Tag: Ogunlana

  • NASC appoints Ogunlana as Clerk to National Assembly

    NASC appoints Ogunlana as Clerk to National Assembly

    The National Assembly Service Commission (NASC), has appointed Barr. Kamoru Ogunlana as Clerk to the National Assembly (CNA).

    According to a letter dated November 6, 2024 by the Executive Chairman of NASC, Engr. Ahmed Kadi Amshi, the appointment of Ogunlana would take effect from February 2, 2025.

    The NASC said that his appointment was in recognition of his hard work and administrative competence.

    It charged him to continue to uphold the confidence reposed in him.

    The appointment of Ogunlana followed the pre-retirement notice the NASC sent to the incumbent CNA, Sani Magaji Tambawal, notifying him of his retirement from the service of the National Assembly effective February 2, 2025.

    The Commission informed Tambawal of the appointment of Ogunlana as his successor at its 610th meeting held on Wednesday, November 6, 2024.

    The NASC said that Ogunlana would oversee the office of the CNA “while working closely with you to ensure smooth transition until he takes over from you as the substantive Clerk to the National Assembly on February 2, 2025.”

    Ogunlana, an indigene of Omu-Ijebu in the Odogbolu LGA of Ogun State, was born on June 22, 1967 in Tiko town, South-West, Cameroon.

    He holds a degree in Law from Ogun State University, Ago-Iwoye, attended the Nigerian Law School in 1989/1990, and was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1990.

    He is a member of the NBA and IBA.

    Ogunlana began his career with the National Assembly Service on October 4, 1993, as a Litigation Officer II in the Legal Services Department.

    After the inauguration of the 1st National Assembly of the 4th Republic on 8th June 1999, he was converted to a Legislative Officer and re-deployed in the House of Representatives as a Committee Clerk by the Management of the National Assembly.

    He serves as the Deputy Clerk to the National Assembly, a position he attained on the 29th March, 2023.

    Read Also: In Ogunlana, Nigeria lost a trailblazing gem of a fighter

    Before his appointment as the Deputy Clerk to the National Assembly, Ogunlana served in various capacities in the National Assembly Service: Director, Legislative Scrutiny and Research Department, House of Representatives (Feb 2017 – Aug 2020); Director, Committee Services Department, House of Representatives (Aug 2020 – April 2022); Secretary, Legal Services Directorate (April 2022 – March 2023).

    In addition, he was for several years the Clerk to the House of Representatives Committees on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters, Justice, Federal Judiciary, and the National Assembly Joint Ad-hoc Committee on the Review of the Constitution.

    Ogunlana had undergone extensive trainings as a Legal Officer and a Legislative Officer both internationally and locally, establishing himself as a seasoned draftsman and Legislative Officer.

    He participated in the conception and drafting of some major bills passed by the National Assembly from 1999 till date.

    Ogunlana is a God-fearing, family-oriented person who enjoys football, watching combat sports, travelling, and reading.

  • In Ogunlana, Nigeria lost a trailblazing gem of a fighter

    In Ogunlana, Nigeria lost a trailblazing gem of a fighter

    • By Joseph Otteh

    Sustaining a fight to hold the Judiciary accountable and ensuring that judges deliver their services uprightly is no walk in the park. It often requires gust, hard determination, courage and a bit of flintiness, particularly with respect to a Judiciary steeped in a long-ingrained sense of invincibility and impunity. Unfortunately, but without meaning to tar everyone with the same brush, a huge slice of the body we call the Nigerian Judiciary functions that way. As Franck Kuwonu said, fighting the Judiciary requires muscles. Adesina Ogunlana had muscles.

    Ogunlana’s early activism was directed towards breaking the silence around the corruption, misconduct and indulgence that had come to define the way the delivery of justice services was done in Lagos State.

    Through the publication of The Squib, Ogunlana confronted the Lagos judiciary, subjecting it to the kind of scrutiny it possibly had never encountered before.

    He began reporting on corruption within the court system, identifying and naming corrupt judges and court officials, monitoring and reporting on when judges sat and rose, as well as the inefficiencies of the justice delivery system. American Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis said some time ago that “Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants.”

    Ogunlana brought sunlight to bear over a system that had become too accustomed to silence and complacency, pretension and dysfunction. But he was walking into a hornet’s nest!

