Tag: Salami

  • Salami urges mates to fight harder at Owerri

    Salami urges mates to fight harder at Owerri

    • Says 3SC’s race out of relegation is a collective effort

     

     

    3SC’s Gbolahan Salami says the Oluyole Warriors are poised to give Heartland of Owerri a good fight in their Matchday 32 Glo Premier League tie slated for the Dan Anyiam Stadium today

    The Ibadan side are last on the log with 38 points from 30 matches while their hosts, the Naze Millionaires are in new rich of form having had 10 points from possible 12 in their last 4 matches in the league. They are 8th on the log with 44 points from 31 matches.

    Salami queried the rationale behind the Oluyole Warriors recent slump but was quick to point out that the players, coaches and management of the club are all in one page towards ensuring that 3SC stay in the elite division beyond this season.

    Salami told SportingLife:”We are storming Owerri full of optimism as Shooting Stars will not go down. We know what is at stake and we shall ensure that we pick as many points as possible that will ensure we retain our spot in the premier league.”

    Meanwhile, players and officials of the Ibadan darling team were all invited for a meeting with the Oyo Sports Commissioner, Dapo Lam Adesina on the way based on the precarious position of the club on the log and what must be done to ensure that 3SC step out of the relegation zone.

    A source within the Oluyole Warriors said the meeting was held Sunday immediately after the club’s final training session.

    SportingLife reliably gathered that the Sports Commissioner charged the players and officials to re-double their efforts to ensure that 3SC stay up at the end of the season.

     

  • Salami:  An epic injustice

    Salami: An epic injustice

    When the National Judicial Council recommended in May 2012 after a detailed inquiry that the suspended president of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Isa Salami, be reinstated, not a few of those who had followed the matter closely felt that the Council was offering President Goodluck Jonathan a decent way to end one of the ugliest episodes in Nigeria’s judicial history.

    That the recommendation bore the imprint of two of the nation’s most eminent jurists who stand at opposite ends of the ideological spectrum made it all the more resonant.

    If the liberal retired associate justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Kayode Eso, since deceased, and the conservative senior attorney and former Minister of Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Chief Richard Akinjide, could sign off on the document, along with the overwhelming majority, it would seem that the Council had decided to take politics out of the matter and had considered it purely on its legal merit.

    The Council, I thought, had thus placed in Dr Jonathan’s hands a powerful weapon to rein in the hawks in the PDP who will settle for nothing less than Justice Salami’s scalp because his Court stripped them of their stolen gubernatorial trophies in Osun and Ekiti and restored the people’s mandate to those who had earned it at the polls.

    I was hoping that Dr Jonathan would seize the opportunity to play statesman rather than party chieftain. And when he was reported to be “studying” the document, I thought he was trying to find a way of appeasing the hawks, aforementioned.

    Dr Jonathan had something else in mind. His strategy, it is now clear, was to run down the clock on Justice Salami, calculating that the books would be closed on the matter once the jurist reaches the mandatory retirement age of 70 years.

    And so, two years after being consigned to judicial purgatory, Justice Salami, according to competent sources, has served notice of retirement, effective October 15, victim of an epic injustice that Dr Jonathan could and indeed should have ended.

    Justice Salami’s ordeal began, as I once recalled in this space, when he presided over the sitting of the Court of Appeal that voided the purported election of the PDP candidate, Engineer Segun Oni in the 2007 Ekiti gubernatorial election and declared Dr Kayode Fayemi of the ACN winner.

    The election was marred by fraud on a staggering scale. In a court-ordered partial re-run to ascertain the true voice of the people, the PDP, the election umpire INEC, Maurice Iwu presiding, and the police executed a more brazen heist that a 3-2 majority of the Election Petitions Tribunal nevertheless consecrated with transparent sophistry.

    The Court of Appeal reversed, and Justice Salami became a marked man.

    Five weeks later, the Salami Court, Justice Clara Ogunbiyi presiding, vacated the stolen mandate under which yet another PDP candidate, Prince Olagunsoye Oyinlola, had governed Osun for three years and seven months — or seven years and seven months if one believes, as one now positively must — that Oyinlola and the PDP never won the 2003 election, on the basis of which he had served a four-year term.

