Tag: NBA

  • Lawyer seeks to alter NBA NEC membership

    Lawyer seeks to alter NBA NEC membership

    •Lagos branch partners insurance firm    

    A Lagos lawyer, Mr. Seth Amaefula, is seeking to stop former chairmen of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), Lagos Branch from becoming automatic members of the National Executive Committee (NEC).

    In a motion titled: Notice of motion to suspend appointment/confirmation of a NEC representative for NBA Lagos branch, Seth is urging the branch to pass a resolution that the practice of an immediate past chairman graduating to be NEC representative should stop.

    He said the branch should rather have the power to choose its NEC representative.

    According to him, the practice which foists a NEC representative on the branch deprives it of an informed choice and ought to be discouraged.

    Seth said the chairman should not send names of his former colleagues to the NBA secretariat as NEC representative based on the existing practice, adding that this would be wrong.

    The motion was adjourned for discussion. Some branches still appoint or elect their NEC representatives.

    Meanwhile, the NBA Lagos branch has concluded insurance policy with FBN Life Assurance for its members.

    The branch chairman, Mr. Alex Muoka said: “The policy is not compulsory; it is optional for interested members who should express their interest by paying N5,000 annually as premium for the cover in addition to paying their branch dues.

    “The policy covers death and personal accident. In case of the death, the assured amount is N750,000. Accident without permanent disability is N250,000 while accident with temporary or permanent disability is N250,000 for medicals.”

    The policy is open to members of the branch who are below 70.

    NBA Vice President to run for Presidency

    The First Vice-President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Mr Osas Justy Erhabor

    has declared his intention to contest the association’s Presidency in July.

    He announced his ambition during the meeting of the Southwest Lawyers Forum (also known as Egbe Amofin) in Ibadan.

    Erhabor was Secretary and Chairman of Ilesa Branch of the NBA. He was the Second Vice-President in the Joseph Daudu (SAN) administration. On both occasions, he was nominated and endorsed by the Egbe.

    He is also the Vice-Chair of International Human Rights Committee of the Section of International Law of American Bar Association.

    NBA holds NEC meeting

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) will hold its quarterly National Executive

    Committee (NEC) meeting at Fountain Hotel, Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State on March 5-7

    by 9am.

    Constitution of electoral committee to conduct the forthcoming NBA election is expected to top the agenda.

    Ungogo branch elects new officers

    The Ungogo branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Kano State has elected

    new officers to pilot the affairs of the branch in the next two years.

    Those elected are: Salisu H. Danjida (chairman), Juliana B. Sale (Vice-Chairman), Mustapha Imam (Secretary), Wada A. Wada( Assistant Secretary), Binta Tukur Abdullahi (Treasurer), Usman Abdullahi (Financial Secretary), Bashir Sale (Public Relations Officer), Mutawakil Ishaq (Welfare Officer) and Idris I. Haruna (NEC Representative).

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • NBA’s festering democratic deficits

    NBA’s festering democratic deficits

    A Lagos lawyer, Akintayo Iwilade, argues that for the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) to become a truly democratic organisation, it should adopt universal suffrage for electing its national officers.

    We have always preferred the reputation of being democrats to the notorious inconveniencies of practising democracy. Now we can enjoy the reputation without the inconveniences of practising democracy because we have trivialised democracy to the extent that it is no longer threatening to those in power or demanding on anyone – the late Professor Claude Ake

    Except we urgently begin to exemplify true and unfettered practice of democracy in the running of our national professional association – the Nigerian Bar Association- our claim to being the ‘conscience of the nation’, ‘the voice of the voiceless’, ‘the bulwark against state tyranny’, ‘guardians of our nation’s democracy’, etc, might likely become untenable.

    To regain our place among the leading ideological and organisational lights seeking to genuinely advance liberty, individual freedom and true social development and progress for all Nigerians, we must urgently recreate ourselves and unarguably become shining examples of what we advocate for Nigeria in the area of genuine and unfettered democratic practice.

