedly raised their voices in support of the lawyers when they walked out of court thereby disrupting the proceedings of the tribunal.

    “The law is in no respecter of anyone, no matter how highly placed therefore you are expected to conduct yourself orderly while in court.

    “There must be maintenance of decorum in the conduct of anybody in the court during proceedings no matter who the person is,” he said.

    Saraki, who is standing trial in the tribunal on allegations of false asset declaration, had appealed to the Supreme Court seeking to stop the trial.

    The lawyers had applied to the tribunal to stay proceedings in the trial pending the decision of the apex court.

    The tribunal presided by Justice Danladi Umar, however, in its ruling upheld the argument of the prosecution that staying proceeding would hamper speedy trial.

    In his ruling, Umar relied on Section 306 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act 2015, which states that: “An application for stay of proceedings in respect of a criminal matter before the court shall not be entertained”.

    Similarly, he said that Section 305 (1) of the Act allows the trial court to exercise its discretion on stay of proceeding if an issue on the interpretation of the constitution is raised before an appellate court.

    The section reads: “Where a question as to the interpretation of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria arises in the course of trial and is referred to the Court of Appeal under the provisions of the constitution, the court before which the question arose may in its discretion:

    “(a) adjourn the trial until the question has been considered and decided

    “(b) conclude the trial and postpone the verdict until such time as the question has been considered and decided, or

    “(c) conclude the trial and pass sentence but suspend execution until such time as the question has been considered and decided,

    “And in any such case the court in its discretion shall commit the defendant or convict to prison or admit him to bail in accordance with the provision of Part 19 of this Act”.