Tag: NBA

  • Our anti-quack plan, by NBA chief

    Our anti-quack plan, by NBA chief

    What is your advice for lawyers attend-ing this conference?I welcome lawyers to Calabar. I urge them to enjoy the town. The conference has been carefully planned for. It started with the opening on yesterday, the plenary, the showcase today, then the break out sessions and all that. So, I advise them that while enjoying all the benefits that Calabar offers, they should find time to attend the ssessions.

     

    What is the conference offering?

    I urge everybody to attend the various sessions holding in different  locations  in Calabar. As soon as they get their conference bags, they should look at their brochure and find out the sessions that will hold. The topics that will hold and pick their areas of interest and attend them so that all the time and money and time that was put into the organisation and planning of the conference will not be a waste.

    What informed your choice of topic for the conference?

    Well, we chose the topic, Law, leadership and challenges of  nationhood in the 21st century Nigeria.  It is all about the country; every society has its history, experiences. It is also built on a set of laws, leadership is also built on the laws governing a given society. It is really how our laws affected  us, how have our leaders complied with our laws, how the leadership is applying those laws to help our country. It is an appraisal of how it has helped us and looking at the future where they should lead us to. So, that is why we choose that theme; it is very central. You know, our philosophy is to provide a platform for people to rub minds on all these issues and at the end of the  day, the communiqué will be made available to the government and  to all arms of government and the public so that it will aid us into a better future.

     

    What are the highlights of the conference?

    There are many interesting aspects of the conference; one of the highpoints will be the opening ceremony; we also expect the showcase to be very interesting. But there is something that we have introduced this year that has not been there before.

     

    What is that?

    This is the idea of having a plenary this morning and we have chosen a very topical issue on regulating the profession for that morning, so we expect everybody to be there. There are other important issues that will come up that morning  during the plenary; for instance,  we expect the Stamp and Seal Committee that was just inaugurated to  brief us on how far they have gone and the way forward. It is a very critical policy for moving forward in our  profession. We have had problems with quacks and all of that so we think that that will be a welcome development. We want everybody to attend that plenary so that we  hear from everybody before we move forward.  The annual Bar Dinner is there and of the AGM on Thursday. Those are the highlights of the conference plus other programmes from the different fora that will come up in Calabar during the  conference week.

     

    During your campaigns, you enunciated a 10-point agenda to move the association forward. Twelve months after, would you say you have actualised them or part of them?

    Well, our 10-point agenda covered quite a spectrum of activities of the Bar, from the professionalisation of the secretariat to capacity building for branches, for  lawyers, human rights programmes, criminal justice reforms, anti-corruption, legislative advocacy and all that. You can see that we have done quite a lot with these programmes and, of course, you  know that the first thing we did was to reorganise the secretariat and get it more functional into four directorates  of Bar services, finance and admin, programmes, conferences and events. So people know  their boundaries; no one crosses to another person’s area of operations. If there is a programme going on, its programme officer, the conferences department will have to take care of logistics. The Bar Services is working so well;  you can see that for the first time, we are going to have a stand by office to  sell items of the association. They have ties; they have neck ties for the ladies and so on.  And they also have better relationships with the branches,   with the establishment of the Bar Services Directorate, so that is for the secretariat.

     

    What of capacity building for members?

    We have organised several seminars and conferences over the period by the Sections, including the Section on Business Law (SBL) Section on Legal Practice (SLP) Young Lawyers Forum, Criminal Justice Reform Committee, and the Anti-Corruption Commission. And on branch capacity building, we have had to meet  regularly  with the branches and socialise with them. We hold meetings with the branch chairmen quarterly and what we do at that meeting is to hear from branch chairmen, rub minds with them advise them on the way the branches should go. In fact, as we got to Calabar, we had a workshop with them last Saturday before we got to the National Executive Committee (NEC) last Sunday.

    Of course, you are aware that we are building the NBA House,  a 10- storey building to give us a greater space and capacity to run a professionalised NBA. There is also Legislative Advocacy. We have furnished and equipped the office space at the National Assembly to make us available within the precinct of the National Assembly. That office gets the bills that are coming up and informs the secretariat. We call up the officers or committee chairmen that are concerned and make our input and contributions.We don’t necessarily wait for committees of National Assembly to come to the office to call us; we have people working within the National Assembly to help make sure that the laws that are passed are in keeping with the times.  So, a lot of these other activities we have also dealt with.

     

    What of human rights?

    The Human Rights Institute has been  reinvigorated; thankfully, the Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Lagos Division  is chairing it and they are doing a very good job. They are  also here in Calabar. The Human  Rights Committee that the First-Vice President  chairs had a very successful  zonal conference in Ibadan; the criminal Justice Committee had one in Minna, Niger State. Generally, it has been a very busy year for us.

    There is this  rumour that the  contractor handling the NBA building project is  not registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) ?

    Well, I don’t think that is correct. Though we  don’t have to react to all  rumours, I know that this is not correct. I didn’t hire the contractor; he was hired by the committee headed by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN); an experienced SAN and the Alternate chairman of the committee is a former General Secretary of the association. We have such people as the former Attorney-General and Commissioner  for Justice  of Ekiti State and top Bar leaders  in that committee and I know that they put up a very competitive process in picking people for the job. Even though I  was not a member of the committee, I called them and asked them, they told me that they had all the registration documents of the committee. Because when you put your bid, that is part of what you must include and they are all there.

     

  • Lawyer tackles NBA chair over apology

    The Legal Adviser to Ombatse Group, Mr Zachary Zamani Alumaga, yesterday accused the Lafia branch Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Mr Eric Irehovbude, of allegedly collaborating with the state government to “annihilate” the Eggon ethnic group.

    Alumaga told The Nation that he was “disappointed” that Irehovbude apologised on behalf of lawyers who boycotted the commission’s sitting without first consulting them.

    He said the lawyers who withdrew their appearance from the panel were not Ombatse lawyers but lawyers representing Eggon communities at the commission.

    Irehovbude, on Monday, apologised to the commission following the withdrawal of the lawyers from the panel’s sittings, saying they were “a bit unruly”.

    But Alumaga likened the development to “shaving a woman’s head in the absence of her husband”.

    He said: “First of all, I wish to say that the lawyers who withdrew from the commission are not Ombatse lawyers. They are lawyers representing Eggon communities. We can now appreciate the conspiracy in this matter, beginning from when the Attorney-General said the lawyers had shot themselves in the leg.

    “Now, the NBA chairman has jumped into the matter by going personally to the commission to claim that he was apologising for the lawyers who withdrew from the commission, without first consulting with the lawyers. It’s a typical case of shaving the woman in the absence of her husband.

    “Putting these two incidents together, you can imagine the range at which the government is going to ensure not only Ombatse militia, if they exist, but now accusing to implicate the Eggon man of whatever standing or Eggon lawyers into their dragnet.

    “I do not see how the NBA comes into this matter. I am disappointed that a chairman, for whatever reason, has joined the government in its attempt to annihilate the Eggon man.

    “I advise that in the interest of peace and harmonious living, these people should check their facts and act or make utterances carefully.”

  • Democracy and socio-economic imbalance in Nigeria: The role of law

    Text of a keynote address  by Chief Joe-Kyari  Gadzama (SAN)  delivered at the Law Week of the Benin branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) held at Fourteen Eighty Five Marquee, Benin City, Edo State.

     

    Since our democratic dispensation in May 1999, socio-economics would reveal how Nigeria has progressed, stagnated or regressed and if imbalance is a feature of the economy, to what extent law can be used to redress the imbalance. This is because socio-economic balance is necessary for a country’s democracy to thrive. The characteristics of a democracy allow for socio-economic balance which is essential to the survival of the democracy itself as a total breakdown in law and order is imminent if the hinges come off a country’s socio-economic programme.

    The recent insurgencies in Europe and some Arab countries are prime examples. In Nigeria we now have more thugs, robbers, illiterates and destitute persons. This can be traced directly to poverty which stems from the near-absence of socio-economic rights in Nigeria. The status of socio-economic rights in Nigeria will be discussed at length as we move on.

     

    (d)  Generation of rights; socio-economic rights

     

    Since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights  and their entrenchment in successive Nigerian Constitutions, we have taken such rights for granted.  These are the first generation rights.  We shall contend that despite their entrenchment, their actualisation has been a mirage.

    The term ‘socio-economic” basically qualifies social and economic concepts, most especially socio-economic rights.  While all rights that accrue to a human being help in achieving social balance, it is the existence of socio-economic rights that helps the society to achieve socio-economic balance. Socio-economic balance refers to a near-perfect state of affairs in a country. The citizens have access to the basic necessities of life; the very things that make life bearable like education, health facilities, housing facilities and water. In more advanced countries, there are social security programmes which aim to ensure that jobless and uneducated individuals (they will always be a part of every country) are afforded the benefit of socio-economic rights as well. The United States of America is a perfect example. When a country finds itself unable to adequately provide these socio-economic rights (and by extension, socio-economic balance) to its people, then there is a problem.

    Socio-economic rights exist only on paper in Nigeria as they are non-justiciable rights. In Nigeria, Boko Haram in the North and Militants in the oil rich Niger Delta region were direct off-shoots of socio-economic imbalance. The rise of these groups could be attributed to criminal tendencies and misguided religious inclination but one cannot deny the fact that poverty must have played a substantial role as well. An educated individual who is gainfully employed and can feed himself would not be so easily persuaded to unleash mayhem on the society. We have more diseased individuals, such disease stemming from lack of basic amenities, and lack of basic health care, a fall-out of low purchasing power.