    As in Ekiti, the Osun poll was vitiated by massive rigging and violence. The ACN candidate, Engineer Rauf Aregbesola, headed to the Elections Petition Tribunal for review and redress. Obtaining none, he took his case to a superior body, which held that the verdict of the court below amounted to a miscarriage of justice and ordered that the petition be heard de novo.

    The new tribunal rejected Aregbesola’s petition in a “unanimous” judgment signed by four of the five judges, and the text of which was festooned with alterations and interpolations that called the integrity of the process into question.

    In finding for Aregbesola, Justice Ogunbiyi wrote for a unanimous Appeal Court, that the Tribunal was “lackadaisical” in its handling of the case, that it dismissed vital evidence as “mere allegations”; that it set at nought compelling forensic evidence; that it wantonly misrepresented evidence of key witnesses; in sum, that the Tribunal’s conduct was “a travesty, and a mockery” of the judicial process.

    That verdict sealed Justice Salami’s doom. He would have to be taken out of the Court of Appeal, the terminus for all election petitions except those arising from the election of President.

    First they offered to promote him to associate justice of the Supreme Court. He demurred.

    Several years earlier, when there was a vacancy, he had declined to apply for such a position.

    Then, they accused him, first in whispers and subsequently in paid newspaper advertisements, of all manner of misconduct, including consorting with attorneys of parties to the case he was handling. Leading the charge was Senator (as he then was) Iyiola Omisore who, despite his apparent conversion to an apostle of probity and propriety, nevertheless remains a principal suspect in the murder of the former Federal Minister of Justice and Attorney-General, Chief Bola Ige, leading the charge.

    Then there was talk of giving him a “soft landing” if only he would just quit.

    Why would they contemplate, much less make such offers to a judge they claim has been tainted irredeemably? Why would they reward him with a promotion to the Supreme Court? Why offer him a “soft landing”? Why not make a public example of him?

    If you have the facts on your side, if you are serious about cleansing the judiciary, if you are truly desirous of prosecuting a Transformation Agenda in which fighting corruption is a core element, why would you pass up such a great opportunity to nail him?

    But Justice Salami’s saga was never about law. It was all along about politics, politics in its rawest form.

    A pending judgment in the disputed gubernatorial election result in Sokoto before the Salami Court would provide the final pretext for caging Justice Salami and ultimately terminating his career. The judgment could overturn many a political applecart, and the authorities were taking no chances.

    According to Justice Salami, the sitting chief justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu, requested that the judgment be withheld, for political reasons. He cited Justice Dahiru Musdapher, of the Supreme Court, as a witness to this encounter.

    Justice Katsina-Alu said he had merely informed Justice Salami that the judgment had been leaked, and that it might be wise to put off issuing it.

    If the judgment had indeed leaked, that was not unusual. Only last month, judgment in a major case before the Supreme Court leaked well ahead of delivery, and no member of the Court was blamed for it.

    Justice Musdapher whom Justice Salami had cited as witness would only say with consummate diplomatic tact that he could not recall the occasion. Not categorically that the encounter never happened; merely that he had no recollection of it.

    For all practical purposes, that was the end of Justice Salami’s career. Those determined to teach him a lesson wove Justice Musdapher’s diplomatic answer into a charge of perjury, with chief justice Katsina-Alu as accuser and prosecutor and witness and judge while in office and even after he retired.

    Not even the National Judicial Council could save Justice Salami from their vengeful wrath.

    He leaves the scene bruised and battered, and not entirely on his own terms. But his head is unbowed. He refused to submit to blackmail and blandishment. While they hurled every weapon in their arsenal of dirty tricks at him, he sought vindication through the law.

    Something tells me that history will remember him more kindly than those who, when presented with a chance to end an epic injustice, chose to perpetuate it.

     

    Re:  Allah-De

    A  retired career ambassador has commented as follows on my tribute in this space (July 31, 2013) (to Alade “Allah-De” Odunewu, the departed veteran newspaperman and revered columnist:

    “I could understand your good intention to “speak no ill of the dead.” But you should not mislead your readers by creating the impression that the veteran was utterly apolitical as a top Editor of the highly regarded Daily Times in the 60s. He certainly wasn’t!

