Tag: NJC

  • Glo has made us proud, says NJC

    Glo has made us proud, says NJC

    Students of the National Judicial Institute (NJI) have said Globacom has made Nigerians proud as a fully indigenously-owned company for its innovation and infrastructural development. These, they said have helped to move the country forward in the areas of business, interpersonal relationships and judicial processes.

    The students, who are members of the Bench  spoke through their leader, Hon. Justice Chinwe Iyizoba of the Court of Appeal, Ibadan Division during an educational excursion to Glo.

    Their Lordships commended Glo for making all Nigerians proud by  growing an indigenous telecommunications firm that is competing favourably with other global telecoms networks.

    Having toured the state-of-the- art facilities in the Customer Care Department of the company, the members of the bench concluded that “Globacom is doing well,” noting that the company had contributed immensely to the socio-economic growth of the Nigerian economy.

  • NJC: S/Court, A/Court Chief Registrars know fate today

    NJC: S/Court, A/Court Chief Registrars know fate today

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) will among other things decide today  the fate of the Chief Registrars of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal who are jostling to replace the council’s retiring Executive Secretary, Halilu Danladi.

    The Nation learnt that the NJC will, at its meeting today, decide who, among Aliyu Ibrahim (Chief Registrar of the Court of Appeal) and Ahmed Saleh (Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court, should replace Danladi.

    Danladi is expected to retire on November 16, 2016 after attaining mandatory retirement age of 65 years.

    Ibrahim and Saleh were said to have been short-listed after the interview conducted on October 19 by the Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC).

    A total of 16 people were said to have been interviewed for the position. They included  Chief Registrars of all the Federal courts, some their deputies, Chief Magistrates and the National Judicial Institutes (NJI).

  • NJC holds last meeting under Mohammed today, Thursday

    NJC holds last meeting under Mohammed today, Thursday

    THE Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmud Mohammed, will preside over his last meeting of the National Judicial Council (NJC) today and Thursday as its chairman.

    Justice Mohammed is billed to retire on November 10 upon attaining the statutory retirement age.

    The Nation learnt yesterday that the meeting will consider some pending petitions against some judges

    It was learnt that investigations on seven of the petitions against judges have been concluded by the various panels to which they were assigned.

    An NJC source told The Nation that the NJC will take final positions on the seven petitions at the meeting to be held today and Thursday.

    “Also in agenda are the appointments of some judges for National Industrial Court NIC).

    “They have earlier been interviewed by the Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC) and consequently recommended to the NJC for appointment.

    “The NJC will also confirm the appointment of the Supreme Court Chief Registrar, Ahmed Gambo Saleh, as the substantive Secretary of the NJC.

    “Interview for the position was conducted about two weeks ago by the FJSC. A total of 16 people were interviewed on October 19.

    “Those interviewed included Chief Registrars of all the federal courts and some their deputies, Chief Magistrates and the National Judicial Institutes (NJI),” the source said.

    It was further learnt that the current Secretary of the NJC will retire on November 16, after attaining mandatory retirement age of 65 years.

     

     

     

  • Welcome step

    Welcome step

    We commend all those responsible for NJC’s shift of position over judges accused of corruption

    Hopefully, there is now a consensus about what the National Judicial Council (NJC) should do over the two justices of the Supreme Court and the other judges who were recently arrested and interrogated by the Department of State Services (DSS), over allegations of corruption. That consensus is that the judicial officers concerned should be suspended from sitting, until their culpability or otherwise is determined. Secondly, the NJC should collaborate with the DSS in dealing with the allegations, despite its misgivings about the conduct of the security agency.

    We commend major stakeholders like the NJC, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), the press, civil society organisations, and notable senior lawyers like Professor Ben Nwabueze and Femi Falana (SAN) for their intervention. We agree with the demand that the judicial officers concerned should either excuse themselves from their duties or that the NJC should send them on compulsory leave, while the matter is sorted out. The complaint by the NJC that the DSS acted beyond its powers should not detract from the weighty allegations of corruption against the judicial officers.

    It is also encouraging that the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Mahmoud Mohammed, has launched a new National Judicial Policy (NJP) to guide judicial officers in their conduct. The CJN also inaugurated the Judicial Ethics Committee, headed by former CJN, Justice Legbo Kutigi, to undertake “preparations of amendments to the Judicial Code of Conduct as the need arises … and do all such things necessary to ensure a continuous high standard of judicial accountability and probity.” We urge the committee to recommend stringent guidelines to stem corruption in the judiciary. The way we treat the present crisis will affect the confidence of our country men and women in the judiciary, and also impact on the confidence of foreign investors, who need a transparent judiciary to protect their investment.

    We agree with the CJN when he said, at the unveiling of the NJP: “The National Judicial Policy (NJP) recognises that the greatest and most damaging challenge to administration of justice is corruption and that tackling this challenge must go beyond mere exhortation and sentiments.” So, with the recent indictment, the NJC must realise that the integrity of the entire judiciary is at risk, until the bad eggs are transparently weeded out from the lot. Also, we urge the NJC to drop the policy against reporting such matters to the press, as public pressure is necessary to aid public accountability.

    Perhaps, the resort to reason instead of emotion may have prompted the change in tactics by the NBA. We recall the initial tough-talk by the association, threatening to bring down the roof, unless the judges were released from detention, even as it called the operation by the DSS unconstitutional. That threat rather heightened the crisis, instead of resolving it. Now that the NBA has called for the judges to step aside while they are under investigation, we urge the NJC to also retrace its step and toe the same line of reasoning, in the overall interest of the country, bleeding profusely from corrupt practices.

