Tag: SANs

  • Solohan & Co congratulates 78 newly elevated SANs

    Solohan & Co congratulates 78 newly elevated SANs

    Africa’s premier legal outfit, Solohan & Co, has congratulated seventy-eight (78) distinguished legal practitioners recently elevated to the prestigious rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) for the year 2024.

    In a statement, Solohan & Co expressed profound pleasure in celebrating the newly conferred Senior Advocates, acknowledging their dedication, resilience, and unwavering integrity that led to this remarkable achievement. 

    The firm also emphasised that the honour is a reflection of years of hard work, persistence, and adherence to sound legal practice.

    “Your attainment of this milestone in the legal profession is a testament to your hard work, resilience, diligence, and sacrifice in service to the bar, as well as your adherence to sound legal practice over the years,” the statement read.

    Solohan & Co further lauded the new Senior Advocates for their outstanding contributions to the legal community and their exemplary service to justice, welcoming them to the distinguished ranks of the inner bar.

    The firm extended its best wishes, offering prayers for their continued success, good health, and wisdom as they shoulder the responsibilities that come with their new rank.

    The firm also reaffirmed its commitment to supporting the growth and elevation of exceptional legal professionals in Nigeria, celebrating this significant milestone for the legal community.

    Among the distinguished legal professionals elevated to SAN are Gyang Yaya Zi, SAN, Ademola Oluwawolemi Esan, SAN, and Abdulkari Kana Abubakar, SAN, whose dedication and contributions to the profession have earned them this prestigious honour.

    Other newly conferred Senior Advocates include Yusuf Olatunji Ogunrinde, SAN, Emonye Oga Adekwu, SAN, Omokayode Adebayo Dada, SAN, and Ovbagbadia Innocent Adams, SAN, each recognized for their unwavering integrity and service to the bar.

    Further honorees include Olaolu Akintunde Owolabi, SAN, Yunus Abdulsalam, SAN, and Uchenna Uzo Njoku, SAN, whose elevation reflects their exemplary commitment to legal excellence.

    Habeeb Orisavbia Ilavbare, SAN, Mofesomo Ayodeji Tayo-Oyetibo, SAN, Ademola Kamardeen Abimbola, SAN, and Paul Babatunde Daudu, SAN, also join the distinguished ranks, celebrated for their passion for justice and legal advocacy.

    Additionally, Kaka Shehu Lawan, SAN, Mustapha Ikhegbe Abubakar, SAN, Kolawole James Olowookere, SAN, and Boonyameen Babajide Lawal, SAN, are recognized for their exceptional expertise in upholding the rule of law.

    Also, Charles Oladipo Titiloye, SAN, Chukwudi Kachikwu Enebel, SAN, Matthew Echezonam Esonanjor, SAN, Kingsley Chuku, SAN, and Tobechukwu Kenechukwu Nweke, SAN, have been honoured for their years of dedicated service and contributions to the advancement of the legal profession.

    It noted that: “Their elevation to SAN is a testament to their excellence, setting them apart as leaders in Nigeria’s legal landscape.”

  • UN genocide prosecutor Adeogun-Phillips, Ubani, Olujimi’s son, others become SANs

    UN genocide prosecutor Adeogun-Phillips, Ubani, Olujimi’s son, others become SANs

    The Legal Practitioners Privileges Committee (LPPC) yesterday announced that it had approved the appointment of 87 senior lawyers to the esteemed rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN).

    A statement by the Chief Registrar of the Supreme Court and Secretary of the LPPC, Hajo Sarki Bello, confirmed that the committee, headed by the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Olukayode Ariwoola, approved the appointments at its 160th plenary session held in Abuja.

    Top on this year’s list is Dr. Charles Ayodeji Adeogun-Phillips, the renowned international lawyer and former genocide prosecutor.

    He led 12 precedent-setting genocide trials before the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, wherein he obtained 12 genocide convictions against 13 defendants.

    Adeogun-Phillips is widely regarded as one of the leading and most experienced international criminal lawyers in the world.

    His case in defence of the Tanzanian politician, Christopher Mtikila, before the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights in 2014, which resulted in amendments to Tanzania’s electoral laws to allow for independent candidacy for election to public office, is also regarded as a watershed and landmark human rights case in Africa.

    Adeogun-Phillips, who was recognised in the Who’s Who in Public International Law in 2001 and 2022, was honoured with an LL.D by the prestigious University of Warwick, in recognition of his pioneering contribution to the development of international criminal law.