    Regardless of the many distortions the concept has undergone, one agreeable point is that democracy aims, among other crucial things, at enabling the people the unfettered freedom to exercise their inalienable rights to equal and direct participation in the actual choosing of those to lead them through free, fair and transparent processes. One efficacious way to pursue the attainment of this ideal is to give every member of every community the unfettered right to cast a single equal vote to determine who to lead them. Simply put, the way to democracy is to practise universal adult suffrage as one of the first preconditions for democratic progress- i.e; one person, one vote! one woman, one vote! one man, one vote! one lawyer, one vote!

    In this wise, the delegates’ voting system, through which national officers of the NBA have emerged for over a decade, abysmally falls short of this pivotal democratic test. The system needs to be discarded if the national Bar is to become the democratic inspiration it ought to be for the rest of Nigeria. Representative voting is an aberration of true democracy or at best, an abridgment of it.

    Many reasons have been adduced for the adoption of the delegates’ voting system in use. One is the need to avoid a re-occurrence of the Port Harcourt stalemate that saw the national leadership go into non-existence for some years. Another is the view that granting universal suffrage will make Bar elections rowdy, unwieldy and time-consuming. Other views have been canvassed, that universal suffrage will create a sort of ‘mob’ electorate who may dislodge the Senior Advocates from the leadership they hold and offer at the Bar. This latter point has, however, been most effectively demobilised by the deeply engaging thoughts expressed by eminent Prof Chidi Odinkalu (now Chairman, National Human Rights Commission) in his insightful piece, Modernising the Bar: A necessary debate.

    Reacting to a view reportedly expressed by a former President of the Bar, Prof Odinkalu said: “In an effort to clothe an anodyne idea with an adverse animus enough to elevate it to a non-existent danger of existential proportions, the learned Senior Advocate attains undesirable genius with a line that gratuitously insults Senior Advocates and simultaneously gives offence to juniors in claiming: “The only way to dislodge the leadership offered by the rank (of Senior Advocate) is to go for universal suffrage where by way of example juniors who will then be in the majority can be persuaded to vote for the Chairman of the Young Lawyers Forum or any other aggressive junior or any of the midlevel seniors who are in the forefront of the clamour for universal suffrage”.

    In dislodging the above argument, the Professor clarified: “This line of argument manages – rather painfully – to imply that Senior Advocates lack the capability to win through to the Presidency of the Bar, unless they are protected from competition and also that juniors lack the judgment to discern from among competitors the ones with serious credentials. Yet, it is clearly the case that even in the system Senior Advocates make up less than 18 per cent of the presumptive electorate and thus have shown themselves to be much more durable and competitive leadership materials – but not as a right of birth, tribal hygiene or patronage as the learned Senior Advocate implies.”

    On the fears of avoiding a repeat of the Port Harcourt debacle and in consequence, uncritically sticking to the undemocratic delegates’ system, Odinkalu argued very courageously. “The benefits of the present ‘Jamboree’ are neither clear nor demonstrated beyond its historical links to an admittedly painful historical episode in Port Harcourt 20 years ago. But the world has moved on from 20 years ago. Do we have to get stuck in the past?”

    On the biggest argument in favour of discarding the delegates’ system in favour of Universal Suffrage, Prof Odinkalu concluded: “If a lawyer pays practising fees and branch dues, which, in turn, are the mainstay of the NBA’s finances, why should he or she be compelled to proxy their votes to someone when they can, by themselves, exercise the right to decide who leads their Bar and how?”

    No attempt is made here to add to the erudite Prof’s responses above as they are at once principled, profoundly analytical, and, as usual, delivered with uncommon and attractive erudition. However, on the fears that granting universal suffrage will make Bar elections rowdy, unwieldy and time consuming, we must say that to build an organisation that would be timeless, democracy’s tenets must be fully operationalised and practised no matter the inconveniences encountered in the process. If there are real or imagined inconveniences on the path to practicsing genuine democracy, it is the inconveniences that must be circumvented, defeated and put out of the way, not democracy itself. Logistical inconveniences are to be put out in favour of democracy and not democracy being put out, undermined or abridged in deference to or in uncritical fear of so-called logistical or veiled ideological inconveniences.