    It is also noteworthy that Nigerians under the auspices of the civil society organisations have shown interest to push for a resolution of the crisis, in line with common sense. One such group has demonstrated to press for the suspension of the judges concerned. Another has given notice that if the judges continue to sit, they would demonstrate before their courts. As the NJC ought to know, it does not bode with common sense for judges accused of serious acts of corruption to continue to sit in courts, to preside over trials and hope to dispense untainted justice.

    Such a practice will negate the proverbial but rhetorical question, about what a common man would think in such circumstance. Without much ado, we feel that the common man would view such a judge with disrespect, if not disdain. Moreover, it will be ridiculous for a judge to finish sitting in the morning, and by afternoon he/she is also docked before another judge, to defend himself/herself. Indeed, any litigant who sees such a judge presiding over a matter after leaving another court as an accused person, will lose confidence in the judicial system.

    We also encourage the DSS to appreciate the enormity of the issues at stake. While we encourage it to join forces with other investigative and security agencies to fight corruption, it must do so transparently. It must not operate under the rule of thumb, or become infected by the same cankerworm it is supposed to be fighting. While holding out that it has powers to interrogate any person suspected of acting to undermine the state, it must not scoff at any scrutiny of its own actions.

    In the fight against corruption, even the hunter must submit to transparency.

     

  • Arrested judges: Senior lawyers urge NJC to insist on due process

    Arrested judges: Senior lawyers urge NJC to insist on due process

    Senior lawyers under the aegis of the Body of Senior Advocates of Nigeria (BSAN) yesterday urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) to insist on due process in determining the fate of the judges arrested by the Department of State Services (DSS).

    It advised the NJC not to be swayed by the sentiments being expressed by members of the public on how best to handle the challenges facing the Judiciary.

    BSAN’s position is contained in a speech delivered on its behalf by a member, Adegboyega Awomolo (SAN), who represented the body’s leader, Alhaji Abdullahi Ibrahim (SAN), in Abuja at an event, marking the commencement of the 2016/2017 legal year of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    Awomolo, who stressed the need for the NJC to act within its rules and procedures, noted: “Both the Bar and the Bench constitute the majority members of the NJC.

    “In this respect, the NJC must act within its rules, procedure and the law and not by the noise of the market. Judicial officers must be treated according to the law of the land.”

    He urged judges and lawyers to support efforts to rid the Judiciary of corruption and restore public confidence to its operations.

    Awomolo argued that although there was the need to rid the Judiciary of corruption, such effort must be within the confines of the law and due process.

    He urged judges to learn from the recent developments in the country and strive to be above board.

    Awomolo said judges must be above board like Ceasar’s wife in their private and public relationships.

    “Men and women of the bar and bench must discipline their hearts for godliness, their eyes for contentment and flesh for holiness.

    “There is urgent need to encourage ourselves because when the judiciary is cowed and when the bar is intimidated, the result is lawlessness and anarchy. God forbid.

    “As late as 1980, I recall Hon. Justice Saidu Kawu, Justice of the Supreme Court (of blessed memory), then as Chief Judge of Kwara State, warned judges of Kwara State judiciary that ‘politicians are to be feared, kept at distance and avoided even if they are your relations’.

    “Those words are now alive as great words of wisdom. My lords, distinguished members of the learned and noble profession of the law, let us from this day resolve to be part of the soldiers fighting against corruption, abuse of powers and misuse of the discretion so as to restore confidence in our judiciary as the last hope of the common man,” Awomolo said.

    The Chief Judge of the High Court of the FCT, Justice Ishaq Bello, expressed discomfort that the Judiciary has been grossly condemned by the public.

    He said although there were bad eggs within the system, the Judiciary was determined to rid itself of corruption.

    Justice Bello, however, added that the fight against judicial corruption must be done in line with due process.

    He urged the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related Offences Commission (ICPC) and other prosecuting agencies to be serious in the handling of their cases because the court was no longer willing to tolerate delay.

    Justice Bello, who was unhappy about congestion in prisons, advised judges and magistrates within his jurisdiction to consider adopting liberal bail conditions to ease detainees access to freedom.

    He said he assembled some judges to address the backlog of criminal cases within specific period.

    “As a measure to address overcrowding, I have encouraged judges, magistrates and Area Court judges to be fair and firm, but at the same time, more liberal in the grant of bail so that the prisons will be decongested.

    “It is in this light also, that I made the point during my visit to the prison in Suleja and Kuje that I will set up some panels of judges that will address the backlog of cases within specific time frames in criminal trials.

    “I call on EFCC and ICPC that we will no longer hesitate to strike out your cases no matter how hostile the case is if you fail to do what you should do.”

    He said FCT has 37 judges and 65 magistrates, and that 15,673 cases were inherited from the previous year, bringing the total number of cases the High Court handled in the last legal year to 22,634.

    “Of this number, 9,895 were completely disposed. The magistracy recorded 16,947 in its docket in the 2015/2016 legal year.

    “A total of 5,931 were filed as fresh cases, while 11,016 were carried over from 2014/2015 legal year.

    “In total, 7,695 were disposed with 9,262 pending. The Abuja Multi-Door Courthouse dealt with 99 cases and disposed 67.”