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    Others chosen from the advocate category are former Second Vice President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Dr. Monday Ubani; a senior prosecuting lawyer with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ekele Iheanacho; the son of a former Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Akin Olujinmi (SAN), Akinyemi Oluwole Olujinmi; an Abuja-based lawyer, Baba Fika Dalah; and a commercial law expert, Chukwudi Enebeli.

    The statement added: “The rank of a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) is awarded as a mark of excellence to members of the legal profession who have distinguished themselves as advocates and academics.

    “The meeting further considered five different petitions written against some of the applicants and determined that each of the petitions lacked merit and thus dismissed.

    “The swearing-in ceremony of the 87 successful applicants is scheduled to take place on Monday, September 30, 2024.”

  • Way out of Rivers crisis, by SANs

    Way out of Rivers crisis, by SANs

    Senior lawyers have suggested ways out of the political crisis in Rivers State.

    They were reacting to the relocation of the House of Assembly to the Government House where only three members sit.

    Ahmed Raji (SAN) said: “It is a matter that should be handled with extra care in the interest of our democracy.

    “Legal solutions should be the last option.

    “The matter calls for a pragmatic political solution in the interest of all.”

    Law teacher and prosecutor Wahab Shittu (SAN) said there was a constitutional issue that needed resolving.

    “The way out is for the Attorney-General of the Federation to pose a constitutional question immediately for the determination of the Supreme Court.

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    “In my view, a constitutional dispute has arisen and the resolution can only be determined by reference to the constitution – the grundnorm of the country.

    “Democratic institutions ought to be activated to resolve this issue,” he said.

    Professor of law Yemi Akinseye-George (SAN) believes the governor lacks powers to relocate the Assembly.

    He said: “He has made it impossible for the House of Assembly to exercise their functions.

    “Under the doctrine of necessity, the House of Assembly can convene anywhere possible including virtually and perform its constitutional functions including removing him from office.

    “Rivers State is too important to be turned into a spectacle of oddities that the young man has turned the state into.

    “There are only two ways out of the crises: removal or reconciliation. The ball is in Governor Fubara’s court.

    “It is doubtful if he has the capacity to retrace his steps and do the right thing that can return the state to the path of peace.”

    But Lagos lawyer Theophilus Akanwa was of the view that Governor Fubara has the powers to make an executive order relocating the Assembly to Government House pending the renovation of their demolished complex.

    “The gazette is legal and he is in order,” Akanwa said

    He added: “The way forward is that Governor Fubara should be allowed to govern Rivers State without any further interference.”

  • 35 women SANs out of 720 unacceptable, says Alli

    35 women SANs out of 720 unacceptable, says Alli

    • NBA Women Forum holds conference

    It is unacceptable to have less than 35 women out of the 720 Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs), Mrs. Folashade Alli (SAN) has said.

    This, she said, underscores the need to bridge the gap through empowerment.

    Alli is the chairperson of the Nigerian Bar Association Women Forum (NBA WF) Conference Planning Committee.

    She spoke at a briefing on the forum’s annual conference to be held in Lagos on Thursday and Friday.

    The theme is: “Beyond the balance sheet: Redefining success for women in law.”

    Alli noted that the conference was one way the NBA WF builds the capacity of women lawyers to achieve more.

    She said: “The 2024 International Women’s Day, with the theme: ‘Invest in women, accelerate progress’ was a call to action. There is a need for more.

    “If you look at the legal profession, there are about 720 SANs, and less than 35 are women, which is 4.2 per cent.

    “That’s the gender disparity we’re talking about, and that’s why we’re clamouring for gender equality. We’re not there at all.

    “In governance, we have never had a female president or female vice president.

    “In terms of population, about 49 per cent are women, but where are we?

    “The Gender Bill that was rejected would have been an affirmative action had it been passed. We are clamouring for gender equality.

    “That’s what the NBA WF is all about. We’re the voice for the women and the voice of the voiceless.

    “We want a change and women to be more involved, even at the Nigerian Bar, where we have only had one female president (Priscilla Kuye), which is not acceptable.”

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    According to Alli, about 30 speakers have been lined up for the conference.

    She said: “Success for women is not about money. We are multi-talented, and success for us is about personal fulfilment. We’ll discuss this in detail at the conference.

    “There will be six plenary sessions. We expect a lot of delegates from all over the federation.

    “We have put in a lot of work and have lined up about 30 excellent speakers. We’re looking forward to a great conference.