    He hardly started when opposition and persecution came. The question is often asked: “Who judges the judges”?

    The Lagos Judiciary did not believe that Ogunlana had the right to call out judges – of all people!!! – or subject them to the judgment of others, and, worse still, that Ogunlana could have the nerve to circulate The Squibmagazine within its court premises.

    In November 2001, the Chief Judge of Lagos State at the time banned the sale of The Squib within the premises of the court, stating, as Ogunlana reported, that it was making her judges uncomfortable.

    Ursula K. Le Guin wrote: “Injustice makes the rules, and courage breaks them.”

    Ogunlana was not lacking in courage and he broke the rules. Following the Chief Judge’s directive, officials of the Lagos High Court told Ogunlana he could no longer circulate The Squib within the premises of the High Court. As Ogunlana himself would later state in an interview with The Justice Observatory Journal, his answer to the Chief Registrar (“CR”) at that time was short.

    He asked her (CR): “Are other papers still selling? She said ‘yes’. I said, tell the CJ that I am going to disobey the directive; being arbitrary, it is illegal”.

    The premises of the court, he said, were not the CJ’s private property.

    He would later be manhandled by the police officers, who were called in by judicial authorities, on account of his insistence on carrying on with his crusade within court premises.

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    “I am not going to back off,” he said. “I am tired of this corruption. My magazine is just [a] reaction”.

    He was ultimately vindicated and was allowed to continue his important advocacy work.

    Ogunlana possibly set the precedent for court monitoring activities in Nigeria, and many other similar initiatives have drawn from that inspiration.

    Nigeria’s Judiciary has, I believe, largely gotten over the hangover of its judges being monitored by civil society, many thanks to the path-breaking activism and indomitable courage of Adesina Ogunlana. He had spoken “truth to power”.

    But Ogunlana’s exertions went beyond campaigning for judicial integrity and accountability; he was also a strong voice for good governance and, as Chairman of a local Bar, used his leverages to fight against exploitative or oppressive policies, and to hold government to account for human rights violations.

    Ogunlana was also a mobiliser and led lawyers to use professionally unorthodox ways to press for change.  

    Ogunlana’s passing will be painful for those who long for a new Nigeria whose social order would indeed be, in word and deed, and as the Constitution says, based on ideals of equality, freedom and justice.

    Ogunlana strove for a Nigeria of freedom, equality and justice, and refused to be civil, idle or neutral to any system he considered oppressive or unjust.

    Like many of us, legal training could mostly have prepared him to fight for a client’s interest.

    But it takes something more to make that tectonic shift from an exclusive “client” lawyering practice to “cause” lawyering activism; from the social and political neutrality of law to fighting for ideological social justice causes.

    In the chambers of the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi was a framed portrait of Nigeria’s first lawyer, Christopher Sapara-Williams and the words he spoke: “The legal practitioner lives for the direction of his people and the advancement of the cause of his country.” 

    I think this was also Ogunlana’s philosophy of lawyering for he put all his professional life to advancing the cause of transparency, accountability and good governance in this country, and died fighting.

    Within the context of a largely conservative profession, his advocacy and methods could be considered revolutionary. Naming and shaming judges and yet conducting cases before them, leading lawyers in street protests, and confronting the impunity of murdering protesters, Ogunlana put law to work in the service of his country.

    This “revolutionary” stripe of activism is what many say is now desperately needed in today’s world in order to confront growing injustice and exploitation.

    As William P. Quigley, of the Loyola University New Orleans School of Law has stated: “If we are going to transform our world, we need lawyers willing to work with others toward a radical revolution of our world. We need no more lawyers defending the status quo. We need revolutionaries.”

    In many ways, Adeshina Ogunlana was such a revolutionary. We will dearly miss him.

    • Otteh is a lawyer

  • Ex-NBA Ikeja branch chairman Ogunlana dies

    Ex-NBA Ikeja branch chairman Ogunlana dies

    Former Chairman of Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Ikeja Branch and rights activist Adeshina Ogunlana is dead. 

    He was 60. 

    NBA Ikeja Branch Chairman, Seyi Olawumi confirmed his death to The Nation on Wednesday. 

    Read Also: Ogunlana not my legal representative – Baba Ijesha

    Ogunlana died on Tuesday night in his office located along Ikorodu Road, Lagos near the turning into Shyllon Street.

    Details Shortly…