     

  • NJC under pressure to suspend troubled judges

    NJC under pressure to suspend troubled judges

    Falana, NGOs push for suspension

    CJN sets up Ethics Committee

    SHOULD the judges under investigation for alleged corruption be suspended?

    This is the question which has sparked a huge row among lawyers and Civil Society Organisations.

    Under investigation by the Department of State Services (DSS) are two Supreme Court Justices -Sylvester Ngwuta and Inyang Okoro –  the suspended Presiding Justice of the Court of Appeal, Ilorin Division, Justice Mohammed Ladan Tsamiya, Justice Adeniyi Ademola (Federal High Court); the Chief Judge of Enugu State, Justice I. A. Umezulike;  Justice Kabiru Auta of Kano State High Court;  Justice Muazu Pindiga (Gombe State High Court);  Justice Bashir Sukola and  Justice Ladan Manir from the Kaduna State High Court.

    Of the nine judges, the NJC has recommended sanctions for Justice Tsamiya; Justice. Umezulike and Justice Kabiru Auta.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission(EFCC) is investigating six other judges of the Federal High Court. They are: Justices Mohammed Nasir Yunusa; Hyeladzira Ajiya Nganjiwa; Musa Haruna Kurya; Agbadu James Fishim; Uwani Abba Aji and Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia.

    The government is insisting that the judges should be suspended from office by the National Judicial Council (NJC) to pave the way for their trial but the NJC claims the “sting operation” conducted in the judges’ homes and their arrest signal an attack on the Judiciary by the Executive.

    Yesterday, a coalition of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) under the aegis of the Forum of Non-Governmental Organisations of Nigeria (FONGON) accused the NJC of shielding corrupt judges from prosecution.

    The Forum said none of the judges sanctioned by the NJC since year 2000 had been prosecuted. It said the NJC failed to investigate several petitions against judges.

    The chairman of the Forum, Mr. Wole Badmus, told reporters in Abuja that it was ironic that some of the judges indicted by the DSS waited until they were arrested before alleging that some public officers wanted to bribe them.

    Chief Justice Mahmud Muhammed, who has said the judges would not be suspended through the NJC, however, identified corruption as the major problem of the Judiciary.

    He spoke at the launch of the National Judicial Policy in Abuja. The CJN also set up an Ethics Committee headed by retired CJN Idris Kutigi to battle corruption on the Bench.

    Former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Chief Wole Olanipekun  warned against forcing judges under investigation for alleged corruption on compulsory leave when they have not been convicted.

    Olanipekun said the move could precipitate anarchy in the Judiciary maintaining that the judges, despite the accusations against them, must be accorded dignity and respect by virtue of the office they hold.

    “I support the idea that the judiciary must be rid of corruption, but I disagree with the NBA on this issue that judges accused of corruption should stop handling cases.”

    Activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN), also yesterday, urged NJC to suspend the judges.

    He said the council did so 10 years ago when it suspended judges accused of corruption in an election petition tribunal, pending investigation.

    Falana said: “If the NJC had treated this national crisis with the urgency required, it should have investigated the matter based on the avalanche of materials placed before it.

    “Interestingly, the NJC had handled a similar complaint of judicial corruption about a decade ago. That was in 2006 when it was alleged that the members of the Akwa Ibom Governorship Election Petition Tribunal had received bribes to pervert Justice.

    “Without prejudice to the innocence of the judges, the NJC suspended them and requested the Director-General of the SSS to conduct a discreet investigation into the allegation.

    “Upon the receipt of the report of the investigation, it was found that each of the members of the tribunal had received a bribe of N10 million while a judge of the Federal High Court had acted as a conduit pipe in the scandal.

    “At that stage the judges were confronted with the allegations. As their defence was found unsatisfactory, the NJC recommended their removal from the bench.

    “Furthermore, the NJC referred the matter to the Independent and Corrupt Practices and Other  Offences Commission (ICPC). One of the indicted judges collapsed and died when the ICPC operatives wanted to arrest him in his house in Makurdi, Benue State.”

    Falana said the NBA, after reviewing the circumstances surrounding the arrests and the large sums of money recovered from the homes of some of the jurists, asked the judges to recuse themselves until they have been absolved of the allegations of judicial corruption levelled against them.

    According to him, rather than allow the judges react to NBA’s advice, the NJC said the judges would not step aside.

    “Meanwhile, notwithstanding the gravity of the allegation of judicial corruption and the far reaching implication for the image of the nation’s judiciary, the NJC has not deemed it fit to institute any inquiry into the matter on the grounds that the DSS had not submitted any report to it.

    “Thus, the NJC has allowed the allegation of judicial corruption to continue to hang menacingly on the heads of the judges like a sword of Damocles,” Falana said.

    The Senior Advocate added that in the communiqué issued after its emergency meeting, NJC condemned the manner of the arrests without denying the allegations of judicial corruption levelled against the judges.

    Falana said: “The NJC ought to commence an investigation into the serious allegation of judicial corruption levelled against the embattled judges without any further delay.

    “Having regard to the embarrassing disclosures in the letters addressed to the Chief Justice of Nigeria by the judges, the NJC should follow the advice of the NBA by placing them on suspension pending the conclusion of full scale investigation in line with Section 2.2.3 of the National Judicial Policy of the National Judicial Council which stipulates that the Council shall have the ‘powers of interim suspension.”