     

    e)  The Nigerian Federal

    structure

    The power structure in a country can take various forms – federation, confederation, imperial or unitary.  The structure can also be parliamentary or presidential.  In Nigeria, what we have is a federal structure with a presidential system of government.  Thus we are in a federation of thirty-six states and seven hundred and seventy four Local Government Areas.  In a federation, the task of governance is shared between the federal government and the federating states.  A cursory look at Nigeria will reveal that there are socio-economic imbalances arising from the availability of natural resources, absence of basic infrastructure, access to opportunities and the development of the various states in the Federation.  Many states in the North and some parts of the south suffer from educational disadvantages while the reverse is the case in terms of basic infrastructure as the north is ahead of many southern states in this regard (better roads, more of a federal presence). Some States are more developed than others. The introduction of concepts like ‘quota system’ and ‘13% derivation’ are ways through which the successive governments have tried to address the socio-economic imbalance prevalent in Nigeria.  We will later look at the other ways through which law can be used to address this imbalance.

     

    2. Socio-economic imbalance in Nigeria: Causes.

     

    Nigeria may statistically be a source of joy to all, but beyond the recent, impressive financial projections, a good number of Nigerians still live on less than $1.00 (One dollar) a day, which is about N160.00 (One Hundred and Sixty Naira), and more Nigerians have taken to a life of crime with some becoming ready tools in the hands of some politicians. Poverty reduction and job creation have not kept pace with population growth, implying social distress for an increasing number of Nigerians. One does not envisage a society in which everyone will be rich but it is expected that the vast majority will be able to afford the bare necessities of life. In ascribing reasons for socio-imbalance in Nigeria, it would be important to note that these reasons are cumulative and have collectively brought us to where we are today.

     

    (a)  Ethnicity

     

    Even though we hate to admit that this sad vice exists in our polity, it has continued to wax stronger. The average Nigerian government official is self-centered and adjusts every situation to conform to his parochial needs. If he is asked to empower someone from the country, he automatically chooses someone from his state. If he is asked to pick someone from his state, he picks from his Senatorial District. If he is asked to pick from his Senatorial District, he picks from his Local Government and if he is asked to pick from his Local Government, he picks from his village. Hilarious as this scenario may sound, it is definitive of the average Nigerian government official. While it merely supports the popular saying that even if you give a madman a hoe, he will drag heaps towards himself, it does not allow for true quality to shine through as better qualified individuals are sometimes left out in favour of less qualified individuals who are simply lucky to hail from the same state as “the man at the top”. The average Nigerian does not see himself as a Nigerian first; he is Hausa, Igbo or Yoruba first. National figures who are meant to advise against such nuances encourage same in their speeches and disposition.  This creates an encouraging platform for ethnic battles and pogroms where members of a particular ethnic group are rendered jobless and poor. For as long as we have jobless, uneducated individuals in the society, we will never lack trouble makers whose stock in trade is crisis.

     

    (b) Religious intolerance

    It was Karl Marx who described religion as “the opium of the people”. Nothing intoxicates an individual more than when he thinks his religion has been spat upon. There are Christian employers who are uncomfortable with Muslims and vice-versa. Some of these individuals are highly placed and thus in a position to materially influence the balance of employment, literacy and by extension, poverty levels.  Such actions lead to distrust and disharmony, thus paving the way for religious riots and similar vices. Poverty-stricken Nigerians who have nothing to lose, readily spearhead such destructive ventures, the seeds having been sown through religious intolerance.

     

    (c)  Non-justiciable Nature of Socio-Economic Rights

     

    Socio-economic rights are required for democracy to thrive in any country (thus giving it socio-economic balance). These rights are only present on paper in Nigeria and are, thus at best, ineffectual.  This is because of the provisions of section 6 (6) (c) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (As amended). Chapter II of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution (As Amended) covers sections 13 to 24 and deals with socio-economic rights. In this Chapter, the duties and obligations of the Nigerian Government are clearly stated. For instance, Section 14 (1) and (2) of the 1999 Nigerian Constitution (As Amended) state thus:

    “14. (1) The Federal Republic of Nigeria shall be a State based on the principles of democracy and social justice.

    (2)   It is hereby, accordingly, declared that:

    (a) sovereignty belongs to the people of Nigeria from whom government through this Constitution derives all its powers and authority;

    (b) the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government: and

    (c) the participation by the people in their government shall be ensured in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.

    I feel particularly compelled to refer to Section 18 which states thus:

    18. (1) Government shall direct its policy towards ensuring that there are equal and adequate educational  opportunities at all levels.

    (2) Government shall promote science and technology

    (3) Government shall strive to eradicate illiteracy; and to this end Government shall as and when    practicable provide

    (a) free, compulsory and universal primary education;

    (b) free secondary education

    (c) free university education; and

    (d) free adult literacy programme.

    By reason of the non-justiciable nature of these rights, Nigerians have been tacitly deprived of socio-economic rights. If Section 14 states that sovereignty belongs to the people but the same section is declared non-justiciable, should we really begin to wonder why there is socio-economic imbalance in Nigeria? The truth is that the non-justiciability of socio-economic rights absolves the government of its responsibility to the Nigerian populace. These rights are of course guaranteed by democracy but in the absence of an express and effective provision giving life to them, they merely serve aesthetic and cosmetic purposes. In the absence of any concrete provision therefore, illiteracy, poverty, unemployment and other vices continue to reign unchecked because the government cannot be sued either for its part in creating them or for its inability to curb their advent. We must borrow a leaf from either South Africa, India or Pakistan.  In South Africa, socio-economic rights are justiciable while in India and Pakistan the courts have given such provisions very liberal interpretations and they are therefore justiciable.  Civil and political rights cannot be realized in isolation of economic, social and cultural rights. Indeed, these rights form the basis upon which all other rights are predicated. What we need in Nigeria is public interest litigation and the review of the issue of locus standi.  In the case of the first generation of rights (fundamental human rights) the Rules of court have relaxed the requirement of standing.

     

    (d) Corruption:

    Corruption is a common word in the vocabulary of most Nigerian citizens. Almost all levels of Nigerian society have been perverted by corruption. It has been described as being endemic and a sub-culture in Nigeria. Section 98 of the Criminal Code has defined corruption as: “the receiving or offering of some benefits, rewards or inducement to sway or deflect a person employed in the public service from the honest and impartial discharge of his duties”.

    However in real application corruption applies to both public and private sectors.

    In Nigeria, a major cause of corruption is ethnicity otherwise called tribalism in Nigeria. Friends and kinsmen seeking favors from officials may impose difficult strains on the ethical disposition of the official. Many Nigerians having a kinsman as a government official may see such a government official as holding necessary avenues for their personal gain10. Corruption is one of the major causes of socio-economic imbalance as well as the political problems besetting Nigeria. It is a sickness difficult to cure once it infects. It is an evil that spreads terror amongst citizens who are its victims and comforts those who use it as a means to acquire wealth.

    Despite the government’s concerted efforts to combat corruption through the establishment of various anti-corruption agencies e.g Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), this endemic problem still persists. Lack of continuity and change in policy framework, lack of political will, low level of public enlightenment and the politicization of policies are some of the factors why most of the anti-corruption agencies can not completely eradicate or reduce the level of corruption.

    Noteworthy also is the socio-cultural constraint towards the fight against corruption. Some communities traditionally encourage gratification and this affects the members of such communities in discharging their functions in bureaucratic organizations. Without the eradication of corruption, the future is bleak. Any country with a high level of corruption cannot attain socio-economic balance. Though corruption is a universal problem, other countries afflicted by it have been able to attain development because they have adequate punitive structures/measures in place. One proposed solution to this endemic problem is for an overall social re-orientation through public enlightenment programmes and campaigns to build up a national consciousness against corruption in the minds of every Nigerian citizen.

    The Role of Law in the fight against corruption cannot be over-emphasized. The Independence of the Judiciary, Supremacy of judicial pronouncements, equality of citizens before the law and the subjection of all social norms to judicial interpretation will be steps in the right direction. There should be a determined approach towards the elimination of institutional weaknesses that promote corruption in the public sector. Professionalism is an avenue where professional associations can effectively discipline their members by the withdrawal of practising licences. The fear of withdrawal of licences will not allow professionals employed by organizations to engage in corrupt practices.

     

    3.     Socio-Economic Imbalance in Nigeria; Effects.

     

    The current socio-economic problems being experienced in the country could be linked to the long years of military rule, but this is fast becoming a lazy man’s argument. Since the advent of uninterrupted democratic governance in Nigeria in 1999, Nigeria has not fared as well as experts believe it should, economically or socially and this is not entirely the fault of the military; the civilian governments should shoulder their fair share of the blame as well. The effects of socio-economic imbalance are self-evident. They include the following;

     

    (a)  Illiteracy.

     

    The value of education, in any society, cannot be over-emphasized. It is no secret that the countries with the highest number of educated individuals take the lead in every major organization from the European Union to the United Nations Organisation. In Nigeria, education which is an important factor in economic growth and development8 and which was one of the platforms upon which such a promising country was built, has lost its glamour due to inadequate funding, lack of planning, poor management, lack of infrastructure and poor quality of teachers at all levels, among others, thus leading to the creation of a new group of educated illiterates. It does not help that more and more Nigerians seem inclined to taking the short-cut to success, instead of the patient build-up that education demands.