    After all, these exaggerated logistical inconveniences are easily surmountable by a coherent deployment of technology and sincere administrative expertise in our electoral process. One way is to adopt a system that ensures elections into the national offices of the NBA are simultaneously held across all the NBA branches on any convenient day(s) designated and valid returns for each candidate for the said elections sent to a Central National Collation Centre funded, staffed and accountable to the NBA. Rather than having an unwieldy situation of having over 100,000 lawyers gathering at a single venue to elect their National Officers, elections into the national offices ought to be simultaneously held across the branches with the same structures through which branches have often held their local branch elections.

    Results of every branch can then be sent to the Central Collation Centre to determine the winners through simple mathematical computations. But such elections need to be held on the basis of the fundamental acceptance and adherence to the principles of universal suffrage, i.e; every member of the Bar having a right to a single equal vote and nothing more.

    Still on this exaggerated scare of rowdiness, I do not suppose anybody holds the thousands of learned men and women that constitute the NBA at the various branches, with as much baseless condescending contempt as to think they would be incapable of conducting credible elections for national officers in their branches just the same, or even better ways, as they have conducted their own local branch leadership elections.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    As the NBA desires to lead the clamour for opening up Nigeria’s democratic space, so must it open up its own democratic space to allow every lawyer have equal rights and say in determining who emerges as their National Officers. The distortion of democracy continues to threaten the development prospects of Nigeria and as the clamour for true democracy promises to eventually become a more engaging, long and perhaps bitter one, credible organizations like the NBA must shore up their credibility by serving as moral guides who not only speak for democracy but practice it in a manner that inspires the Nation.

    It was America’s former President Bill Clinton who admonished his fellow citizens, while presenting his first inaugural speech that; “our democracy must be not only the envy of the world, but the engine of our own renewal”. If this is true for America, which despite its enviable leadership in the world, continues to work at perfecting its democratic union, how much true it must be for our brutalized Nation? And how true this must be for the Nigerian Bar Association if it is to renew itself, revitalise its members, and open up its electoral spaces to broaden the progressive leadership choices available within it!

    As we commence 2014 (another election year to decide the National Officers to lead, and speak for the Nigerian Bar), we should rethink the permutations that go into the selection of our officers at the National Level and take sincere steps to democratise the processes completely. The NBA must become a democratic oasis from which members and aspiring participants in Nigeria’s desolate governance desert can draw inspiration. More than speaking for democracy, we must practice it. More than theorizing on the concept, we must set examples in democratic conduct among ourselves and thereafter beckon on our country women, and men, to emulate us. More than saying we are Democrats, we must be indisputably seen to be so. And having enjoyed the reputation for long, now is the time to act and live up to it.

    IWILADE Akintayo is a Lagos based Legal Practitioner.

     

     

  • NBA presidency: Why we adopted Adesina, by Southwest chairmen

    NBA presidency: Why we adopted Adesina, by Southwest chairmen

    Fifteen branch chairmen of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) yesterday explained why they adopted the association’s former General Secretary, Deacon Dele Adesina (SAN), as their presidential candidate.

    They said an agreement was reached in 2008 that Adesina should run when it is the Southwest’s turn again after he stepped down for the former NBA President Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN).

    The chairmen, under the Central Working Committee of the Egbe Amofin, met in Lagos yesterday.

    At the meeting were members of the steering committee said to have been appointed on December 7 last year.

    Ten chairmen were present.

    Egbe Amofin’s interim chairman Mr. Adebayo Ayodele, who addressed newsmen after the Lagos meeting, insisted that 17 out of the 23 branches that make up the Southwest bar were in support of Adesina’s candidacy.