    “There will be a pre-conference cocktail at the Boat Club on Awolowo Road in Ikoyi. There will also be health checks during the conference.”

    NBA WF Chairperson, Chinyere Okorocha, said the theme was carefully chosen to redefine the meaning of success for the female lawyer.

    “Success means different things. It could be in leadership, mentorship or finance. We want to explore those different areas in great detail.

    “We have so many distinguished members of the society, both lawyers and non-lawyers who will grace the occasion as speakers and panelists.

    “Our keynote speaker will be Mrs Bolanle Austen-Peters, founder of BAP Productions and Terra Kulture, who is also a lawyer.

    “We’ll have a dinner and a gala night, which will be chaired by Mrs Funke Adekoya (SAN).

    “The guest speaker at the dinner will be the Chief Executive Officer of the Bank of Industry, Dr Olasupo Olusi.

    “We urge those who have not registered for this special event billed to be held at the Oriental Hotel to do so,” she said.

    Okorocha said the forum was created to cater to the needs of female lawyers through empowerment programmes such as seminars, workshops and mentorship initiatives.

    The NBA WF, she said, collaborates with sister bodies, both locally and internationally, to empower the Nigerian female lawyer for success.

    “Sometimes female lawyers’ careers are truncated in some way by family obligations, stereotypical biases and cultural nuances.

    “So, we empower ourselves such as through the annual conference that speaks to issues that are important to us,” she said.

    On how the Forum’s activities are organised, Okorocha said: “The NBA WF has a governing council and is structured around 11 committees through which we carry out our activities.

    “These include mentorship, advocacy, external relations, membership, young lawyers, in-house counsel, and public sector, among others.

    “The WF has 125 branch facilitators across the country in each NBA branch.

    “We also have a State Lead in each of the 36 states of the federation and Abuja.

    “This way, we’re able to reach the grassroots in our bid to empower the Nigerian female lawyer.”

    Head of Hospitality, Logistics and Protocol Committee, Kemi Afesojaye, said discussions have been held with the management of major hotels on the Island.

    “We have secured discounted rates for delegates. We’ll also be arranging for shuttles for our speakers,” she said.

    The head of the Finance and Fundraising Committee, Ifeoma Ben, said registration was ongoing.

    “We hope to conclude the registration process a day before the conference.

    “To register, simply visit the NBA WF website – nbawomenforum.org.ng and click on the registration link,” she said.

    Also at the briefing were a member of the Content and Programme Committee, Blessing Udo and Deputy Head of Media and Publicity Committee, Gloria Ireka.

  • New SANs cautioned on conduct, utterances                        

    New SANs cautioned on conduct, utterances                        

    The 58 newly sworn-in Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) have been told to take extra caution in their conduct, character display, and spoken words in court,  public and  private places.

    Justice Mojeed Adekunle Owoade JCA (rtd) gave the admonition while delivering a paper at the annual induction of the new SANs at the Idera Hall, Radisson Blu Anchorage Hotel Victoria Island in Lagos.

    The topic was ”Understanding the Culture and Demands of Continuous Excellence at the Inner Bar; Court of Appeal Perspective”.

    Justice Owoade  charged the new SAN to always speak the truth regardless of the situation, stressing “it is only the truth that will guarantee them the trust of their client, court and the general public.”

    The administrative Judge of the Federal High Court Lagos Division,  Justice Ayokunle Olayinka Faji, while congratulating the newly appointed SANs, remarked that  over 90 per cent of lawyers elevated to the new position of Senior Advocat deserve their elevation and there should be no dissenting voices.

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    Justice Faji further urged the senior lawyers to always be there for their colleagues, as this will go a long way to ensure that the culture of excellence associated with their new status is maintained

    Mr Ademola Akinrele SAN, on his part, urged the new SANs to read widely and to prepare well for their matter in court, so that they are not found wanting in court.

    He further admonish them to always be humble, respecting other lawyers and the court by not insisting that the court should listen to them first because they are SANs.

    The host of this year’s induction programme and the Dean, Faculty of Law at Ajayi Crowther University, Prof. Olanrewaju  Onadeko said that the theme for this year’s induction ”Legal Ethics and Professionalism in the Practice of Law” was carefully selected to deal with the present day realities facing the legal community in Nigeria.

    He  stated that the induction is aimed at reminding the new SANs of the challenges and responsibilities attached to their new office.