    “The day after the Western Region election was massively rigged by Chief Akintola, & Co, the Daily Times under Allah De screamed with a headline in an unprecedented Yoruba language headline, “DEMO BORI!” — a clear exultant declaration by an ‘apolitical’ editor.

    “I hope you will be characteristically courageous to publish this contribution.”

     

     

     

     

  • Court strikes out suit seeking Salami’s recall

    A Federal High Court, Abuja yesterday struck out a suit seeking the reinstatement of the suspended President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    Justice Adamu Bello said the plaintiffs lacked the locus standi to institute the action, therefore the court lacked jurisdiction to decide the matter on its merit.

    Citing Order 9 Rule 2 of the Federal High Court Rules, 2009, the court held that it would have had the jurisdiction to deal with the controversies surrounding the suspension if Justice Salami had applied as a co-plaintiff in the suit.

    “Justice Isa Ayo Salami is the one who has the aggregate enforceable rights to bring the action but oddly enough he was made a Defendant in the suit.

    “In other words, the present is not about public interest litigation but involves the private rights of Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    “Having held that the plaintiff lacks the locus standi to institute the action, the court lacks the jurisdiction to entertain it. In the circumstance, the proper order to make is the one striking out the suit. I therefore grant an order striking out the suit in its entirety. I make no order as to cost.”

    The plaintiffs are Mr. Jitobo Akanike, Idris Musa, Allens Agbaka, Ibrahim Bawa, Princewill Akpakpan , Obruche Ayeteni, Nosa Ihaza, Timothy Odumosu, Stewart Salomi, Egogo Lawrence and Maxwell Adeniran.

    They sued for themselves and on behalf of the trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration.

    The human rights activists were seeking an order of mandamus to compel the defendants to recall Justice Salami from his suspension.

    The defendants are President Goodluck Jonathan, the Attorney-General of the Federation and Justice Minister, Mohammed Adoke (SAN), the National Judicial Council (NJC) and Justice Salami.

    They contended that Jonathan breached the Constitution for disregarding the recommendation of the National Judicial Council (NJC) to reinstate Salami.

    Akanike said: “We are going to study the judgment and take appropriate action. We are going to pursue the issue of locus to a logical conclusion.”

     

  • Court strikes out suit  to reinstate Salami

    Court strikes out suit to reinstate Salami

    The Federal High Court on Monday in Abuja struck out a suit seeking the reinstatement of Justice Ayo Salami as President of the Court of Appeal.

    The Registered Trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration led other 10 plaintiffs to institute the case.

    Delivering the judgment, Justice Adamu Bello held that the plaintiffs lacked the `locus standi’ to institute the action.

    Bello further held that “in the circumstance, the court lacks the jurisdiction to entertain the suit.’’

    “The suit is, therefore, struck out for lacking in merit. Only Justice Ayo Salami can bring the action challenging his suspension as President of the Court of Appeal.

    “This is not a violation of public interest issue but rather a private rights issue that can only be challenged by the person directly affected,’’ he said.

    The plaintiffs are: Jitobo Akande, Idris Musa, Allens Agbaka, Ibrahim Bawa, Princewell Akpakpan, Obruche Ayeteni, Nosa Ihaza, Timothy Odumosu, Stewart Salomi, Egogo Lawrence and Maxwell Adeniran.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that President Goodluck Jonathan, the National Judicial Council (NJC), Minister of Justice and the Attorney General of the Federation were the defendants.

    Salami was joined in the suit as a nominal defendant.

    The plaintiffs prayed the court to hold that the NJC, by virtue of the 1999 Constitution, ceded exclusive power to the Council to sanction judicial officers.

    The suit sought to compel the NJC to reinstate Salami as PCA.

    Salami was suspended on August 18, 2011 when the NJC claimed it found him guilty of “gross judicial misconduct’’.

    The plaintiff further sought a declaration that the NJC breached the provision of the Constitution by submitting its resolution on Salami to the President for approval.

    They sought an order directing NJC to implement the recommendation of its three-man panel urging the recall of Salami as President of the Court of Appeal among others.

    Speaking to journalists after the session, Akanike, the counsel to the plaintiffs, said the court `used narrow arguments’ on locus to deliver the judgment.

    He said that “my principal will brief me on the next action to take.’’

    Mr. Matthew Echo, the counsel to Salami, said he was delighted by the decision of the court, because “it judgment was given with great industry.’’