    He said: “We had directed Adesina in 2008 to step down for Chief Olarotimi Akeredolu (SAN). That meeting was chaired by Mr. Bamidele Aiku.

    “If in 2008, Adesina obeyed us, why must we not keep to our words since he listened to us the last time?

    “We re-affirm our support for the aspiration of Mr. Adesina, the endorsed candidate and charge him to continue to exploit all legitimate and realistic ways to sell his candidature.

    “We resolve to jointly and individually work hard to achieve a successful election of Adesina as the President of NBA come July 2014.”

    The chairmen described a parallel meeting of Egbe Amofin, holding in Ibadan, as “unfortunate”.

    “We consider this state of affairs as unfortunate. We believe the outcome of the Ibadan meeting today will convince the Chief Bamidele Aiku’s group that majority drives democracy and that there is the need to allow equity, fairness and justice to prevail in this matter.

    “We resolve that the obvious destabilisation effort of some of the members using the respected Chief Aiku should not be allowed to succeed. It must continue to be resisted.”

    He added:”We resolve to extend our hand of fellowship to all and sundry with a view to unify the forum under the principle of equity, fairness and justice which are essential elements of democracy and rule of law.”

    The interim executive said the Aiku-led leadership was “sacked” last year after the allegedly failed to attend the association’s duly adjourned meeting despite being invited by the chairmen.

    “The interim executive committee was put in place after the Aiku team was sacked,” Ayodele said.

     

  • NBA presidency: Why we adopted Adesina, by Southwest chairmen

    Fifteen branch chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) yesterday explained why they adopted the association’s former General Secretary Deacon Dele Adesina (SAN) as their Presidential candidate.
    They said an agreement was reached in 2008 that Adesina should run when it is the Southwest’s turn again after he stepped down for former NBA President Oluwarotimi Akeredolu (SAN).
    The chairmen, under the Central Working Committee of the Egbe Amofin, met in Lagos on Saturday.
    At the meeting were members of the steering committee said to have been appointed on December 7 last year. Ten chairmen were present.
    Egbe Amofin’s interim chairman Mr Adebayo Ayodele, who addressed newsmen after the Lagos meeting, insisted that 17 out of the 23 branches that make up the Southwest bar were in support of Adesina’s candidacy.
    He said: “We had directed Adesina in 2008 to step down for Chief Olarotimi Akeredolu (SAN). That meeting was chaired by Mr
    Bamidele Aiku.
    “If in 2008, Adesina obeyed us, why must we not keep to our words since he listened to us the last time?
    “We re-affirm our support for the aspiration of Mr Adesina, the endorsed candidate, and charge him to continue to exploit all legitimate and realistic ways to sell his candidature.
    “We resolve to jointly and individually work hard to achieve a successful election of Adesina as the President of NBA come July 2014,” he added.
    The chairmen described a parallel meeting of Egbe Amofin, being held in Ibadan, as “unfortunate”.
    “We consider this state of affairs as unfortunate. We believe the outcome of the Ibadan meeting today will convince the Chief Bamidele Aiku group that majority drives democracy and that there is the need to allow equity, fairness and justice to prevail in this matter.
    “We resolve that the obvious destabilisation effort of some of the members using the respected Chief Aiku should not be allowed to succeed. It must continue to be resisted.
    “We resolve to extend our hand of fellowship to all and sundry with a view to unify the forum under the principle of equity, fairness and justice which are essential elements of democracy and rule of law,” he added.
    The interim executive said the Aiku-led leadership was “sacked” last year after the allegedly failed to attend the association’s duly adjourned meeting despite being invited by the chairmen.
    “The interim executive committee was put in place after the Aiku team was sacked,” Ayodele said.