    8FORMULATIONS AND IMPLEMENTATION OF EDUCATIONAL POLICIES IN NIGERIA Dayo Odukoya, Ph.D Education & Development Consultant ERNWACA, University of Lagos, Nigeria

     

    This has further worsened the already fragile security situation in the country. Ethnic, economic and religious militia now hold sway in some parts of the country and while we may not have an ‘Arab Spring’ anytime soon, there is certainly a growing discontent, particularly among our misinformed youth, some of whom pay less attention to education these days, but many of whom could not even afford basic education, if they were to pay attention to it. Free public education means that knowledge is widely diffused among the people and would go a long way in clearing the ignorance that today’s youth suffer from. Unfortunately, however the rising cost of education in Nigeria, and the non-availability of free education in most parts of Nigeria have combined to ensure that the astronomical number of uneducated Nigerians will not be significantly reduced anytime soon. The increasing number of uneducated and unemployed Nigerians is alarming and should be a major cause for worry. About 56 million Nigerians are believed to be illiterate9. In the North in particular, the situation is critical and the region lags behind the rest of Nigeria in this regard. What does an uneducated, unemployed person think about? I am afraid we are starting to find out.

     

    (b)  High Rate of Unemployment

     

    It is rather ironic that while Nigeria continues to post impressive financial figures, majority of its citizens live in abject poverty. To cut a long story short, Nigeria has grown richer without making majority of Nigerians any richer. Jobs have suddenly become scarce or totally unavailable. Unemployed people quite naturally flirt with poverty and it does not take too long for a life of crime to beckon. It appears as though the Nigerian population is growing at a rate much faster than the country’s ability to create jobs. When illiteracy and unemployment marry as in the case of husband and wife, the children they gave birth to will certainly include but not limited to poverty, riots, insurgencies and kidnapping.

     

    (c)  Poverty

     

    Poverty is every government’s greatest fear. It is a situation in which an individual lives on less than $1.00 (One dollar) per day. A dollar as we know exchanges for N160.00 (One Hundred and Sixty Naira). The horrors of such a state are best imagined. In Nigeria, about 51.6% of the population live on less than a dollar per day10. This however is the lot of many Nigerians.

     

    9The challenges of mass illiteracy in Nigeria- BEN ADOGA, Nigerian Pilot, Thursday, June 20, 2013

    10 PRESS BRIEFING BY THE STATISTICIAN-GENERAL OF THE FEDERATION/CHIEF EXECUTIVE , NATIONAL BUREAU OF STATISTICS, DR. YEMI KALE HELD AT THE CONFERENCE ROOM, 5TH FLOOR, NBS HEADQUARTERS, CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT, ABUJA ON MONDAY, 13TH FEBRUARY, 2012.

     

    Poverty more than any other factor is the greatest effect of socio-economic imbalance as it breeds angry groups of individuals who are more than ready to do great harm to others.

     

    (d) Insurgency

     

    This is a logical consequence of socio-economic imbalance in any country. The ‘have-nots’ mobilize against the ‘haves’, who are represented by the government and other affluent personalities. Insurgency is said to occur when individuals take up arms against the state. This has occurred in quite a number of countries like Libya and Egypt with tragic consequences. It nearly occurred in England as well but was unsuccessful due to the fact that impoverished individuals constitute the minority. In a country like Nigeria where the “have-nots” far outnumber the “haves”, coordinated insurgencies have proved to be quite damaging. The activities of the Boko Haram sect as well as the Niger-Delta Militants not too long ago have given us a glimpse of what we would experience if all uneducated, unemployed and impoverished Nigerians were to take up arms against the government. Grappling with the sectional insurgents has been tasking enough for the government with lots of collateral damage in-between. This is a major effect of socio-economic imbalance. There was a placard at a riot some years back which read: Very soon the poor shall have nothing to eat except the rich. I hope it never comes to that.

     

    (e)  Criminality

     

    Another inevitable fall-out of socio-economic imbalance is criminality. For individuals who are unemployed, illiterate and poor and who are unwilling to create jobs for themselves, a life of crime offers succour, because an idle mind is the devil’s workshop. It is in this life of crime that they can harass and inflict terror on the affluent minority, while keeping body and soul together. As far back as 2006, our crime rates were shocking with a healthy population in prisons11. The activities of criminals in turn, lead to insecurity12 and commercial stagnation (most business ventures close on time for fear of armed robbers). Criminality is certainly the scariest of the effects of socio-economic imbalance.

     

    (f)   International Embarrassment

     

    Countries suffering from socio-economic imbalance are regularly at the fore-front of embarrassing international incidents. This is because of the inadvertent exportation of their socio-economic imbalance to other countries.

     

    11 International Centre for Prison Studies – World Prison Brief.

    12 Rising crime wave in Nigeria: US laments poor security response. Vanguard Newspaper March 15, 2013.

     

     

    The socio-economic imbalance is prevalent when a few Nigerians flaunt their wealth recklessly abroad while others struggle to survive (working in bakeries, working as night soil men and joining neighbourhood gangs) just to survive. Recently, two British citizens of Nigerian origin allegedly murdered a British soldier in Woolwich, Southern London. One of them, Michael Adebolajo had been a member of a Somali-dominated gang (Southern London is rumoured to be full of such gangs, their ranks filled with misguided, intoxicated Nigerians). While one may argue that the boys were British citizens, born and bred in Britain, their Nigerian connection cannot be severed. Their parents migrated from Nigeria in the 80s, quite possibly as part of the “brain drain” earlier mentioned. Some years back, a Nigerian was also hanged in Singapore for drug trafficking while Nigerians are deported on a regular basis from Europe and the U.S.A. In international circles, Nigeria regularly makes the news for the wrong reasons. Corruption, fraud “419”, and drug-dealing are fast becoming a Nigerian forte abroad with tighter immigration checks on those with green passports. With the socio-economic imbalance showing no signs of improving, and with Nigerians emigrating on a regular basis, we may have to brace ourselves for such embarrassing occurrences in future.

     

    (g) Weak Democracy

     

    Socio-economic imbalance invariably leads to a weak democracy. The reason for this is not far-fetched. The reason individuals submit to democracy is because they believe their rights will be guaranteed. Democracy is also expected to protect socio-economic rights. When this does not happen, the people lose confidence in the democratic government and may resort to other means to remove that government. This may include violent change of government. It is important to note that socio-economic imbalance is also responsible for the ‘politics of money’ that operates in Nigeria as against ‘politics of issues’.

     

    This is because Politics is the allocation of resources and if a country cannot operate a system that satisfactorily (to the satisfaction of the vast majority) allocates resources without rancour, then the plan is faulty from its substratum. There is a belief by some that the country is unable to organize elections acceptable by everyone as free and fair. Free and fair elections constitute the bedrock of democracy, the accepted form of government in most countries. When the majority of the populace believe that a country’s democracy cannot guarantee their rights, the basis for that democracy can be said to have been destroyed

     

    4.     Attaining Socio-Economic Balance in Nigeria Through Democracy; the Role of Law.

     

    It will be recalled that at the commencement of democratic practice in May 1999, two of the laws that challenged the level of corruption and economic crimes were the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) Act and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Act.  Despite the protests by some states that ‘corruption’ was not in the exclusive legislative list, the provisions in Chapter Two of the Constitution proscribing the abolition of corruption and the powers of the National Assembly to enforce these provisions were the authority for the passage of the ICPC Act. The body that sprang from this Act, the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) has been very active since its establishment.  It is therefore baffling that the government utilizes the provisions of Chapter II of the Constitution only when those provisions suit it. If the said Chapter can serve as the platform for the establishment of the ICPC, then there is no reason that Nigerians cannot benefit from all the provisions under the said chapter.

     

    In Nigeria, several legal instruments and policies have been used to address socio-economic imbalance.  For example, although some people may argue that the Federal Character Commission Act appears unconstitutional as it discriminates, this law has been used to address imbalance at the Federal level in terms of access to opportunities and positions. This is because Nigeria is a multi-cultural country with over 300 ethnic groups and languages. The moment there is socio-economic imbalance in the sense that one or more ethnic groups feel left out or marginalized, the embers of discontent and insurgency are fanned.

     

    The establishment of the Niger Delta Development Commission and the Hydro Power Development Commission in the year 2000 and 2010 respectively through their enabling laws, Niger Delta Development Commission Act13 and the Hydro Power Development Commission Act14  is part of the efforts of government to correct the socio-economic imbalance in Nigeria using the law as a catalyst. Section 1(3) of the NDDC Act 2000 clearly states that the head office of the Niger-Delta Development Commission shall be in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. The provision states thus;

     

    13 2000.

    14 2010.

     

     

    “The Commission shall have its head office in Port Harcourt, Rivers State   and shall establish an office in each member state of the Commission”

     

    Its functions are as contained in section 7 of the Act which states thus:

     

    (1)

    (a)     formulate policies and guidelines for the development of the Niger-Delta, area;

    (b)     conceive, plan and implement, in accordance with the set rules and regulations, projects and programmes for the sustainable development of the Niger-Delta area in the filed of transportation including roads, jetties and waterways, health, education, employment, industrialisation, agriculture and fisheries, housing land urban development, water supply, electricity and telecommunications;

    (c)     cause the Niger-Delta area to be surveyed in order to ascertain measures which are necessary to promote in physical and socio-economic development;

    (d)     prepare master plans and schemes designed to promote the physical development of the Niger-Delta area and the estimates of the costs of implementing such master plans and schemes.