     

  • Salami: President asks court to strike out suit

    Salami: President asks court to strike out suit

    President Goodluck Jonathan has asked a Federal High Court in Abuja to strike out a suit by 11 plaintiffs seeking the reinstatement of the suspended President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    The plaintiffs, who are the Registered Trustees of Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration, are seeking an order of mandamus to compel Jonathan, the Attorney- General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke (SAN) and the National Judicial Council (NJC) to reinstate Salami.

    Justice Bello ordered the service of the court process on Jonathan through Adoke.

    The court also granted an order for the plaintiffs to sue in representative capacity.

    In a motion notice by their counsel, Matthew Echo, Jonathan and Adoke listed four grounds for the court to strike out the suit.

    They said the activists, who filed the suit for themselves and the Registered Trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration, do not have the locus standi to institute the action.

    The duo said they do not have sufficient interest in the matter to which the application relates.

    They also contended that the plaintiffs have not shown any authority granted them by the Trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration to maintain the action on their behalf.

    Besides, Jonathan and Adoke stated that the reliefs sought by the plaintiffs are indeterminable as they are merely academic and as such should be expunged.

    They added that there is no cause of action against them as they have always acted in accordance with the constitution in relation with the subject matter in the suit.

    When the matter came up yesterday, Justice Bello granted the application to strike out Justice Dalhatu Adamu as fifth defendant from the suit having been replaced as the Acting PCA.

    The court adjourned till January 17, for the adoption of written addresses.

    The NJC had, in its response filed earlier, agreed with the plaintiffs that the power to recall the suspended Justice Salami solely and exclusively belongs to it without any recourse to the direction or authority of any other person outside the council, including the President.

     

  • Jonathan asks Court to strike out suit on Salami

    Jonathan asks Court to strike out suit on Salami

    President Goodluck Jonathan has asked a Federal High Court, Abuja, to strike out a suit by 11 plaintiffs seeking the reinstatement of the suspended President of the Court of Appeal (PCA), Justice Isa Ayo Salami, to his duty post.

    The plaintiffs who are the Registered Trustees of Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration are seeking an order of mandamus to compel Jonathan, the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke (SAN) and the National Judicial Council (NJC) to reinstate Justice Salami.

    Justice Bello had in the suit ordered the service of the court process on Jonathan through Adoke.

    The court also granted an order for the plaintiffs to sue in representative capacity.

    In a motion notice filed by their counsel, Mr. Matthew Echo of Dr. Fabian Ajogwu‘s Chambers; Jonathan and Adoke listed four grounds for the court to strike out the suit.

    According to the duo, the human rights activists who filed the suit for themselves and the Registered Trustees of the Center for the Promotion of Arbitration do not have the locus standi to institute the action and to seek the reliefs sought as they do not have sufficient interest in the matter to which the application relates.

    They also contended that the plaintiffs have not shown any authority granted them by the Trustees of the Center for the Promotion of Arbitration to maintain the action on their behalf in a representative capacity.

    Besides, Jonathan and Adoke stated that the reliefs sought by the plaintiffs are indeterminable as they are merely academic and as such should be expunged.

    They added that there is no cause of action against them as they have always acted in accordance with the constitution in relation with the subject matter in the suit.

    When the matter came up on Tuesday, Justice Bello granted the application to strike out Justice Dalhatu Adamu as Fifth Defendant from the suit having been replaced as the Acting PCA.

    The court thereafter adjourned till January 17, for adoption of written addresses.

     

  • Court strikes out suit against Justice Salami

    Court strikes out suit against Justice Salami

    It was another victory for the suspended President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Isa Ayo Salami, yesterday.

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, struck out a suit seeking to stop President Goodluck Jonathan from reinstating him.

    Justice Abdul Kafarati granted the order, based on a notice of discontinuance filed on June 22 by the purported Plaintiff, Wilfred Okoli.

    Okoli had denied knowledge of the suit filed in his name by an Abuja lawyer, Amobi Nzelu. Okoli is a lawyer working in the chambers of Nzelu.

    The suit was filed to frustrate the recommendation of the National Judicial Council (NJC) to Jonathan.

    On May 10, the NJC, after its meeting in Abuja recommended the reinstatement of Justice Salami.