  • NBA tasks NSA, IGP on Rivers court explosion

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has called on the National Security Adviser and the Inspector General of Police to unearth the perpetrators of the court explosion in Rivers.
    This information is contained in a statement issued by the NBA President, Mr. Okey Wali, in Abuja on Tuesday.
    “The NBA is shocked at the news of the explosion in the Ahoada High Court and the alleged case of arson in the courtroom of the Okehi High Court, both in Rivers State,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the NBA as saying in the statement.
    It said that it would not accept such usual comments as “the police investigation is continuing.”
    The statement also stated that it would not stand by and watched such act of violence and impunity which were inimical to the rule of law and a threat to democracy.
    The association said the act underscored the need for government to take the security of lives and property more seriously.
    “The lackadaisical attitude accorded to the security of courts nationwide calls for concern,’’ the body stated.
    The NBA stressed the need to secure the premises of courts of justice across the country.
    “We demand an immediate and thorough investigation and expect a report, even if, interim, within 30 days of the date of the incidents.
    “Attacks on our courts will not be swept under the carpet,’’ the statement added.

  • The sacrilege in Rivers

    The sacrilege in Rivers

    Those who bombed courts in the state have gone beyond the limits and should be fished out and punished

    The bombing and burning of two courts, respectively, in Rivers State last week is ominous, and those responsible for this degeneration to anarchy in the state must stop on their track. Importantly, the full arsenal of our country as a modern state must be marshalled to duty, to stop this descent into anarchy in the state and also to bring to justice the perpetrators of this dastardly act. Let nobody be fooled, the resort to bombing and burning of the very hallowed chambers of the temple of justice which is designed in any modern society, to arbitrate centrifugal forces of partisanship in governance, is akin to unsettling the very equilibrium on which the society stands.

    We commend the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) for its timely condemnation of this brazen desecration of the judiciary, and recommend that it unflinchingly follows up its demand from the security agencies of the Federal Government. The demand that the National Security Adviser (NSA) and the Inspector-General of Police should fish out the perpetrators of this crime within the next 30 days should be insisted on by all Nigerians. As the lawyers stated, the Nigerian people will not accept a lackadaisical investigation of this heinous crime, or the police tendency to keep this serious criminal infraction against the state under investigation for eternity.

    It is also very important that an independent enquiry, independent of the state police command, which is in a running battle with the state governor, be given this responsibility. As we have severally argued, it is important that the ongoing madness in Rivers State be stopped. It is a crying shame that for whatever reasons political partisanship is fingered as the root cause of this breach of national security. There is therefore the urgent need for President Goodluck Jonathan who is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces and the chief security officer of the country to transparently extricate himself, his wife, his minister of state for education and his party from the partisan interests alleged by the governor and his group to be at the root of the crisis in the state.

    In investigating this clearly unacceptable descent into impunity, the police should beam their searchlight on the claim by the Rivers State government that the courts were burnt down by those opposed to the interim injunction granted by the courts in favour of Amachree Otelemaba as the legitimate speaker of the state house of assembly. According to that allegation, the courts were burnt by elements beholden to the Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, and the illegitimate surrogate speaker, Evans Bipi; fighting a proxy war on behalf of the wife of President Jonathan. We urge the police to thoroughly investigate this lead that the destruction was carried out to frustrate the courts’ adjudication of the impasse in the state assembly.

    We also urge Governor Rotimi Amaechi and the political leadership in the state, to show clearly that they are above the allegation by the opposition in the state, that they are responsible for this willful desecration of the third arm of the tripod in the state. In investigating this criminality visited on the courts, the police should spare no leads, but must ensure that they do not fall into the advancement of partisan interests against their constitutional responsibility to protect the state. Unfortunately, the current leadership of the police in the state has been so embroiled in a tug-of-war with the state government such that it will be against the principles of natural justice to expect them to be neutral in their investigation, which is very embarrassing for the institution of police.