    (e)     implement all the measures approved for the development of the Niger-Delta area by the Federal Government and the member States of the Commission.

    (f)      identify factors inhibiting the development of the Niger-Delta area and assist the member States in the formulation and implementation of pollicies to ensure sound and efficient management of the resources of the Niger-Delta area;

    (g)     assess and report on any project being funded or carried out in the Niger-Delta area by oil and gas producing companies and any other company including non-governmental organisations land ensure that funds released for such projects are properly utilised;

    (h)     tackle ecological and environmental problems that arise from the exploration of oil mineral in the Niger-Delta area and advise the Federal Government and the member States on the prevention and control of oil spillages, gas flaring and environmental pollution;

    (i)      liaise with the various oil mineral and gas prospecting and producing companies on all matters of pollution prevention and control;

    (j)      executive such other works and perform such other functions which, in the opinion of the Commission, are required for the sustainable development of the Niger-Delta area and its peoples; and…….

     

    (2)      In exercising its functions and powers under this section, the Commission shall have regard to the varied and specific contributions of each Member State of the Commission to the total national production of oil and gas.

     

    (3)     The Commission shall be subject to the direction, control or supervision in the performance of its functions under this Act by the President, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

     

    The location of the Commission in an oil producing state from the South-south region was ostensibly in recognition of the region’s production of the oil relied upon by all Nigerians. Due to the oil exploration and mining that goes on in the oil producing states of Nigeria, a lot of environmental degradation, at the hands of explorers and miners has occurred on their lands although they receive a percentage of the proceeds of crude oil sales. Their natural resources have been hard hit as their lands, natural source of water and wildlife have been steadily destroyed while the other regions benefit from the proceeds of crude oil sales without having to contend with the environmental degradation suffered by the oil producing states. The law of balance therefore necessitated that the region be adequately compensated in that regard.

     

    Like the NDDC Act, the HYYPADEC ACT seeks to achieve some semblance of socio-economic balance by situating the head office of the Commission in one of the Hydro- power producing states of the Federation (in the Northern part of Nigeria). Its membership comprises hydro-power producing states just like the Niger Delta Development Commission comprises oil producing states of the Federation. The Bill was sponsored to address the following issues raised by the communities in the hydro-power producing states;

     

    ·        Access to electricity for the communities;

    ·        Environmental degradation – loss of biodiversity etc.;

    ·        Flooding of the communities;

    ·        Poverty due to loss of livelihoods by the communities

    ·        Resettlement of communities

    ·        Provision of access to strategic commercial centres in order to revive the economy of these communities.

     

    Both Commissions seek to achieve socio-economic balance by ensuring that a larger part of the revenue derived from resources they produce for the country, is given back to them. One has its head office in the South, the other in the North. While this may further glorify the much maligned quota system, it is necessary if socio-economic balance is to be achieved. This is one of the ways through which the concept of law can aid in a country’s socio-economic balance.

    The role of law in attaining socio-economic balance in Nigeria therefore, cannot be overemphasized. As earlier stated, it is law that legitimizes a government. Law protects democracy. It is the presence of, and respect for law that preserves a country’s democracy. Similarly, it is only through the social engineering provided by Law that the socio-economic imbalance in the country can be addressed and corrected. It is Law that states how the state is to be governed and it is in this light that we seek to examine the role of law in respect of Nigeria’s nascent democracy, vis-à-vis the socio-economic imbalance experienced in the country.

     

    In discussing the role of law, I must refer again to the non-justiciability of Chapter II of the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria (As Amended) where most of the socio-economic rights are found. It goes without saying that most of the socio-economic rights enjoyed by Nigerians are “hand-outs” by the government and not what we would term “entitlements” legally speaking. The National Assembly might want to take another look at that particular conundrum. Nigerians would do wonders if they were afforded free water, free education etc, and the country would attain the levels of the likes of America where although education is not free, there is a high level of literacy and citizens are entitled to social security if they have no means of livelihood. If America is too far gone, then we might want to pattern our social-security program after Ghana or South-Africa (Nigerians have emigrated to these countries so they must be doing something right).There is the need for Nigeria’s legal system to pick up the gauntlet and address the country’s socio-economic problems. Law would play several roles in this instance and ensure the following:

     

     

    ·        The Rule of Law. This is self-explanatory. The Law reigns supreme.

     

    ·        Periodic Popular Elections. Elections are held as at when due.

     

     

    ·        A Legal Framework for the attainment of Socio-Economic Balance. This could also include some form of social security. We could take a look at the American Social Security system for guidance. In America, social security compasses several social welfare and social insurance programs15.

     

    ·        Tougher immigration laws. While this may present a bit of a problem due to our ECOWAS commitments which render it unnecessary for citizens of ECOWAS member states to obtain visas before visiting other member states, certain checks can still be made at the point of entry to ensure that aspiring visitors do not intend to rely on public funds. This ensures that the security system benefits Nigerians only and not Chadians and Nigeriens.

     

    ·        Constitutionalism. This simply connotes that the Constitution is followed to the last letter.

     

    ·        Separation of Powers16. There must be explicit constitutional limits, or checks, on concentrated power and those checks will only remain effective where there is some countervailing power to enforce them. Thus every concentrated power should be balanced by some other concentrated power in order to prevent any particular part of the government system from grasping excessive power and nullifying the constitutional checks.

     

    ·        The amendment of section 6 (6) (c) of the 1999 Constitution (As amended) to ensure that matters under Chapter II of the Constitution are made justiciable.

     

     

     

     

    15 ^ [42 USC 7] “US Code—Title 42—The Public Health and Welfare”. Archived from the original on October 12, 2006. Retrieved November 8, 2006

     

     

    16 Democracy: A Social Power Analysis By Dr. John S. Atlee, with Tom Atlee

     

    Law has been described as a means of social engineering by Dean Roscoe Pound and in no other instance is this definition more apt. By preparing a legal framework for the attainment of socio-economic balance, the Government would have nipped the growing insecurity in the country in the bud. Socio-economic rights would become justiciable and the government would feel obligated to address issues like poverty, unemployment and illiteracy as it could be sued for its part in creating them. Issues like resource control would be better addressed and no individual or group of individuals would feel deprived. No expenses should be spared here. A poor country may not be able to afford a good legal system, but without a good legal system, it may never become rich enough to afford such a system. Law is the glue that holds society together and the responsibility therefore falls on this much vaunted concept to somehow restore some balance to the Nigerian Socio-economic landscape.

     

    5.     Conclusion

     

    Domestic challenges, continue to undermine Nigeria’s constitutional democracy and its potential as a major economic and diplomatic power. Such challenges—insecurity, poverty, unemployment and low quality education —must be addressed if Nigeria’s democracy is to survive the test of time. In the meantime, Nigeria trudges along, socio-economically, like a drunken giant on the legs of a mosquito and is in need of a massive re-engineering.

     

    I have no doubt that our country is destined for great things as long as there is strict adherence to the rule of law and contradictory provisions in our laws are amended so as to eradicate illiteracy, poverty and criminality. The eradication of illiteracy, discrimination, poverty and criminality is what determines if a country is socio-economically balanced but this does not imply that these vices are totally absent in a fully developed society (after all, some misguided individuals in Woolwich, London, recently killed a serving soldier despite the existence of some semblance of socio-economic balance in the United Kingdom and there have been recent riots in Sweden and Turkey), it simply means they have been substantially curtailed. That way, insurgency, which is a consequence of socio-economic imbalance becomes a rare exception and not the norm. This is the aim of the law; to act as a catalyst for socio-economic balance.  It is hoped that when all is said and done, we would be able to say that we have attained socio-economic balance in Nigeria using the Constitution and legal instruments as catalysts.

     

    Thank you and God bless.

     

    Chief Joe-Kyari Gadzama, MFR, SAN, FCIArb. (UK).

    Honorary Bencher/Barrister at Lincoln’s Inn.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    NBA did not call for dissolution of Governors’ Forum.

    By Emeka Obegolu

     

    Following the critique and misrepresentations that trailed the  by  the NBA president, Okey Wali (SAN) for the Nigerian Governors Forun (NGF) to dissolve itself if it cannot resolve its crises and face the challenges of governance, the General Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Associatrion (NBA) Emeka J’ P. Obegolu in this piece, examines the circumstances and true import of the NBA Presidents speech.

     

    Recently, Nigerian Newspapers, online publications and faceless bulk text messages have been awash with grave misrepresentation of the position of the  National Executive Committee (NEC) of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) on the crises rocking the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF). The reading public have been “informed” that the NBA President, Okey Wali, SAN called for the proscription/banning/de-registration  or the scrapping of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum if they could not put their house in order. Nothing can be farther from the truth.

     

    Perhaps a brief narrative of the background of the proceedings at the NBA NEC Meeting held in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State will suffice to throw more light and enlighten readers on the factual basis for the position that will be adopted by this writer. Let me also state that as the General Secretary of the NBA with the duty to record and keep records of the proceedings of NEC, I feel a sense of responsibility to set the records straight and afford our members, and indeed Nigerians the factual records for all of us to make our deductions there from.

     

    The NBA President, Okey Wali SAN, whilst making the traditional President’s speech to the NBA NEC traced the history of the Governors’ Forum to the United States of America (USA), where he identified the vision of the National Governors’ Association of the USA as a body formed to identify priority issues and deal with matters of Public Policy and Governance at both National and State levels. He listed the NGA’s interventionist schemes through working committees and special committees, all designed to raise the bar of good governance  for  the benefit of Americans.