    Okoli stated two grounds for seeking to “discomtinue the suit against all the Defendants”.

    He said: “I neither gave consent nor authorised that the suit be instituted, in the first instance. I did not brief anybody whatsoever to commence the suit on my behalf”.

    “I do not have any cause of action against any of the Defendants,” he added

    At the resumed hearing yesterday, Justice Salami’s counsel, Chief Akin Olujinmi (SAN), urged the court to strike out the suit.

    According to him, Nzelu committed a gross professional misconduct by filing a suit in the name of a person whose consent he did not seek.

    The NJC agreed with his position.

    Justice Kafarati struck out the suit.

    Nzelu, In the suit filed on behalf of Okoli, had asked the court to stop Jonathan from acting on the recommendation sent to him by the National Judicial council (NJC).

    The Defendants are the NJC, Justice Salami, the Attorney General of the Federation and Jonathan.

    The plaintiff urged the court to hold that NJC can not deliberate on an issue which is a subject of litigation.

  • NJC to consider options on  Salami tomorrow

    NJC to consider options on Salami tomorrow

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) is to meet tomorrow. The council is likely to discuss Justice Salami’s non-reinstatement and weigh options on the fate of the acting President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Dalhatu Adamu.

    But it was not immediately clear whether the NJC will intervene in the ongoing investigation of Chief Judges of two states and three Federal High Court judges. They are being investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “Going by the notice issued, the NJC members will meet on Wednesday on issues confronting the judiciary.

    “The challenge at the Court of Appeal over its suspended President, Justice Ayo Salami, and the continued stay in office of the acting PCA, Justice Dahiru Adamu, is one of the matters to be considered.

    “Of course, the council will address a few issues bordering on how to fast-track the judicial process, indiscipline and ongoing investigation of some judges by the EFCC.

    “Some NJC members are certainly unhappy with the approach adopted by the EFCC in going about the investigation. I think they believe there ought to be consultations with the council before it is put in the public domain.

    It was learnt that some members of the council have been pushing for a sustainable solution to the stalemate at the Court of Appeal.

    The source spoke about the displeasure about the interim leadership arrangement at the Court of Appeal; the NJC will surely address this challenge.

    “We are aware of ongoing court processes but the council can find a common ground for all the aggrieved parties. What is important is that we want to move forward,” he said.

    But another source said: “Any intervention on Justice Salami by the NJC may be subjudice because of the ongoing cases in court.

    “Although one of the cases was struck out on Monday, we still have a few others outstanding in court.

    “Without going through all these courts, the NJC might be a bit handicapped. But one does not rule out the application of Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanism. The ball is in NJC’s court.”

    Through its lawyer, Usman Isa Kana, the NJC had a few weeks ago told a Federal High Court that President Goodluck Jonathan has no disciplinary power over any Justice of the Court of Appeal or its President.

     

  • Will Jonathan bow  to NJC on Salami?

    Will Jonathan bow to NJC on Salami?

    Many could not believe their ears when the National Judicial Council (NJC) came out with its position on the suspension of President of the Court of Appeal (PCA) Justice Isa Salami last week. In papers fitted in court, NJC said President Goodluck Jonathan lacks the power to determine Justice Salami’s fate, adding that he could not reappoint the Acting President of the Court of appeal, Justice Dalhatu Adamu without its consent. Lawyers view this as a healthy development and want parties to resolve the dispute without further delay. Eric Ikhilae, Joseph Jibueze and Precious Igbonwelundu report.

    • Lawyers hail Council’s stand

    The judiciary, arguably, attracted the worst comments in its history on the case involving the former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu, and suspended President of the Court of Appeal (PCA) Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    Since Justice Salami’s suspension on August 18, 2011, the judiciary has attempted, in vain, to remedy the nastiest decision it ever took. It played into the hands of politicians and got its hands burnt. Today, the judiciary seems to be a victim of its undoing.

    The realisation of this fact may have informed its new position that the Presidency lacks the powers to determine Justice Salami’s fate. The National Judicial Council (NJC) astounded all last week when it made a dramatic ‘U’ turn from its earlier position, arguing that the President has no constitutional role in Justice Salami’s recall.