    Unfortunately too, in our distorted federation, the governor of a state merely answers the chief security officer, when in fact he is not effectively in charge of the security apparatus of the state. So, the responsibility of ensuring that this criminal infraction against Rivers State and the constitution of our country lies with President Jonathan and the federal authorities, and it is important that they discharge that responsibility vigorously. As we have stated severally, it is important for our democracy that President Jonathan should rise above the fray in Rivers State politics, to ensure that the culprits behind the desecration of the courts are brought to justice in the overall interest of our country. Let no one make any mistake about the repercussions of neglecting the arson and assault on the temple of justice in Rivers State, for that will amount to playing the ostrich, when the national edifice is on the brink.

  • NBA to Fed Govt: probe bombing of Rivers court

    NBA to Fed Govt: probe bombing of Rivers court

    It’s a ‘desecration of the temple of justice’

    Lawyers give 30-day deadline

    Lawyers are angry over the bombing of courts in Rivers State.

    Their umbrella body, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) challenged yesterday the National Security Adviser (NSA) and the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to conduct a thorough and prompt investigation into the incidents

    The body expressed shock at the bombing of the High Court in Ahoada and the suspected arson at another High Court at Okehi.

    NBA President Okey Wali, (SAN), in a statement in Abuja yesterday, said the news of the brazen and dastardly act of bomb explosion in court premises amounted to desecrating the temple of justice.

    Wali called for an immediate probe of the incident and asked that the report be made public within 30 days.

    The statement said: “The Nigerian Bar Association condemns these acts of brigandage and views them not only as sacrilegious, but also as a desecration of the temple of justice.

    “The Nigerian Bar Association reiterates that, on no account will it ever idly stand by and watch these acts of violence and impunity to our courts, which are tantamount to an affront to the rule of law and threat to our democracy.

    “This underscores the need for government to take the security of lives and property more seriously. The lackadaisical attitude accorded to the security of our courts nationwide is now brought to the fore.

    “The need to secure the premises of the hallowed courts of justice across the nation should be taken more seriously.”

    Wali particularly urged the NSA and the IGP to employ all security apparatuses at their disposal in apprehending those behind the attack and bring them to justice.

    “The NBA will not and cannot be satisfied with the usual mantra of, ‘the police investigation is continuing’.

    “We demand an immediate and thorough investigation and expect a report, even if interim, within thirty days of the date of the incidents. Attacks on our courts will not be swept under the carpet.

    “We are shocked. It is a total desecration of the temple of justice; we condemn it in its entirety and we are calling on the President and NSA and IGP to investigate it. We expect that the report of the investigation will be available within 30 days; it should not be the usual police report that the report is being awaited.”

    The NBA suspected that politics may have been at the root of the violence.

    It said: “We have always called on politicians to play by the rules. Whatever grievances anybody has, he should go to court.”

  • Lagos names Gbagada Recreation Park after Aka-Bashorun

    Lagos names Gbagada Recreation Park after Aka-Bashorun

    lagos State Governor Babatunde Fashola yesterday inaugurated the Recreational Park and Garden in Gbagada Phase II, named after a former President of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), the late Chief Alao Aka-Bashorun.

    The late Aka Bashorun, who founded the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights (CDHR), died in October 2005.

    Shortly before unveiling the bronze-made bust of the late rights activist, Fashola said the significance of the garden would add value to the residents.

    He said: “In 2007 when I assumed office, I promised to build and reclaim all the parks and garden in the state. People complained but I did this to protect life and property. The protection of life and property doesn’t begin and end with guns or hospitals, rather it lies with sanitation and well-being. And nothing can be healthier than a clean environment.”

    He said more than 180 parks and gardens have been reclaimed and redeveloped in different parts of the state. He said over five million trees have been planted since he assumed office.

    He added that a number of prominent residents of the state “have asked me what will happen to the trees when I leave office next year. In order to cater for this, we have set up an agency to create and maintain the parks and gardens. That is the Lagos State Parks and Garden (LASPARK).”

    He extolled the virtues of the late Aka-Bashorun, who, he said, stood up for the oppressed in the country, noting that he was one of the heroes “who sacrificed their lives for people like me to stand here today”.

    He added: “It was important to begin writing their stories even if they are no longer physically present with us. We can immortalize their memory. We believe that when all of us are gone, the next generation will ask who is this and this.