     

    Falana said the NJC and the NBA should demand a public apology for Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Federal High Court, Abuja, whose house was raided, as the DSS has not linked him with any corrupt practice or misconduct whatsoever.

     

  • NBA, NJC and the burden of history

    NBA, NJC and the burden of history

    From an initial thunder of “judicial emergency”, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) is softening its war cry.  It now wants judges, accused of corrupt practices, to recuse themselves, until they clear their names.

    That is tribute to common sense.

    But not so from the National Judicial Council (NJC) war room.  That body seems fated, with all due respect, to that cynical old quip: those the gods would destroy, they first confound!

    In that rarefied NJC chamber, scoffing down from the clouds at the unlearned hoi polloi on the dusty streets, stubborn procedure must trump common sense.

    That fixation with technicality is clear hubris, which may yet prove fatal for the  NJC brand integrity.

    That was clear from its stonewalling — not entirely unreasonable — of the Department of State Services, DSS’s rather cheeky call on NJC to “suspend” judges it is accusing of sleaze.

    NJC was right to bristle: if DSS could go solo, and with satanic gusto, jettisoning constitutionally stipulated procedures on disciplining errant judges, why doesn’t it complete its solo demolition run?

    The DSS Leviathan doesn’t need NJC’s puny powers to suspend anyone, does it?  Perfect sarcasm!

    Still, it would be extremely reckless, with all due respect, for NJC to spurn the NBA-offered soft-landing.

    For one, the NBA suggestion gives the judiciary the opportunity to regain a moral high ground.  What is more?  NJC would suspend nobody; and would continue to hold DSS in high judicial contempt its hurt soul now needs for mental balance.

    Yet, the accused judges would graciously stay off, pending their days in court, as they would in any civil community.  The onus would now be on DSS to prove its allegations, thus defanging the so-called trial by the media.

    For another, the initiative would have been the judiciary’s.  That would send the message that though it would resist — to the death, if necessary — the DSS’s alleged jungle methods, it would not condone any judicial corruption.

    But by its response to the NBA pitch, it would appear clear the NJC would rather, parodying English Poet, John Milton in Paradise Lost, rule by its stubborn procedure in hell, rather serve with it in heaven!

    If you think the heaven-hell comparison is extreme, just take a glimpse at the judicial netherworld NJC, by its stubborn insistence on procedure, is pushing.

    It would not suspend judges, because DSS usurped procedure by its sensational arrests.  Neither would it hearken NBA’s plea that the accused judges recuse themselves.

    So, blimey!  His Lordship, accused of graft, arrogantly sits in judgment over others, in a sensational case of an alleged felon trying another alleged felon!

    If that is not the eminent judicial disgrace — and ruin — NJC is fleeing from, it is hard to contemplate a worse equivalent!

    Adegoke Adelabu, had he lived in these troubling times, would simply have snorted:  a judicial peculiar mess! To which his doting Ibadan country yokels would have roared, “judisia pen-kele-meeesssssiiiiiiiiii!”, with a few even attempting a yodel, in the hilarious hubbub of the moment!

    It is that peculiar mess of history that the contemporary judiciary (perhaps without fully realizing it) is grappling with.

    If the NJC must be fair to themselves, they must ask when the Nigerian Judiciary cascaded from the Mount Olympus of honour, to the Hades of disgrace, to borrow an illustration from Greek mythology.

    A proud national institution that earned near-universal acclaim with the likes of Taslim Elias, Chukwudifu Oputa, aka Socrates, Kayode Esho, Daddy Onyeama, Udo Udoma and Akinola Aguda (all of blessed memories) now diminuted to the grim conclave of what Justice Esho called “billionaire judges”, allegedly trading Justice — or more correctly, injustice — to the highest bidder!

    Remember that biblical racket, that riled the meek Christ Jesus to ire?  My father’s house of worship has become a den of thieves!

    Just replace, with the NJC, Pharisees and Sadducees and the colluding high priests feeding fat from that holy racket, and contemporary Nigerian judiciary may well find itself in that holy company of the Jews of yore!

    Yet, let no one, in romanticizing the past, be deceived that the judiciary had always been perceived spotless — at least by those in the unlearned streets, that neither knew law nor procedure.

    CJN Adetokunbo Ademola virtually made the law an ass for the ruling establishment to spur as they wished.   So,  when in 1967, he championed a National Conciliation Committee to fend off war — a noble enterprise — voices across the Nigeria-Biafra divide rejected him as a credible voice for mediation.

    Forty-nine years later, his grandson is one of the judges in the eye of the DSS storm.  If the allegations are proved, would it be from alleged personal failings? Or the case of the Biblical fathers eating sour grapes but setting their children’s teeth on edge?

    Justice Elias was razor-sharp, both as lawyer and CJN.  But as Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa’s attorney-general and Justice minister, he midwifed, on 29 November 1960 in the House of Representatives,  the parliamentary canonization of the legal voodoo that in 1962 supplanted the West, under the guise of a dubious emergency.  That proved the beginning of the end for the 1st Republic.

    Ironically, the “Elias solution” — searching for CJN, outside the Supreme Court’s present hierarchy, hangs like a sword of Damocles.

    The “weight of evidence” himself, the irreplaceable FRA Williams, SAN, would at dawn take a brief from Satan but balance it out at dusk with a brief from Christ and claim, in all honesty and integrity, he was bound by the lawyer’s creed!