    At the height of the crisis last year, the NJC, under Katsina-Alu, wrote the President recommending Justice Salami’s sack, for alleged ground of unethical conduct. Despite the pendency of Justice Salami’s suit, challenging the composition of the Justice Ibrahim Auta panel (that recommended his sack), President Goodluck Jonathan wasted no time in approving his suspension.

    In May this year, the NJC, under the immediate past CJN, Justice Dahiru Musdapher, voted for Justice Salami’s recall and communicated same to the President. Rather than act with the dispatch with which he enforced the earlier recommendation from the body, Jonathan became creative in devising reasons to avoid giving effect to the recommendation.

    The President, speaking through the Attorney-General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke (SAN), argued on May 22 that the Presidency would not act on NJC’s request because of pending cases in court in respect of the matter.

    Again, determined to reverse its earlier position, the NJC went before the Federal High Court, Abuja to challenge President Jonathan’s powers in facilitating Salami’s return to office and his retention of Justice Dalhatu Adamu as Acting Court of Appeal President. Justice Adamu’s appointment has been renewed about three times.

    Citing the provisions of Sections 153, 158, 237 and 238, the NJC queried President Jonathan’s powers to determine Justice Salami’s fate.

    The NJC, in a written address it filed in a suit by some rights activists, acting as Registered Trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration (RTCPA), argued that under Section 238 (5), the renewal of Justice Adamu’s mandate by President Jonathan ought to be proceeded by its (NJC’s) recommendation.

    Section 238 (5) reads: Except on the recommendation of the National Judicial Council, an appointment pursuant to the provisions of subsection (4) of this section shall cease to have effect after the expiration of three months from the date of such appointment, and the President shall not re-appoint a person whose appointment has lapsed.

    Sub-section 4 reads: If the office of the President of the Court of appeal is vacant, or if the person holding the office is for any reason unable to perform the functions of the office, then until a person has been appointed to and has assumed the functions of that office, or until the person holding the office has resumed those functions, the President shall appoint the most senior Justice of the Court of Appeal to perform those functions.

    Observers argued that the dilemma, in which the judiciary now finds itself, resulted from the obvious moral decadence in the society fueled by corruption, which has permeated all its segments. They noted that the most worrisome angle to the Katsina-Alu/Salami saga is the negative impact it has on the judicial system.

    They said rather than allow reason to prevail and justice to take its natural course, they were manipulated in the case, resulting in a fragmented and highly bruised judiciary. Rather than speak with one voice on the issue, observers noted that the judiciary was divided by interest.

    They observed that there are those who believe that Salami should be kept outside, despite the injustice this position may occasion, in view of the benefit they are deriving from his continued suspension; and the others who believe that it is just to allow Salami back.

    This polarisation of opinion, they argued, is reflective in Justice Adamu’s position in the case by RTCPA. Adamu argued, in his objection to the suit, that the court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain the reinstatement suit, because the plaintiff lacked the locus standi to bring the action.

    In the application filed by his counsel, E.O Kanda, Adamu said a search conducted at the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) on the plaintiff showed that it was registered as a non-governmental organisation (NGO), whose constitution did not give it the power to sue in representative capacity.

    He further argued that with the plaintiff’s locus taken away by its own constitution, no suit would be deemed to be before the court. He objected to the hearing of the suit on the ground that it constituted an abuse of court process and amounted to forum shopping.

    According to him, Salami had filed similar suit, seeking among others, to be recalled. Adamu added that though the plaintiffs in both suits were different, parties and the reliefs being sought were similar. He added that the current suit could only survive if it was consolidated with the existing one.

    Rights activists, Bamidele Aturu and Jiti Ogunye faulted Salami’s suspension in the first place. They argued that the Presidency acted in error when it suspended Salami and appointed Adamu in acting capacity.

    Aturu, argued last year in a statement titled “Justice Salami’s purported suspension- a farcical illegality,” that NJC’s suspension of Salami, in spite of service on it of the process filed by him, challenging the setting up of the Auta Committee, is a condemnable illegality.

    “That the brazen decision was taken by a body that has responsibility for overseeing the judiciary shows that our attempt at building a liberal democracy is imperiled simply on account of the illiberal persons that superintend the administration of justice in this country.