    “This was how we started with the Beko Ransome Kuti memorial park and we move to commissioning of the Prof. Ayodele Awojobi and the Gani Fawehinmi Park, which became an international park due to the role it played as the venue for people to demand for their rights in 2012. All these are great men. This will tell everyone that this is a land of great men and women.”

     

  • NBA seeks access to detention centres of terror suspects

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has sought to be granted access to the centres where suspected terrorists were held. It said it needed to visit the centres to ensure that the human rights of those held were not abused. The association also condemned extra-judicial killings. Its President Okey Wali (SAN) called on security agents to observe international best practices and rules in combating terrorism. He said it was gratifying that the military authorities had acknowledged that for close to one year, they have detained over 1,400 suspects.

    The military, he said, also claimed to have recommended 500 for trial, 167 to be freed and 614 cases to be reviewed. The implication is that these suspects have been in detention for several months in violation of constitutional stipulations.

    “This is constitutionally unacceptable,” the NBA chief said. “We, therefore, urge the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Chief of Defence Staff to grant the NBA access to the detention facilities in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa to access the condition of those centres and the number of persons detained and for how long they have been detained,” Wali said.

    NBA called on the all those who have one form of grievance or the other to explore peaceful and non-violent means of redress.  It added that nothing justified the killing of innocent citizens or persons of different faiths because of what they do not know.

    “Nothing justifies the mindless destruction going on in different parts of the country. We must continuously and continually work on our federation for purposes of strengthening the bond of unity and brotherhood in the country.

    “Unexplained and challenging security situations must make us stronger and we must at this time stand firmly with our troops that are in the line of fire with an enemy that is very mobile and vicious.

    “More fundamentally is the fact that we do not seem to have a coherent, forward looking and acceptable national security policy and strategy. Our national security strategy is obviously reactive and episodic,” Wali said.

    NBA called on President Goodluck Jonathan to constitute and convene an all-Nigerian national security conference to draw up a comprehensive and coherent national security policy strategy that can respond to the changing domestic and international situation.

    “Since the present security strategy in Nigeria is reactive, episodic and ad-hoc, no serious country can operate on such loose security infrastructure.

    “In our fight against violent crimes, we must never lose the soul of compassion and empathy on account of the security challenges facing the country,” Wali said.

    Wali said NBA, last year, resolved to look at the fundamental right to life against the background of extra-judicial executions and other rights violations and implications for national security.

    “We decided to focus on the right to life because the fundamental law of the land, which is the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) guarantees the right to life and provides very clear constitutional basis, when someone’s right to life can be abridged.

    “Even in those circumstances, very clear safeguards are provided, because life as they say in local parlance, has no duplicate and has no photocopy and if someone’s life is taken away, it cannot be reversed. The right to life is therefore fundamental and inalienable to the human person. Yet it seems we have lost the value for life in Nigeria.”

    He continued: “While it is unacceptable that Nigerians will continue to die on account of insurgency, robbery and mindless kidnappings, it is unconstitutional, illegal and immoral for state and non-state actors to engage in extra-judicial execution of Nigerians who have not been found guilty by a properly constituted court of law.

    “It is also not sufficient to plead the doctrine of necessity occasioned by rising crime and criminality and the deadly insurgency challenges, to engage in extra judicial killings and executions.

    “While we recognise the fact that where there is rise in crime and criminality people are jittery and more nervous about the constitutional protection of our liberties, believing that suspects should be detained indefinitely and not given their due process rights.

    “However, it is in moments of difficult security challenges that the citizens must become more vigilant in the defence and protection of the rights of the citizens.”

    The association admitted that battling insurgency was not mean task, but that the law must always be respected.

    “We acknowledge that our security agencies have been engaged in difficult insurgency and militancy operations.

    “We support our military and other security agencies who day and night toil to make sure that we remain safe, but we will continue to urge them to observe the rules of engagement in their operations and not to engage in indiscriminate execution of persons who are mere suspects, no matter the circumstances,” the NBA boss said.