    His opponents, particularly the equally irrepressible Gani Fawehinmi, SAN, SAM, did not like it.  But almost everyone agreed his motives were anything but robust fidelity to the law, even it became a bully crushing morality.

    That was the law yesterday, warts and all.  Still, the public perception of it was a great national enterprise which though imperfect, held humanly promises — profound promises founded on robust erudition and near-celestial integrity.

    The law today would appear the diametrical opposite.  Despite stellar though quiet work by probably a majority of Nigerian justices and lawyers, the overwhelming public perception is the Bench is yet another conclave of hustlers.  And that the Bar is not exactly aghast at that unholy racket.

    Help, the ghosts of Esho’s “billionaire judges” are haunting the hallowed chamber, and are fast turning it a hollow shell!

    That is the heavy burden of history the present generation NJC and NBA carry.  You don’t discharge that by instinctively raising a flag of solidarity, and stonewalling grave allegations with “defending the judiciary”.

    Corrupt judges are a scourge to justice, much more than any arbitrary DSS action, no matter how brazen.  And if justice departs from the judiciary, what is left?

    If that thinking necessitated NBA’s softening rhetoric, it is hugely welcome — but much more to the judiciary themselves.

    But when would the NJC wake up and, as the Americans would say, smell the coffee?

    Maybe when, to parody Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the hurly-burly is done, when the battle is lost and won!

  • Activists to NJC: don’t shield corrupt judges

    Activists to NJC: don’t shield corrupt judges

    NON-governmental organisations, under the auspices of Forum of Non-Governmental Organisations in Nigeria (FONGON) yesterday accused the National Judicial Council (NJC) of shielding corrupt judges from prosecution.

    The forum said none of the judges sanctioned by the judicial body for corruption since 2000 had been prosecuted, adding that it also failed to probe many petitions sent to it.

    FONGON Chair Wole Badmus said at a news conference in Abuja that it was an irony that some of the judges indicted by the DSS waited until they were arrested before making allegations against some public officers for attempting to bribe them.

    Badmus said while the forum was aware the judges have not been found guilty by a court of law, they should step down from their positions since the NJC was not willing to suspend them.

    Badmus said if the judges failed to step down, the group would mobilise citizens to besiege their courts until they  stepped down.

    He added that the group will embark on a peaceful demonstration in support of the battle to rid the judiciary of bad eggs.

    The group’s chair expressed concern about the silence of the organised labour, adding that this is one of the few moments when silence is not golden.

    The group alleged that the NJC refused to investigate and sanction alleged corrupt judges in 10 petitions submitted to it by the Civil Society Network Against Corruption (CSNAC) as well as the Edo and Oyo state governments.

    The petitions, Badmus said, include those against Justice B. A. Adejumo, president of the National Industrial Court (NIC), by Edo and Oyo states for granting illegal ex-parte orders against the two states, and another by the CSNAC accusing him of recommending unqualified candidates as judges of the NIC.

    They claimed the NJC refused to investigate petitions against president of the Court of Appeal for failure to hear and determine the appeal by the EFCC against the judgment of Justice Buba in the Odili case, which was handled by the NBA president as counsel to the EFCC.

    According to the group, the judicial body failed to investigate a petition by CSNAC against Justice Uwani Abba-Aji of the Court of Appeal; Justice Ibrahim Auta; Justice Hyeladzira Nganjiwa, and Mohammed Yunusa as well as chief judge of the Federal High Court alleged to have collected bribe from Rickey Tarfa (SAN).

    Other petitions include the one against Justice Marcel Awokulehin for sentencing drug dealers to lesser terms, contrary to provisions of NDLEA, and  Justice Abdul Kafarati for gross misconduct and desecration of the bench.

     

  • Falana: why NJC should suspend judges  accused of corruption

    Falana: why NJC should suspend judges accused of corruption

    Activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) yesterday urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) to suspend the judges accused of corruption without further delay.

    He said the council did so 10 years ago when it suspended judges accused of corruption in an election petition tribunal pending investigation.

    Falana said: “If the NJC had treated this national crisis with the urgency required, it should have investigated the matter based on the avalanche of materials placed before it.

    “Interestingly, the NJC had handled a similar complaint of judicial corruption about a decade ago. That was in 2006 when it was alleged that the members of the Akwa Ibom Governorship Election Petition Tribunal had received bribes to pervert justice.

    “Without prejudice to the innocence of the judges, the NJC suspended them and requested the Director-General of the SSS to conduct a discreet investigation into the allegation.

    “Upon the receipt of the report of the investigation, it was found that each of the members of the tribunal had received a bribe of N10 million while a judge of the Federal High Court had acted as a conduit-pipe in the scandal.

    “At that stage, the judges were confronted with the allegations. As their defence was found unsatisfactory, the NJC recommended their removal from the bench.

    “Furthermore, the NJC referred the matter to the Independent and Corrupt Practices and Other  Offences Commission (ICPC). One of the indicted judges collapsed and died when the ICPC operatives wanted to arrest him in his house in Makurdi, Benue State.”

    Falana said the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), after reviewing the circumstances surrounding the arrests and the large sums of money recovered from the homes of some of the jurists, asked the judges to recuse themselves until they have been absolved of the allegations of judicial corruption levelled against them.

    According to him, rather than allow the judges react to NBA’s advice, the NJC said the judges would not step aside.