    “The decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Ojukwu v Military Governor of Lagos State has made it clear that it is an act of lawlessness for a party to present the court, as the NJC as brazenly and contemptuously done in the instant case, with a fait accompli. What the NJC has done is nothing but a farce. First the NJC evaded service, then, it pronounced definitively on a matter that is pending in court; what nonsense?” Aturu noted.

    Ogunye in his article titled: “Justice Salami’s suspension by the NJC is illegal and unconstitutional,” published in the wake of the suspension, argued that the NJC has no power to suspend Salami from office, but that it can only, competently, recommend his suspension, to the President, in deserving cases, and the President can only act on such recommendation if it is supported by a two-third address of the Senate.

    “Although the National Judicial Council has the power, under the Third Schedule, Part I, Paragraph I, Section 21(b) of the Constitution to recommend to the President the removal from office of the President of the Court of Appeal and exercise “disciplinary control” over him, it is clear that by virtue of Section 292(1)( a) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, any recommendation of removal of the President of the Court of Appeal from his Judicial Office can only be effected by the President, acting on an address supported by two-thirds majority of the Senate.

    “It is our contention that just as in the case of removal of any removal of the President of the Court of Appeal from office, any exercise of power of “disciplinary control”, over him, such as this suspension, must be subject to the approval of the President, acting on an address of two-third majority of the Senate.

    “The correct interpretation of the above-cited provisions of the Constitution is that if the President of the Court of Appeal can only be removed from office only when a two-third address of the Senate directs the President to do so, in the same vein, the President of the Court can only be effectively and consummately suspended from office by the NJC, with a two third endorsement of the Senate and a decision of the President to that effect. This is the principle of checks and balances that is crafted in the Constitution,” Ogunye said.

    Lawyers, including Dr. Joel Adedigba, Executive Director of the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), Adetokunbo Mumuni and a Senior Advocate, who pleaded not to be named, praised the new position by NJC.

    They said although the NJC’s position appears a reversal of its earlier stance, parties should ensure prompt resolution of the crisis so that the judiciary can focus on effort to rebuild its battered image.

    Adedigba said: “The current situation has provided the court with another opportunity to formally ensure justice in the Salami-case. The decision to right a perceived wrong is now left for the Judiciary. I say this because the case, in which the NJC queried the President’s power to determine Salami’s case, is before a court. If the court wants to do justice, this is the opportunity.

    “If it wants to continue to act as an appendage of the Executive rather than an independent equal, the choice can be made in the course of this case.

    “The judge handling the case should allow an accelerated hearing so that the case can be decided with dispatch. Even of those opposed to Salami’s return want to appeal up to the Supreme Court, the court can speedily hear the case, determine it and ensure that Salami returns to office before his tenure expires,” he said.

    Mumuni said: “The point being made and the position now being canvassed by the NJC is the correct position of law.

    “However, the NJC acted earlier in the Salami matter as if the Presidency had a role to play in the discipline of a federal judicial officer. This is what the Presidency took advantage of to meddle in a matter clearly outside its constitutional pursue purview.

    “It is better late than never. Now that the NJC has re-discovered itself and made the constitutional position known the presidency should just keep a long distance from the matter and let the NJC’s recalling of salami be so that this monumentally embarrassing saga will be put behind the judiciary,” Mumuni said.

    The SAN said: “Sadly, a group of individuals within the NJC initially didn’t want Justice Salami back. That group may be losing its influence now, and with the appointment of a new CJN in the person of Justice Mukhtar, there is a breath of fresh air.”

    The Senior Advocate observed that until the new CJN came, the old NJC and the Presidency worked in tandem. “It suited all parties that Salami was not recalled. My worry was that push for his recall was taking an ethnic and political colouration which was not good for the judiciary.

    “The new position being considered by the NJC, although seemingly contradictory to its earlier position of waiting on the President, is encouraging. But will they have the moral will to push it through?

    “I think the ongoing Constitution amendment should spell out a few things more clearly. The Constitution provides that a President of the Court of Appeal shall be appointed by the President on the recommendation of the NJC subject to Senate confirmation. But it is not clear who recalls him in a situation where he is suspended. Ordinarily, it is he who suspends that should recall.

    “I think the judiciary should not depend on the executive for such decisions if it must be truly independent, otherwise political considerations will always be brought to bear by the ruling party and other powers that be.