    Wali said it appeared as if the country had lost its soul and no longer regarded the right to life as important.

    “On a daily basis we are regaled with bizarre statistics of the number of persons that have lost their lives in questionable and unacceptable circumstances.

    “We flip through the newspapers and behold these statistics and pictures and simply move ahead, because we have become immune to shock. The lives of Nigerians are wasted on account of ethnic, communal and religious conflicts, and we do not bath an eyelid,” he said.

    Speaking at an event to mark the International Human Rights Day, Wali said the country must continue to reflect on the past.

    “More often, it is our refusal to look at the past and learn from our challenges that leads us into making the same mistakes in human rights defence and protection.

    “For when we sincerely interrogate our past, we will find out that those that trampled the fundamental rights of the people in the past have always and I say always appealed to be afforded their rights when they are out of power and in difficulties.”

    On Mandela, he said: “Let me pay tribute to the greatest symbol of human rights and human rights activist of this century, the late President Nelson Mandela.

    “Mandela was an iconic leader, freedom fighter and human rights activist who used his training as a lawyer to serve, not only his people in South Africa, but the entire humanity.

    “He demonstrated the role a lawyer should play in the interest of the public, which should serve as a lesson to lawyers worldwide.”

     

     

  • Civil servants threaten strike over delayed salary

    The Association of Senior Civil Servants of Nigeria (ASCSN) has given the Federal Government a notice to embark on a strike over the non-payment of its members’ December salary and emoluments since last July.

    The ASCSN, an affiliate of the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria(TUC), in a statement by its Secretary-General, Mr. Alade Lawal, urged the government to begin the payment immediately or face its wrath.

    It called on the TUC, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), civil society groups, The Patriot, the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) and prominent individuals to prevail on the Federal Government to pay the civil servants their salaries promptly, to avert disruption of services in the public service a few days after the strike by the Academic Staff Union of Universities was resolved.

    The umbrella union of senior civil servants expressed shock that thousands of federal civil servants were not paid their December salaries.

    “We wish to emphasise that if the federal civil servants are not paid their December 2013 salaries and arrears outstanding since July 2013 immediately, the entire Federal Civil Service will be shut down shortly.

    “It is difficult to understand why civil servants cannot be paid their paltry salaries in an economy where the political elite are carting away millions of naira monthly as remunerations, while billions in public funds are also being looted without qualms and those involved in the stealing spree are not being brought to book.”

    Lawal, said the Finance Minister, Dr  Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, owes Nigerians an explanation on what caused the delay.

    “It is disheartening that thousands of civil servants employed by the Federal Government were not paid their December 2013 salaries, and so, these workers and their families spent the Christmas under the pain and pang of hunger. What is also clear is that these workers, their children and other dependants will also celebrate the New Year in sadness,” he said.

    The union called on the Finance Minister to speak out and tell Nigerians why the Federal Government can no longer pay salaries to its employees as and when due, saying it was necessary for the minister to address the nation on the embarrassing situation because she has maintained that the country was not broke.

    The ASCSN also said it was bad that civil servants are the least paid in sub-Saharan Africa, adding that the fact that thousands of them could no longer be paid their meagre salaries was pushing the workers and their trade unions to the wall.

    The association requested President Goodluck Jonathan to step in and put the necessary machinery in motion to ensure that such an embarrassing situation would not repeat itself.

    The group posited that the inability of the government to pay salaries was lending credence to the belief in some quarters that the managers of the public sector of the economy were grossly incompetent.

    However, the Federal Government last week said it would investigate the reasons for the delay in payment of the December salary of some civil servants.

    But Mrs Okonjo-Iweala said in a statement by her Special Adviser on Communication, Mr. Paul Nwabuikwu, that the investigation followed the protest by ASCSN over the alleged non-payment of some of the members.

    She said the ministry had not received any complaint on the matter.