     

    Coming home, the NBA President noted that the Nigerian Governors Forum has failed to model itself after the NGA where the whole idea derives from. He opined that the existence of such a body should be for altruistic reasons and as such in the best interest of the nation, Nigeria.

     

    Okey Wali, SAN concluded thus “The NBA calls on our Governors to quickly resolve their crisis and get on with the business of governance which was why they have been elected Governors. If they cannot resolve their crisis very quickly, and face delivery of democracy dividends to their electorates, they must dissolve the body and stop this distraction as sooner than later, Nigerians will call on them, in or out of Government to give account of their stewardship.”

    Page 7, of the Presidential address.

     

    The NBA NEC thereafter adopted this presidential speech as a NEC resolution. By the adoption, the call became the NBA’s call to the NGF and no longer Okey Wali SAN’s call.

     

    Now, the underlined portion of the statement is instructive for the purpose of the argument – “Whether Okey Wali/NBA has become undemocratic, unlawful, anti-constitution or anti-masses” The allegations differ depending on the person making the allegation and the interest he or she wishes to serve.

     

    The call by the NBA is for the NGF to self-dissolve where the forum finds it difficult to live up to its own expectations and objectives. Self-dissolution of Associations registered by Trustee is provided under the Companies and Allied Matters Act, specifically, Section 608.

     

    The NBA President also mentioned his inability to comment on the NGF Electoral dispute due to the pendency of a suit before a court of competent jurisdiction where the election is a subject matter, thereby reiterating the time honoured doctrine of ‘lis pendis’ that protects the sanity of courts and its processes.

     

    NBA acknowledges the freedom of association as enshrined in our constitution and cannot call on an external body to dissolve the NGF, as that would be unconstitutional.

     

    We therefore urge very senior lawyers and commentators to always read speeches of NBA president as the chief spokesperson of the NBA before attempting to critique it and even then appropriate channels of critique and/or dissent should be followed to avoid dragging our profession into the political arena and inviting opprobrium to our Association.

     

     

     

     

     

    Part of cover

    Judicial corruption is  a cancer that every society must strive to eliminate.

     

    Mr. Desmond U. M. Yamah is the chairman of the Abuja branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA). In this interview, he bares his mind on the challenges of Bar leadership, welfare of lawyers, fighting corruption in the Judiciary and sundry national issues. Legal Editor, JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU, met him. Excerpts:

    You have been the chairman of the NBA Abuja branch for six months now, what has  been the challenges of this office?

    The office of the chairman of NBA Abuja branch is tasking and quite challenging. This is a branch that has about 10,000 members and with that kind of number, we are trying to reach out to make every member feel the impact and importance of the NBA in the personal lives and professional lives also.

    How are you going about this?

    We have embarked on a series of trainings for the branch in order to build the capacity of members in various fields  of law practice, for instance legislative advocacy. We are trying to acquire  basic knowledge in the art of drafting ,the idea of this is to ensure that  many of our members to take advantage of the knowledge and skills to do work for members of the National Assembly in terms of initiating  and proposing bills for members and even private member bills. We are also working on the areas of human rights because human rights violations are quite rampant in Abuja. A lot of the rights of the people are being violated, especially by the security agencies and some other organisations. We are trying to streghten the capacity of our human rights committee to be able to deal with these challenges. W e are also looking at the area of improving the judiciary and also trying very hard to acquire  a Bar Centre  for the branch. These are some of the key priority areas that we are looking at and in some of these  areas, the structures have been put in place, we are looking at the next six months to be able to have tangible achievements from the administration.

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria,  Justice Aloma Miriam  Mukhtar  has taken some bold steps to rid the judiciary of corruption, what is your reaction to this?

    The fight against corruption in the judiciary by the CJN is a welcome development. Every lawyer, every sane human being knows that any jurisdiction where the judiciary is corrupt, it is as dangerous as having a mad man with a loaded AK 47 loose on the streets. Judicial corruption is such a cancer that every society must strive to eliminate.  We support the fight against corruption by the CJN and if you look at events of the recent past, some people may seem to misunderstand our position.

    What has been your position?

    Our position has been  that where there have been established cases of judicial corruption,  such judicial officers must be  brought to justice because they destroy the lives of people, the destroy the rights of people, they destroy the interest of [people, they destroy the wealth of people  by making pronouncement  that are not in accord with the sense of justice. In as much as we support the fight against corruption, our position has always been that, the fight should be done in such a way as not to destroy the institution. Judicial corruption is like eroding  public confidence in the judicial system.

     

    How do we go about this?

    For instance today, many lawyers and their clients, litigants prefer to explore option of petition as against  appeal when they loose  cases.  No matter how clever a judge wants to be, when giving judgements for which he has been compromised, every average lawyer will know that the judgement is not in accord with established precedents. The law requires that a judge does not give judgement at his whims and caprices, not the way he feels or desires, no.  A judge gives judgement   based on established precedents and rule of law and every decisions reached by a judge, he must give reasons as to why he reached that decisions or conclusions. And when these reasons are weighed against the facts of the case, it is always very easy to know whether a judge has perverted judgement or not.  Now, a situation where people decide to write frivolous petitions against judges is unfair because it distracts judges from doing their jobs. This is not acceptable in a civilised judicial system. A situation where judges are intimidated, when they give judgements in line with what they think the people will say as against what they believe is the justice of the case, is not also acceptable.

     

    What is your suggestion about this?

    A judge must be courageous, this  is one of the major attributes of a good judge.  Judge must be fair, the judge must be principled,  he must be fearless in applying the law  and in reaching the decisions that he makes. But today, the judiciary is highly intimidated, we now have an instance where a judge of the Federal High Court, openly said in the open court, I do not know the ruling that I should give now, whichever ruling I give now, I am likely to be taken to the National Judicial Council (NJC). When we have a scenario like this, then the institution is seriously threatened and we cannot destroy the institution we seek to protect eliminating corrupt judges. So, there must be established guidelines, the must be established principles of bringing to justice judges that are corrupt. The trend now is that when lawyers loose a case, instead of going  on appeal, they write an appeal against a judge, for giving judgement against me, I will destroy him. We now have a situation where litigants openly threaten judges, most people make frivolous allegations against judges even there in the court.

    How do we resolve this?

    My advice on this is, let fight this cause in such a  way that corrupt judges are eliminated from the system and judges who are not corrupt, are also protected  against destructive allegations that threaten his career.

    It is widely believed that the standard of legal education in the country has fallen abysmally, consequently, people have called for law to be made a second degree programme, what is your reaction to this?

    Well, it depends on how you look at it. Law is a profession  like  wine that  gets better  with age. Now, looking at law, looking at the standard of education generally in the country, and looking at what you presume to be falling standards, a lot of factors are responsible for this. What are the conditions of our universities today, what are the conditions of the faculties of law in the universities, what are the qualifications of the lecturers that you have in these  faculties. Now, in arriving at that conclusion that the standard of  legal education is falling, you take a number of these factors into consideration, the educational sector has been thoroughly neglected by the government. Recently, I had a cause to visit the secondary school which I left in 1990, when I got there, the science laboratory which we used there then is no longer in existence, the school library is no longer in existence,  this is a Federal Government College, then how do you expect the pupils to read and become great scholars. Consequently, if you go to some law faculties today, you cannot find ordinary internet facilities.  Online research facilities are not there, the average lawyer cannot do research on the internet, how do expect rising standards of legal education in this circumstance?

    What is your advice in this circumstance?

    My thinking is that it is not making it a second or third degree programme that will improve the standard, you can have a first degree in a university that is not  properly equipped  and you come out worse than somebody the graduated from a well equipped secondary school. Consequently, you can take law as a first degree course in an academic environment that is properly equipped and you come out better than somebody who has practised law for more than 10 years. What we need to address, is the state of infrastructures in our universities and in our Law School. We need to look at the quality of lecturers that we have in those institutions, this underscores the need for us to have Law Faculties that are properly equipped with state of the art facilities where you have  regular supplies  of current editions of Law Reports, legal textbooks and high quality teachers as lecturers, who are properly and well remunerated, teachers who are encouraged and who are committed to the course of legal education. Where  teachers are not well paid, where adequate facilities are not provided for them to teach, where students do not have access to quality legal materials to enhance their study, we will continue to have these  challenges even  if  you make law a third degree  programme.  So, it is not making law a second degree course that will improve the standards of legal education,  but the quality of our tertiary  institutions and the preparedness of the institutions in turning out good students.

    Alternative Disputes Resolution Mechanisms (ADR) has been described as a faster mode of resolving commercial disputes, how come that we still have a lot of commercial disputes in our courts in spite  of the high level  of ADR practice in the country?

    Well, ADR is a very important component  of the judicial process in commercial  disputes resolution, because it helps the parties to reconcile and erode all forms of bitterness. It helps to reduce the workloads  in the court system, Many people will say that it is fast, many people will also say that it has a lot of advantages, but for any society to enjoy the advantages of ADR, the practitioners of ADR need to have quality education in the fields of ADR, I have seen so many situations where people  who have gone for ADR with the intention of speedy resolution of their disputes regretted ever going there because the panel members  failed or deliberately refused to write and deliver their awards after sitting and sometimes you find out that because  they  are not directly liable  to anybody,  they hand out awards that are perverse. I have seen a situation where an award that was given by an ADR panel was a big disappointment. Now, the challenge or disadvantage here is that you have to back to the court system again to seek to set aside the award, this is like going back to the drawing board.