    “Meanwhile, notwithstanding the gravity of the allegation of judicial corruption and the far-reaching implication for the image of the nation’s judiciary, the NJC has not deemed it fit to institute any inquiry into the matter on the grounds that the SSS has not submitted any report to it.

    “Thus, the NJC has allowed the allegation of judicial corruption to continue to hang menacingly on the heads of the judges like a sword of Damocles,” Falana said.

    The Senior Advocate added that in the communiqué issued after its emergency meeting, NJC condemned the manner of the arrests without denying the allegations of judicial corruption leveled against the judges.

    Falana said: “The NJC ought to commence an investigation into the serious allegation of judicial corruption levelled against the embattled judges without any further delay.

    “Having regard to the embarrassing disclosures in the letters addressed to the Chief Justice of Nigeria by the judges, the NJC should follow the advice of the NBA by placing them on suspension pending the conclusion of full scale investigation in line with section 2.2.3 of the National Judicial Policy of the National Judicial Council which stipulates that the Council shall have the ‘powers of interim suspension’”.

     

  • ‘NJC can’t probe criminal acts by judges’

    Prof Bolaji Owasanoye is the Executive Secretary of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), a seven-man think-tank with the mandate to drive the anti-corruption crusade. A two-time Director of Research at the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS), he is the first person to be conferred with the institute’s Taslim Elias Distinguished Professor of Law. Owasanoye has taught at the Lagos State University (LASU), NIALS, University of London School of Oriental and African Studies (as professorial research associate) and University of Pretoria (as visiting professor). He has consulted for the World Bank, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and International Labour Organsation (ILO), among others. In this interview with JOSEPH JIBUEZE, he speaks on how Nigeria can win the war against corruption and sundry issues.

    Are you disappointed that the judges accused of corruption have not stepped down?

    Once they are arraigned, the proper thing to do is for them to stop sitting, because in the eyes of the public it’ll be as if they are in fact sitting as judges in their own courts even though the cases are not before them. It will not be in consonance with practices elsewhere. More importantly, it helps to safeguard the integrity of the institution. There’s nothing stopping the judges from saying: I want to clear my name. Until I have done so, I don’t want to sit. Unfortunately, that culture is lacking in our society. But we must also recognise that we’ve adopted a culture of dispute resolution that uses the courts and we’ve placed the judges on a high pedestal. Judges are called ‘My Lord’ because they’re next to God. We deify them virtually. No matter how young a judge is, we bow and show reverence to him. All of that culture needs to be preserved.

    What about arguments that they are presumed innocent?

    Once you have a situation whereby a judge is arraigned and is docked today, and tomorrow the judge sits and others bow before him – there’s something wrong with that. But if that judge clears his name, it reaffirms and reinforces the position that he has the integrity to continue to preside. This is just the principle behind it. It is not strange in the profession. It’s happened in other countries; there’s no reason it shouldn’t happen here. The fact that it happens in other areas and people don’t step down – we should not equate them to judges, because those people don’t have the power of life and death. Judges do. That’s why we fear and revere judges. Once they step out of that arena of integrity and respect, a different rule ought to apply.

    What’s your take on calls for the reform of the NJC?

    The composition of the National Judicial Council (NJC) is constitutional. However, having tried and used that mechanism for a while now, we can see the weaknesses. I think there’s a need to have an infusion of more members of the Bar in the NJC, and independents who are not judicial officers. Others have written that the NJC, as it is, is too pro-Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN). In other words, the power of the CJN to identify and nominate almost 50 per cent of the members does not make for a very healthy institution. Going forward, this should be one of the areas of reflection towards strengthening the organisation.

    How can this be done?

    This will involve bringing in more representatives from the Bar, not nominated by the CJN and not just nominated by the leadership of the Bar, but people who are widely elected by the profession itself so that we don’t transfer what we regard as the wide powers of the NJC leadership to the Bar and then they put their friends and cronies and we still don’t achieve anything. If we must reform NJC, then the NBA must have a representation in the NJC that is very robust. The way they select members must also be democratic so that people don’t just put their friends there, which won’t serve any purpose.

    What about NJC’s disciplinary powers?

    Looking at the jurisdiction of the NJC, recent happenings have shown that its capacity to deal with everything affecting judges is somewhat limited. It’s easy for NJC to deal with things like petitions against judges, that they are not sitting, or that they engaged in misconduct, abused their powers or did not follow statutory or constitutional guidelines about certain things. But if it’s a much more serious allegation of criminality, the NJC does not have the power to investigate. The present approach involves inviting the petitioner and the judge and then asking: ‘Did you collect money from this guy?’ Naturally, nobody will say ‘yes’. They’ll deny it. And that’s the end of the power of the NJC to investigate.

    What is the best solution?

    In situations where a judge is accused of committing a criminal act, my humble view, with recent happenings, is for the NJC to allow a statutory agency to investigate. The NJC could refer the case to a law enforcement agency if it’s something the NJC doesn’t have the capacity to deal with. If a judge is accused of amassing wealth, where’s the NJC’s capacity to investigate it? If a judge is accused of having assets all over the world, the NJC does not have the capacity to investigate that. It ought not to be writing to law enforcement agencies all over the world asking them to give it intelligence reports about a certain person. This is the job of other anti-corruption agencies through which Nigeria operates mutual legal assistance provisions. So, the clear, obvious, rational, logical thing to do is for the NJC to refer such issues to the relevant agencies. The majority of judges are honest and hard working; working against the grain of poor infrastructure and poor remuneration and they bear it with equanimity. The few not acting in accordance to their oath are the ones who denigrate the system. So, clearly, what has come out in recent times shows that the capacity of the NJC to deal with this thing is obviously limited and it needs to work with other agencies of government to solve that problem.