    “We also see what may be a clear violation of the Constitution as the Acting Court of Appeal President ought to have left since. His first three-month appointment ought to cease and the President was not supposed to reappoint him after his first appointment had lapsed. How many more times has been reappointed now? I’ve lost count.

    “I also believe Justice Salami should withdraw his suit. We are at a point of reconciliation, and if his court case will stand in the way of his recall, let him withdraw it.

    “But I think the NJC under Justice Mukhtar should be commended for even considering taking steps to correct what many see as injustice and victimisation of Justice Salami. It is never late to do right. Let us wait and see,” the senior lawyer said.

     

  • NJC: President can’t decide Salami’s fate

    NJC: President can’t decide Salami’s fate

     

    The National Judicial Council (NJC) has opposed the retention of Justice Dalhatu Adamu as the President of the Court of Appeal.

    This is contained in the council’s reaction to a suit by 11 plaintiffs suing for themselves and on behalf of the Registered Trustees of the Centre for the Promotion of Arbitration.

    The plaintiffs are Mr. Jitobo Akanike, Idris Musa, Allens Agbaka, Ibrahim Bawa, Princewill Akpakpan, Obruche Ayeteni, Nosa Ihaza, Timothy Odumosu, Stewart Salomi, Egogo Lawrence and Maxwell Adeniran.

    They are before the Federal High Court, Abuja, challenging the refusal of President Goodluck Jonathan to reinstate the suspended President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Isa Ayo Salami.

    The NJC agreed with the Plaintiffs that President Jonathan has no power or role under the 1999 Constitution or any other law to recall or reinstate Justice Salami or any other Justice of the Appellate Court.

    The Council insisted that the power to recall Justice Salami solely and exclusively belongs to it without any recourse to the direction or authority of any other person, including the President, outside the council.

    Its counsel, Mr. Usman Isah, posited that the extension of Justice Dalhatu Adamu’s appointment as the Acting PCA is unconstitutional, illegal, null and void by virtue of section 238(5) of the 1999 Constitution.

    The section states: “Except on the recommendation of the National Judicial Council , an appointment pursuant to the provisions of subsection (4) of this section shall cease to have effect, after the expiration of three months from the date of such appointment and the president shall not reappoint a person whose appointment has lapsed.”

    The NJC argued that Justice Adamu cannot be re-appointed by President Jonathan after the expiration of his three months in office without its recommendation.

    Justice Adamu Bello has, however, ordered parties in the suit to file and exchange their written addresses and fixed December 4 for adoption.

    In the suit against Jonathan and the NJC, the Plaintiffs, who are human rights activists, are seeking an order of mandamus to compel them to recall Justice Salami from his suspension.

    Justice Bello had at the last sitting, ordered the service of the court’s process on Jonathan through the office of the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Bello Adoke (SAN).

    The Judge granted the order, following an exparte motion filed by the 11 plaintiffs.

    The motion was brought pursuant to Sections 153 and 21 of the third schedule of the Constitution as amended Order 4 Rule 2 and Order 6 Rules 5(b) of the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2009 and under the inherent jurisdiction of the court.

    The court also granted an order for the Plaintiffs to sue in representative capacity.

    The plaintiffs are contending that Jonathan has breached the Constitution for disregarding the NJC’s recommendation.

    They are urging the court to declare the extension of Justice Adamau’s tenure as the Acting PCA as unconstitutional, illegal, null and void.

    The Defendants are Jonathan, Adoke, NJC, Justice Salami and Justice Adamu.

    In the Originating Summons, the Plaintiffs are seeking a declaration that: the NJC is the only body that can discipline Court of Appeal Justices and/or the president of the Court of Appeal; and a declaration that *the refusal of the third defendant to implement the recommendation of its three-man panel headed by Honourable Justice Aloma Mariam Muhktar (JSC), urging the recall of Justice Salami constitutes a breach of the constitution as amended.

    They are seeking also an order: •of mandamus directing the third defendant to implement the recommendation of its three-man panel urging the recall of Justice Salami.

    •directing the third defendant to recall the fourth defendant to resume his duties as the President of the Court of Appeal forthwith; and

    •a declaration that the President has no power whatsoever and/or howsoever to discipline Court of Appeal Justices and or Justice Salami.