    How do we resolve this?

    I want to appeal to the Institutes to exercise major control over their members, some of them are not giving the Institutes very good names. The concept is a good one, the advantages are numerous but the practice in Nigeria today is undergoing a lot of challenges. I always believe that there is always room for improvements, once we have credible members of the institutes who deliver credible awards in line with the provisions of the law and their conscience,  I think ADR is a wonderful alternative.

     

     

  • NBA seeks legislations to make chapter two of the constitution justiceable

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has called on the National Assembly to make Chapter two of the constitution justiceable in order to meet the yearnings and aspirations of Nigerians.

    The Chairman, NBA Constitution Review and Law Reform Committee, Chief Charles Edosomwan (SAN) during a visit to the Nigeria Law Reform Commission in Abuja said it had become imperative to make the chapter justiceable.

    Edosomwan said NBA had monitored the ongoing Constitution Review Process, adding that it must be a people driven process to bring the exercise to completion. The reason for this stand is that, the National Assembly has embarked on a widely scoped agenda that can only be described as sweeping.

    “Our mandates on law reform generally make the NBA a ready partner to your Commission in the several ongoing projects that are already grinding through your mills. After all  the fuss,  the hype and the serious business of achieving a new or reviewed constitution, it is important to bear in mind that legislation and case law decisions are two veritable ways of bringing its principles nearer to the people. Seriously, the people’s aspirations expressed in Chapter 2 of the Constitution need legislations to bring them to effect in the lives of citizens because when its provisions may not be ordinarily justiciable, government is in place to effect them when possible. This is one the reasons why the government is the organising committee of mass society to fulfil its aspiration”

    Responding on behalf of the Commission, Prof. Cyprian Okonkwo thanked the NBA for its efforts in upholding the rule of law in the country and assured the committee of the commissions’ readiness and determination to work with relevant agencies and organisations to make sure that our laws meet the aspirations of Nigerians.

     

  • Fuel Subsidy: Minister denies award of fuel importation contracts

    Fuel Subsidy: Minister denies award of fuel importation contracts

    The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, on Thursday denied that some companies indicted by the House of Representatives over fuel subsidy scam were awarded new contracts to import fuel.

    Alison-Madueke spoke with State House Correspondents at the Presidential Villa in Abuja.

    According to her, there is no way the companies indicted will have been patronised by the Petroleum Products Pricing and Regulatory Authority (PPRA).

    The minister said that all successful companies penciled down for the importation of fuel were thoroughly screened before selection.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Alison-Madueke was in the villa to attend the meeting between President Goodluck Jonathan and the leadership of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA).

    “All companies were vetted carefully and only companies that were cleared were put on the list,’’ she said.

    Speaking on the Petroleum Industry Bill before the National Assembly, Alison-Madueke said the progress made in its passage was in tandem with the expectations of the executive.

    “As different stakeholders go through the bill, there will be different views.

    “There will always be different stakeholders whose views are brought to bear when there is a document of such critical importance.

    “Once it enters the purview of the legislature, it is expected that different views will be heard.

    “At the end of the day, the expectation is that the document that comes out will represent a fairly win-win situation for all stakeholders for the good of the entire economy and the entire polity,’’ she said.

    The minister said she was invited by the President to attend the meeting with the NBA, because of the importance of some of the legal policies in the oil and gas sector.

    She said the NBA, which was a critical stakeholder in the country, considered the PIB as “a very critical piece of legislation’’ because of its far reaching implications on the country’s oil and gas sector.

    “It is an amalgamation of 16 existing laws in the oil and gas sector which have now been refined and repositioned to hopefully take Nigeria in this sector into the next 30 years and beyond.

    “We will like to see it move forward,’’ she said.

    Also speaking, the NBA President, Okey Wali (SAN), said the meeting with the President discussed some issues bordering on security, economy, the rule of law, and the Judiciary.

    “We thought we should have audience with the President and express our concerns on some issues and then the President graciously took the issues and addressed them.

    “We talked about the issue of the independence and funding for the judiciary.

    “We talked about the rule of law because we believe that it is a strong issue in any civilised society and we talked about the economy,’’ Wali said.

    Wali said the NBA acknowledged and appreciated the fact that Jonathan’s administration is working.

    He, however, stressed the need for the effects of the work to trickle down and affect the common man positively.

    “The government is working because we have lots of reports, but our concern is also the impact on the average Nigerian. It is not good enough to have the statistics, but we will like it to be moved to the next level where the average Nigerian gets the impact of what the government is doing,’’ he said.

    Wali said the delegation expressed the association’s concern over the crisis in Rivers and appealed to the President to do all that he could lawfully do to ensure that peace returned to the state.

     

  • NBA Lagos election: How the candidates stand

    As Lagos branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), goes to the poll on Friday, its outgoing Chairman, Mr. O. Taiwo Taiwo, has urged contestants not to be desperate in the exercise of their constitutional rights.

    He told The Nation: “ They are my friends. I have no particular candidate for any of the offices and I wish all of them well.”

    On his advice for the contestants, he said they should allow the votes to count and should not exhibit some traits to show that they are desperate for the elecction.

    He said: “ There must be losers and winners in the election. The losers should feel free to contest again and may possibly win; after all, I lost election twice before I campaigned and won the last one as the branch chairman.”

    He said the new branch executives will be sworn in on July 22, during the branch Annual General Meeting (AGM) when he would feel free to lash out at some members whose electoral fortunes might be imperilled if he lashes out at them, because some of them are contestants in the forth coming elections.

    He said: “Whether they win the election or not, I will talk because I am not impressed with their behaviour in the branch. I will definitely lash out at them.”

    Meanwhile, a list of about 1,859 eligible voters in the election as approved by the branch electoral committee has been displayed at the Bar centre with a a notice signed by the branch Financial Secretary, Mr Philip Njetene , urging those whose names are missing from the list to forward copies of their Branch Dues and Bar Practice Fees to the Bar Centre at the High Court on or before July 11, at 3.00pm for inclusion on the list.

    As is usual in NBA elections, the offices of the branch chairman and secretary are the most contentious and contested offices in this election with three people, Alex Muoka, Martins Ogunleye and Hannibal Uwaifo, contesting for the chairmanship of the branch while Tola Apata and Chukwuma Ezeala are slugging it out for the office of the branch secretary

    Alex N. Mouka

    He graduated from the Lagos State University (LASU), Ojo in 1990 and was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1991. He won the Dr. Graham-Douglas prize for the ‘best and most outstanding student in Company Law and Commercial Practice at the Nigerian Law School. He holds a Master of Laws (LL.M) of the University of Lagos (UNILAG) specialising in International Commercial Law and Secured Credit Transactions.

    He was a Legal Officer with ITT Nigeria Limited. In September 1992, he joined the law firm of Messrs. Tunde Odanye & Co. , which he left in July 1997 as Head of Chambers to set up his practice.

    He was appointed a Notary Public by the Chief Justice of Nigeria and was sworn-in on September 22, 1999. He is an Associate of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators of the United Kingdom.

    Muoka is Treasurer, Intellectual Property Law Association of Nigeria and Secretary, NBA, Lagos branch. His practice covers civil litigation and dispute resolution, company and commercial law, banking and insurance matters, corporate re-structuring and re-engineering, project and joint venture documentation, communications, construction and development law, trusts, environmental law and intellectual property law.

    Mr. Mouka said good leadership, institutional reforms, capacity building among members, welfare of members and discipline in the profession is the core focus of his manifesto.

    Martins Ogunleye

    Mr Ogunleye is the First Vice Chairman, NBA Lagos branch; chairman, NBA Lagos Human Rights Committee (2011-2013); chairman J.I.C. Taylor Memorial Lecture Committee, NBA Lagos, (2011-2013); Member, Human Rights Committee, NBA Lagos (2009-2011); chairman, Protocol sub- committee, NBA Lagos Annual Dinner 2011; Member, NBA Lagos Law Week Committee 2012; ex-Officio member, Nationmal Association of Catholic Lawyers (2011-date)

    He has the welfare of members, integration of zonal fora, capacity building for members, enhancing the capacity of the branch secretariat, ensuring financial discipline, Bar and Bench relations and branch corporate social responsibilities as the focus of his manifesto.

    Hannibal Uwaifo

    Uwaifo has been a very active member and player in the branch since 1990, when he was called to the Bar. He has served the branch in the following capacities, ex-officio member of the Exco-1995-97; Asst. Publicity Secretary, 1997-99.

    Secretary, Loc al Organising Committee1997, N.E.C. Lagos-1997; Asst. Social Secretary, 1999-2001; Chairman, Law week committee 2009, Chairman, Task Force for AGM (Lagos) 2009; Secretary, Judicial Committee 2009-2011, Alternate chairman, Bar Dinner Committee, 2011; Chairman, Law Week Committee 2012 and member, National Executive Committee (NEC) NBA 2008 2012.