    Do you agree with suggestions that the CJN should not be the chairman of the NJC, to avoid conflict of interest? 

    There are arguments for and against. Personally I don’t see anything wrong with the CJN being chairman of the NJC. He or she would be the leader of the judiciary in the country. But what we need to do is to balance the composition. There’s nothing wrong in having an NJC that has representations from the three arms of government. If we have a situation where the CJN is accused of impropriety and the matter is sent before the NJC, then the CJN should not preside over that meeting. That body should appoint somebody to act as chairman so that the CJN won’t be a judge in his own case. There is need for a lot of independents who won’t rubber-stamp the CJN’s views.

    Do you think the judiciary should account to Nigerians how it spends its funds, and can failure to do this lead to corruption?

    Certainly it can. We support improving the welfare of judges and increasing the judiciary’s financial allocation based on verifiable needs. But it is also important that all the arms of government, including the legislature, must account for the money they collect. It’s public funds. If the executive can account for its expenditure, why can’t the judiciary and the legislature? It will simply help the advocacy for more funding, because if there are gaps in the resourcing, it is easier to make the case. Accountability does not remove from the independence of the judiciary. They develop their budget and decide how it’s going to be spent, but they should account to the public as to how the money was spent. This also applies to the legislature. The Auditor-General of the Federation has constitutional responsibility to audit the accounts of all arms of government. This should be encouraged. There’s nothing wrong with the judiciary publishing a detailed annual account that shows how much was spent on remuneration of judicial officers, the number of judicial officers, how much it spent on infrastructure, how much it has spent on resourcing the courts. It’s then easier to scrutinise such reports. It’s helpful to the image and integrity of the judiciary for it to, on its own volition, audit itself and publish the report so that it can be interrogated.

    How does the plea bargain manual that PACAC has produced address public concerns?

    Plea bargain is not an initiative of PACAC. It’s statutory. What we have done is to create a framework for anti-corruption agencies and the government to take advantage of what is in the law. The lawmakers put plea bargaining in the laws after debates because they found merit in it. The plea bargain framework that we have recommended creates safeguards at every level. It does not say there will be no prosecution. It does not say you will return a little and keep the rest. In fact, it’s the other way round. If you’re about to enter a plea bargain, you have an obligation to put everything on the table. So, if the government finds that somebody who opted for a plea bargain agreement had withheld information, the agreement becomes inoperative.

    What’s the court’s role in a plea bargain?

    Under the law, the judge has the final say. Plea bargain does not exclude the oversight of the court. And it must be in the public interest, which the framework we designed ensures. We have also said that certain categories of cases are regarded as high profile. If it’s a case involving theft of public funds, a politically exposed person, affects the economy or has international dimension even if by a private person, it is regarded as high profile. The standard of plea bargaining for them is higher and stricter. It is not a closet arrangement between the defence and prosecution. First, the agreement will be in writing and it must go before the court. If the court is dissatisfied or feels it is not in the interest of the state, the court can reject it. Plea bargain does not cut off judicial review of some sort. It also requires the approval of the Attorney-General. So, these different levels of scrutiny ensure the state is not shortchanged. The misconception that plea bargain is designed to help the rich escape justice is not true at all.

    Why do some corruption cases still drag despite the ACJA’s provisions for day-to-day trial and no stay of proceedings?

    We think that the judges and lawyers, especially defence lawyers, have not been giving effect to the spirit and letter of the Administration of Criminal Justice Law (2015). As a revolutionary legislation it was designed to diminish all of the anomalies in criminal justice administration. But, judges are still tolerant of dilatory tactics of defence counsel. One good example is a judge accepting that different lawyers in a defence team would cross-examine one witness for close to a month. It’s unacceptable and intolerable. It completely undermines the principle behind the enactment of the ACJA.

    What’s the way out of this problem?

    One of the things that must be done is for us to track cases to see whether or not there is compliance with the provisions of the Act. The Act provides for a fixed number of adjournments. There must be reasonable timing. More importantly, it encourages that when a case starts, there’s a case management procedure in which the court would ask the prosecution and the defence how many witnesses they have, how much time they need, and the judge then specifies how many days would be given each team. This eliminates the possibility of cross-examining for three months. Once the case management framework is agreed upon, the judge then looks at his diary and a time-table is drawn and the public has an idea of when a case starts and when it’ll finish. This is what happens elsewhere. But that is not happening. Hardly do we have case management at the beginning, which leaves room for lawyers to continue to use dilatory tactics. This needs to change.

    There was a controversy when the NBA president suggested that the EFCC be stripped of its prosecutorial powers. Do you agree with him?

    Certainly, we do not agree with the NBA because the basis of that recommendation has not been proven or justified. There are many agencies that have prosecutorial powers. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is not the only one. The NBA did not explain to anyone why it singled out the EFCC. The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), the Police, Customs and National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) all have prosecutorial powers. Why the EFCC alone? Second, whatever the mischief NBA thought would be cured by recommending the stripping of EFCC of its prosecutorial powers, will it be solved by creating a single agency and giving it prosecutorial powers? Third, in most democracies, you have multiple agencies that have powers and you don’t want to saddle one agency. All of them are specialised and people who prosecute from those perspectives have special skills.