    He said: “ I discharged my duties in those offices creditably well and with all sense of responsibility. The process of discharging those responsibilities exposed me on first hand basis, to the challenges facing the branch as a body, the expectations of its members which I have briefly articulated in my manifesto as follows: proper harnessing of the potentials of our branch, branch secretariat and Bar Centre, creation of wealth for our members, dignifying our profession by the provision a 30- seater air-conditioned bus for younger members of the Bar and other lawyers who rely on public transport to run their practice, to shuttle between our major practice centres. This will, definitely, bring dignity to the legal profession, mentoring of young lawyers, continuing legal education, maintain an activist Bar within the boundaries of professional ethics, as a member of the International Bar Association (IBA) since 1997, American Bar Association (ABA) since 2005, I can also tap from my experience in those organisations to further the interest of our branch, insurance for members and their spouses.”  Tola Apata

    He said: “ The office of the secretary of NBA Lagos branch is not that of a “glorified clerk”. Whoever occupies that office is a leader in our noble profession. He must, indeed, have the traits, attitudes and qualities of a good leader. He should be accessible and acceptable to interest groups within the Bar.

    “There are gender, religious and professional interest sub-groups within the Bar, such as Arbitration, Mediation,  Insolvency, Muslim Lawyers Association of Nigeria ( MULAN),Christian Lawyers Fellowship of Nigeria (CLASFON), Young Lawyers etc.

    Apata promises each subgroup and interest equal and fair treatment, but with bias and over indulgence towards the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) as it champions the cause of women, the down trodden and other vulnerable members of our society.Apata promises “good, quality professional and organisation leadership to all. He will ensure that the Bar gets its dues from all its members and that the Bar reciprocates by according honour, privileges and protection to its members in the course of law practice.

    “To serve the Bar effectively and efficiently at its Lagos branch Secretariat. He will focus on professional training and capacity building in all areas of law. He will initiate the publication of an NBA Lagos Branch Law Reports. He will reactive the ongoing efforts by the Bar to build a permanent secretariat with modern day office and other information communication technology (ICT) equipment.

    Babatola foresees and shall work for a proactive Bar, not a reactionary one – one that be “on top of its game” on all issues affecting the legal professional in our country. He specifically called the profession’s attention to section 41 of the Financial Reporting Council Act, 2011, which requires all professionals, lawyers inclusive to register with the Council before they can render services to public entities I.e government organisations, parastatals and public companies. The Bar was not consulted before the Act was enacted. The Bar is now in a precarious position, ever willing to react when the provisions of the Act are effectively implemented against its members! That is what the Bar is presently doing in the litigation on the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 at the Federal High Court, Abuja Division.

    The Bar has a duty to fight quacks, by ensuring that no non-legally qualified persons practice law under any disguise.

    Above all, whenever the Bar has to identify with the people by undertaking political affirmative action as witnessed in the fuel subsidy removal protest, Justice Salami protest etc.

    Apata shall be at the vanguard of such actions.

    The Bar that shall ensure the rule of law and not the law of the ruler is Apata’s vision. Each vote for Apata counts and is valuable for the attainment of these lofty ideals.”

    Chukwuma Ezeala

    He said his immense experiences from his services to the branch in various capacities has exposed him to the challenges of the NBA system.

    He said: “In these capacities, I have gained immense experience and capacity for management of human/material resources and projects, more especially, I have gained invaluable insights on the strengths and weaknesses of the NBA system.

    “My careful review of our Bar, particularly the office of the secretary reveals that it has been growing from strength to strength due to the committed efforts of our past great leaders and secretaries. However, there is the urgent need to consolidate on the labours of our great Bar leaders while at the same time raising a bar of excellence.

    Our secretariat: ”The Lagos Bar has the largest, finest and most successful lawyers in West Africa. However, there is the need to devise ways to bring about optimal utilisation of these intangible but enviable resources for more efficient services to our teeming members

    Lack of database of Lawyers in the Branch: “This is a fundamental issue, as there cannot be proper planning without a reliable database. Therefore, the compilation of membership register and issuance of identity cards shall be pursued with the utmost vigour. The exercise shall lead to increase in membership strength from the current 3,000 to more than 5,000 members that should be captured in our database.

    On minutes and branch resolutions, he said: “It is axiomatic that minutes and resolutions of meetings are very important for any association. Therefore, minutes of the branch meetings shall be regularly and timeously communicated to members. Resolutions at meetings will be adequately publicized to avoid ambiguity in the minds of members.

    On the the courts, he said: “The secretariat staff shall be empowered to constructively engage court registrars and the courts towards a seamless administration of litigation and probate related matters.”

    He added: “Collaboration and networking among secretariat staff of the NBA branches in Lagos shall be developed with a view to meeting the expectations of an association that is interested in the welfare of its members. This would most likely lead to provision of similar services in Ikeja and other branches where there are courts.”

  • ‘Judicial corruption is  a cancer we must eliminate’

    ‘Judicial corruption is  a cancer we must eliminate’

    Mr Desmond Yamah is the chairman of the Abuja branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA). In this interview with Legal Editor JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU, he speaks on the challenges of leadership, lawyers’ welfare, fighting corruption in the Judiciary and sundry issues. Excerpts:

    You have been the chairman of the NBA Abuja branch for six months. What are the challenges of the office?

    The office of the chairman of NBA Abuja branch is tasking and quite challenging. This is a branch that has about 10,000 members and with that kind of number, we are trying to reach out to make every member to feel the impact and importance of the NBA in their professional lives.

    How are you going about this?

    We have embarked on training for the branch to build the capacity of members in various fields  of law practice, for instance legislative advocacy. We are trying to acquire  basic knowledge in the art of drafting, the idea of this is to ensure that  many of our members to take advantage of the knowledge and skills to do work for members of the National Assembly in terms of initiating  and proposing bills for members and even private member bills. We are also working on the areas of human rights because human rights violations are quite rampant in Abuja. A lot of the rights of the people are being violated, especially by the security agencies and some other organisations. We are trying to streghten the capacity of our human rights committee to be able to deal with these challenges. W e are also looking at the area of improving the judiciary and also trying very hard to acquire  a Bar Centre  for the branch. These are some of the priority areas that we are looking at and in some of these areas, the structures have been put in place, we are looking at the next six months to be able to have tangible achievements from the administration.

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria,  Justice (CJN) Aloma Miriam Mukhtar has taken some bold steps to rid the judiciary of corruption. What is your reaction to this?

    The fight against corruption in the judiciary by the CJN is a welcome development. Every lawyer, every sane human being, knows that any jurisdiction where the judiciary is corrupt, it is as dangerous as having a mad man with a loaded AK 47 loose on the streets. Judicial corruption is such a cancer that every society must strive to eliminate.  We support the fight against corruption by the CJN and if you look at events of the recent past, some people may seem to misunderstand our position.

    What is your position?

    Our position has been  that where there have been established cases of judicial corruption,  such judicial officers must be  brought to justice because they destroy the lives of people, the rights of people, the interest of people, they destroy the wealth of people  by making pronouncement  that are not in accord with the sense of justice. In as much as we support the fight against corruption, our position has always been that, the fight should be done in such a way as not to destroy the institution. Judicial corruption is like eroding  public confidence in the judicial system.

    How do we go about this?

    For instance today, many lawyers and their clients, litigants prefer to explore the option of petition as against  appeal when they lose  cases.  No matter how clever a judge wants to be, when giving judgements for which he has been compromised, every average lawyer will know that the judgement is not in accord with established precedents. The law requires that a judge does not give judgment at his whims and caprices, not the way he feels or desires, no.  A judge gives judgment   based on established precedents and rule of law and every decision reached by a judge, he must give reasons for it. And when these reasons are weighed against the facts of the case, it is always easy to know whether a judge has perverted judgement or not.  Now, a situation where people decide to write frivolous petitions against judges is unfair because it distracts judges from doing their jobs. This is not acceptable in a civilised judicial system. A situation where judges are intimidated, when they give judgments in line with what they think the people will say as against what they believe is the justice of the case, is not also acceptable.

    What is your suggestion on this?

    A judge must be courageous, this  is one of the major attributes of a good judge.  A judge must be fair, the judge must be principled. He must be fearless in applying the law  and in reaching the decisions that he makes. But today, the judiciary is highly intimidated; we have an instance where a judge of the Federal High Court, said in the open court, I do not know the ruling that I should give, whichever ruling I give, I am likely to be taken to the National Judicial Council (NJC). When we have a scenario like this, then the institution is seriously threatened and we cannot destroy the institution we seek to protect eliminating corrupt judges. So, there must be established guidelines. There must be established principles of bringing to justice judges that are corrupt. The trend now is that when lawyers lose a case, instead of going  on appeal, they write an appeal against a judge, for giving judgment against me, I will destroy him. We have a situation where litigants threaten judges, most people make frivolous allegations against judges even there in their court.

    How do we resolve this?

    My advice on this is, let’s fight this cause in such a  way that corrupt judges are eliminated from the system and judges who are not corrupt, are also protected  against destructive allegations that threaten his career.

    It is believed that the standard of legal education in the country has fallen abysmally; consequently, people have called for law to be made a second degree programme, what is your reaction to this?

    Well, it depends on how you look at it. Law is a profession  like  wine that  gets better  with age. Now, looking at law, looking at the standard of education in the country, and looking at what you presume to be falling standards, a lot of factors are responsible for this. What are the conditions of our universities; what are the conditions of the faculties of law in the universities; what are the qualifications of the lecturers that you have in these  faculties. Now, in arriving at that conclusion that the standard of  legal education is falling, you take some of these factors into consideration, the educational sector has been thoroughly neglected by the government. Recently, I had a cause to visit the secondary school which I left in 1990, when I got there, the science laboratory which we used there then is no longer in existence, the school library is no longer in existence.  This is a Federal Government College, then how do you expect the pupils to read and become great scholars. Consequently, if you go to some law faculties today, you cannot find ordinary internet facilities.  Online research facilities are not there, the average lawyer cannot do research on the internet, how do expect rising standards of legal education in this circumstance?

    What is your advice in this circumstance?

    My thinking is that it is not making it a second or third degree programme that will improve the standard, you can have a first degree in a university that is not  properly equipped  and you come out worse than somebody the graduated from a well equipped secondary school. Consequently, you can take law as a first degree course in an academic environment that is properly equipped and you come out better than somebody who has practised law for more than 10 years. What we need to address, is the state of infrastructures in our universities and in our Law School. We need to look at the quality of lecturers that we have in those institutions, this underscores the need for us to have Law Faculties that are properly equipped with state of the art facilities where you have  regular supplies  of current editions of Law Reports, legal textbooks and high quality teachers as lecturers, who are properly and well remunerated, teachers who are encouraged and who are committed to the course of legal education. Where  teachers are not well paid, where adequate facilities are not provided for them to teach, where students do not have access to quality legal materials to enhance their study, we will continue to have these  challenges even  if  you make law a third degree  programme.  So, it is not making law a second degree course that will improve the standards of legal education,  but the quality of our tertiary  institutions and the preparedness of the institutions in turning out good students.

    Alternative Disputes Resolution Mechanisms (ADR) has been described as a faster mode of resolving commercial disputes, how come that we still have a lot of commercial disputes in our courts in spite  of the high level  of ADR practice in the country?

    Well, ADR is a very important component  of the judicial process in commercial  disputes resolution, because it helps the parties to reconcile and erode all forms of bitterness. It helps to reduce the workloads  in the court system, Many people will say that it is fast, many people will also say that it has a lot of advantages, but for any society to enjoy the advantages of ADR, the practitioners of ADR need to have quality education in the fields of ADR, I have seen so many situations where people  who have gone for ADR with the intention of speedy resolution of their disputes regretted ever going there because the panel members  failed or deliberately refused to write and deliver their awards after sitting and sometimes you find out that because  they  are not directly liable  to anybody,  they hand out awards that are perverse. I have seen a situation where an award that was given by an ADR panel was a big disappointment. Now, the challenge or disadvantage here is that you have to back to the court system again to seek to set aside the award, this is like going back to the drawing board.

    How do we resolve this?

    I want to appeal to the institutes to exercise major control over their members, some of them are not giving the Institutes very good names. The concept is good, the advantages are numerous, but the practice in Nigeria is undergoing a lot of challenges. I always believe that there is always room for improvements, once we have credible members of the institutes who deliver credible awards in line with the provisions of the law and their conscience,  I think ADR is a wonderful alternative.

     

  • NBA condemns violent clash in Rivers’ Assembly

    NBA condemns violent clash in Rivers’ Assembly

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has condemned the violent clash in the Rivers State House of Assembly.

    It asked the Federal Government and the relevant security agencies to take all necessary steps to urgently resolve the political crisis in the state.

    The association expressed regret over the turn of events in the state, arguing that the resort to violence was uncivilized and condemnable.

    NBA, in a statement issued on Wednesday by its president, Okey Wali (SAN), urged security agencies not to take side with any party in the dispute, but to maintain an unbiased position.

    It urged all parties to the dispute to explore the judicial option in resolving their differences rather than resorting to self help.

    “The political differences in Rivers State up and until now, had been in the courts, which was the right and proper way to settle disputes in any civilized society.

    “But the latest twist of violence is a dangerous dimension that must be condemned very strongly and quickly.

    “The NBA therefore appeals to the parties to sheath their swords and return to the courts, where they have been, for adjudication of any disputes between them.

    “The NBA calls on the Federal Government of Nigeria and security agencies to do all that is lawful in ensuring the restoration of peace and tranquility in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. The rule of law must prevail, and there must be no sacred cows, as nobody is above the law.

    “The NBA emphasises that the security agencies must not only be above board but must be seen to be above board, in carrying out their lawful duties.

    “At all times, the interest and well being of the good people of Rivers State must remain paramount,” the NBA said.

     

  • National Honours: Don’t strip president powers, say Belgore, NBA

    National Honours: Don’t strip president powers, say Belgore, NBA

    Former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Alfa Belgore has opposed to the removal of exclusive powers of the president to award national honors on deserving Nigerians.

    Belgore’s position was supported by the Nigerian BarAssociation (NBA), Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) and the Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) among other stakeholders.

    The former CJN, who is the Chairman of the National Award Honours Committee also disagreed with idea of excluding serving public office holders from being recognized with the award, as proposed by the amendment.

    Belgore spoke on Thursday at a public hearing organized by House Committee on Governmental Affairs on two bills seeking to amend the National Honours Act.

    One of the bills seeks to subject the conformation of any award on the National Assembly as well as powers to revoke due to misconduct on the part of the awardee.

    The bill also seek to prohibit serving public officer, elected or appointed from being conferred with the award while it also seeks to increase the fine payable upon conviction from N100, 000 to N1m.

    Justice Belgore, however, appealed to the lawmakers to shelve any attempt at stripping the President of the powers to award the National Honours on those he deemed fit.

    “It is not done anywhere in the world, it is the exclusive of the President and not the National Assembly. I don’t think this amendment is necessary because everywhere in the world, it is the prerogative of the President to preside over this award,” he said.

    He also disagreed with the exclusion of serving public officers from the award, saying, “Why not? The award is meant to recognize those that are deserving and if those serving merited it, they should so be recognized.

    “It is for recognition and being so recognized would serve as impetus for others to want to contribute their own quota to nation building, “the former CJN added.

    The NBA in its presentation aligned with Justice Belgore on the two issues and stated that limiting the number of awardees to 100 would not be fair to deserving Nigerians.

    According to the NBA, the current 450 limit should be left open.

     

  • ‘Pitfalls to avoid in money laundering cases’

    ‘Pitfalls to avoid in money laundering cases’

    Although the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has challenged the legality of the Money Laundering Act 2011, which compels lawyers to declare financial transactions with the clients in court, lawyers were last week taught how to relate with their clients in order to avoid being indicted for money laundering.

    Participants at the NBA Lagos branch “money laundering vs the legal practitioner” session, which was part of events to mark the branch’s law week, were enlightened by renowned legal scholars and practitioners on how to do their jobs without aiding and abating the crime.

    The session, which was chaired by Rickey Tarfa (SAN), had Mrs. Funke Adekoya (SAN), Prof. Akin Oyebode and Mrs. Ngozi Giwa-Amu as speakers.

    Referring to countries such as Canada, South Africa and the United Kingdom, Mrs Adekoya noted that legal practitioners across the globe have always staged a legal war against enactments that conflict with their codes of professional ethics.

    She said lawyers indirectly get involved in money laundering through the use of the lawyer’s client account by criminal clients as a bank account to deposit criminal proceeds for onward transmission to various payees on the instructions of the client; through management of clients’ money or other assets; using his/her name to acquire bank accounts, credit cards or loan agreement for the client; creation of companies and trusts, among others.

    The attorney-client privilege is a fundamental concept in the relationship between a lawyer and his client, Adekoya said.

    ”It provides protection for both the lawyer and client from disclosing communications made in confidence for the purpose of enabling the client to obtain legal advice or assistance. The lawyer cannot be compelled to disclose it, even by an order of court.

    “The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (“the Constitution”) guarantees every person the right to a legal practitioner of one’s choice (Section 36(6)(c)) and, thereby, entitlement to attorney-client privilege. Section 37 of the Constitution also guarantees the right to privacy,” she said.

    On how lawyers can protect themselves from such liability, Adekoya urged them to ensure client’s due diligence checks and further enquiry; report suspicious activity; do in-depth oversight of the client’s business; assess the client’s objectives and provide requisite staff training.

    She said they should ensure awareness of transactions with heightened money risks; avoid the provision of banking services for clients; refuse cash payments above a certain limit at the law office or into the firm’s bank account as well as the monitoring by accounts staff to ascertain if funds received from clients are from credible sources.

    Citing the rules of professional conduct, Mrs Adekoya advised lawyers to terminate relationships with clients who are criminal dealings, adding “a lawyer shall uphold and observe the rule of law, promote and foster the course of justice, maintain a high standard of professional conduct, and shall not engage in any conduct which is unbecoming of a legal practitioner.”

    Oyebode noted that contrary to widely held opinion, the privilege of confidentiality between lawyer and client is not absolute as the law has envisaged circumstances when the privilege can be impugned.

    He argued that the Money Laundering Act does not directly remove the lawyer-client confidentiality privilege but obliquely criminalises failure by any person to report an international transfer of funds or securities required to be reported under the Act, which was merely following the precedents laid down by earlier legislation such as the ICPC Act, 2000 and Terrorism (Prevention) Act 2011.

    Oyebode said lawyers would enjoy no protection under the law for any property that they hold on behalf of their client if it can be established that such a property arose from transactions involving money laundering.

    “It should be clear to all concerned that lawyers carryout their duties under the law and have to abide by whatever strictures and constraints envisaged by the law in furtherance of the larger interests of society,” he said.

    The event also had sessions on security; the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), legal ethics, with Justice Ayotunde Philips, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN), Chief Bayo Ojo (SAN), Emeka Ngige (SAN) and Babatunde Ogala, among others, in attendance.