    Is there anything wrong with having a single agency to prosecute?

    With one prosecutorial agency, you’ll have a jack of all trade, master of none. I think that the NBA did not fully come out with why it made this awkward and surprising recommendation. It needs to justify that recommendation with facts and very credible evidence that takes us forward and not backward. If there are issues with the EFCC, I don’t think we should throw away the baby with the bathwater. It is for the NBA to come up with other solid recommendations towards reforming the EFCC. It’s been found that, because that model of having a separate agency investigating and another prosecuting was not working, it is better to house both investigative and prosecutorial capacities in one agency where they can work together in synergy.

    Speaking of NBA, are you satisfied with its disciplinary capacity?

    The NBA itself has admitted that there are weaknesses in its disciplinary mechanism. There’s no doubt it needs to be improved.

    Who makes up the National Prosecutions Team?

    In the past, the Ministry of Justice farmed out cases to private lawyers. The result is that many of the cases were never concluded and are still not concluded. It denied the state counsel of any opportunity to gain experience and to learn. In many cases the fees were paid, but government did not get any value for money. So there was need for a paradigm shift, for the state as much as possible to reduce the farming out of cases to private counsel because it was a cesspool of corruption where cases were farmed out to friends. What needs to be done is to build the capacity of in-house counsel. We could have a mixed approach whereby experienced private counsel team up with in-house counsel to prosecute cases. This is what we recommended and that is the model now being used in the national prosecutions team made up of experienced external counsel who will work with in-house counsel so that if for any reason the external counsel decides to go, they don’t go away with the files and there’ll be some institutional memory about the case within the government circle. We’re happy the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) is taking this forward in establishing the national prosecutions team.

    Most judges write down everything during trial, which contributes to delays. Any plan to equip the courts with electronic recorders?

    In the Anti-Corruption Action Plan that we have developed, we have very robust chapters or sections on not only improving infrastructure for the judiciary, but also welfare. We recognise that hardworking judges need to be well remunerated. The work environment must be conducive. The introduction of electronic recorders is just one of the things that have been suggested. In today’s world, we don’t think it is salutary for judges to be taking record of proceedings in long hand. It delays the trial, and it has a deleterious impact on the health of the judge. It’s been said that some judges suffer arthritis due to a long career of writing in long hand. We have recommended significant improvement in the infrastructure that supports the work of judges.

    How can inter-agency rivalries be avoided in the prosecution of corruption cases?

    It must be recognised that as the Chief Law Officer, the AGF has a supervisory role over all prosecutions. We recognise that there are statutes that give powers to other agencies to prosecute, but the AGF has constitutional powers to take over proceedings so that inter-agency rivalries and clashes in court really should not occur. If an agency initiates a case, the AGF has the right to take over. Under the present dispensation the AGF is providing some direction to ensure this sort of thing doesn’t occur.

    Some have said only a revolution can cure this country of corruption. Can the battle be won?

    I think it’s a battle that can be won, but it’s not that we’ll eliminate corruption 100 per cent. I think that you can significantly diminish corruption. There’s no country where there’s no corruption, even some countries that top Transparency International index, but it’s very, very low. Granted, the progress and pace are very slow and extremely frustrating. The people are disenchanted. But if we stay the course, if the government remains focused, and there’s buy-in from the public, it’s not impossible. It’s in our interest. The alternative is chaos and anarchy. Corruption has brought us this low. It’s responsible for Nigeria’s low economic development, low level of our GDP, for us being rated as a third-world country; it affects the growth of our democracy and our reputation. Even for accomplished Nigerians who are internationally recognised, once you identify yourself as a Nigerian, people may sigh and wonder how such brilliant people emerged from such a dysfunctional society. So it’s really in our own interest to fight corruption. I have hope that it can be diminished if we have the stamina, the consistency, the focus, the political will. And if we don’t shift, I think that ultimately Nigeria will win the war against corruption.

    What is the role of citizens?

    The battle against corruption cannot be won except the people buy into it. If the people buy into it, they’re not doing so for President Buhari. We’re certainly not doing what we’re doing because the President wills it. PACAC believes that corruption has a deleterious effect on our economy and wellbeing. Corruption has killed people in their prime from minor ailments that could be treated free elsewhere. Corruption is responsible for high level of unemployment and the almost virtual collapse of the educational sector. It’s responsible for bad roads because people steal the money meant to fix them. It’s responsible for the escalation of kidnapping. We should not assume that kidnappers are happy in that vocation. It’s corruption that led to the stealing of pension funds so that our retirees cannot retire in peace. It’s corruption that is diminishing the capacity of children to take care of their elderly parents. We’ve got to recognise that corruption is a push factor for so many other social vices. If Nigerian citizens join the fight, they’re not necessarily doing the government a favour. We’re actually doing ourselves a favour. We’re creating an environment that is conducive for our own future and for the future of our children. If we’ll take a broader view of what corruption is doing to us, I don’t think that anybody needs to be preached to. We have seen progressively more primitive and prebendal ways of committing impunity. Before, people would make effort to legitimise corruption; these days they don’t even bother. We need to really do a U-turn and recognise that corruption affects all of us in very negative ways. We’re all victims – both the rich and the poor, both those working hard for their money or not – we all have a collective duty to stand together to fight corruption.