  • SANs and Onnoghen circus

    His eyeballs shone across as his fist thumps resounded from his oak desk. That afternoon, in his striped navy blue suit in his office at Anthony in Lagos, he was in a combative temper. “If there is a case between a rich man and a poor man,” roared the late Gani Fawehinmi to now Senator Babafemi Ojudu, Dele Momodu and myself, “I will find the law for the poor man.” This was in the late 1980’s when Gani was the people’s armoury against a state of army and anomie.

    That was the Gani, who did not flaunt an elitist conscience as a lawyer. He bonded with hoi poloi. That Gani will be growling in his grave now. His younger colleagues are pitching their tents with an oppressor in a puerile defence of one of their own. That is what the Walter Onnoghen case has made of otherwise cerebral and intuitively intelligent lawyers today. Gani would have said it was right to prosecute Onnoghen. He would have said the NJC has nothing to do with this. He would have asked Onnoghen to explain  how he was able to afford over 50 houses on his little salary. He would have wondered why his colleagues did not understand the difference between a public servant and judicial officer.   He would have questioned his mnemonic faculties and asserted that a chief justice who can forget such a lump sum could forget crucial matters of law while dispensing justice. He could have asked Walter Onnoghen to resign and return to the arboreal tranquillity of his village.

    But it astounds that our judiciary has fallen into such decay. But it should not. The judiciary is no high tower, or Noah’s ark. It is not immune from the maggoty rot, the prevalent purulence of the Nigerian society. Corruption is writ large even in the argument of lawyers who want to defend Onnoghen and claim that the CJN ought not be prosecuted at the Code of Conduct Bureau. In the first place, did Onnoghen fill the assets declaration as a judicial officer or as a public servant or a Nigerian citizen? He did it as a Nigerian citizen and public servant. If filling the form were exclusive to lawyers, then it would be a matter for the NJC. But as he filled it, so the soldier or doctor fills it for the public office. Does it mean that a journalist who fills an asset declaration form and lies or suffers memory loss, will have to go to the media council and not CCT? If a judge commits murder, is that a case before the wigged and hoary personages of the NJC?

    Even at that, as I stated in my TVC show, The Platform, even the lawyers are not listening to themselves. Some of them claim the job of CJN is exclusive to a profession. But so is the office of the attorney general. Would they say the attorney general would go to the NJC? The lawyers, led again by Wole Olanipekun and the 88 other supine faithful, lined up as though they owned the constitution and the society. They remind me of the words of the playwright George Bernard Shaw: “the vocations are a conspiracy against the laity.”

    Such attitudes led another playwright Shakespeare to proclaim. “The first thing we do, let’s kill the lawyers.” I have no such morbid imagination about lawyers. Thankfully, they are not wise enough to fool the rest of us or even other lawyers.

    They are quick to turn on the big courts to defend the rich like them, especially the SANs. Yet, I have no record of an instance where this gang of knowledgeable men have felt a stir in their hearts for the poor. When did they go to court to defend a yam seller who was unfairly charged to court? We have so many people in jail because no one pled their cases, either for stealing N20 or for taking a bribe. They were easy on their own consciences to line up for the klieg lights of vanity to defend somebody who already said he did wrong.

    The man said he forgot about $3 million. Even Bill Gates would not forget such a sum of money. The question is, if he could forget that amount, how much more has his lordship’s memory forgotten? If a man forgets N1, he must have so much that N1 is not worth the burden of his remembrance.

    I still don’t understand why the man who says he is guilty wants Nigeria to do for him? To allow him continue as the preeminent judge in the land? Who can defend that? The lawyers argue that it is about process first, and substance later. The real substance is that the man is putting the nation through a meaningless circus and rigmarole by not resigning. Once he resigns, which he will eventually do, the case will go under the radar and we can go on as a nation.

    The lawyers also wondered why it was so quick to take the matter to court between the submission of the petition and prosecution. These are the same lawyers that have perfected the art of turning a case that should take six days to six years. They are so used to dilly-dallying and shilly-shallying  that they are dazed that a case could cruise in court.

    The Onnoghen case is also an example of how the lawyer can be out of sync with the society. When the history of the judiciary is written, today will go on record as a watershed of an era when a section of our top lawyers burned the book of justice because one of them broke the law. They are acting in cahoots with a self-indulgent class. People sometimes forget that the SANs are not about justice, but about the law. “The law,” as Henry Thoreau noted, “has not made anyone a whit more just.” They want law for law’s sake.

    Was it not Onnoghen, who presided over the case against the Senate president? His ruling was not only wrong but curious. Bukola ‘Eleyinmi’ Saraki had filled a form that he owned a property before he owned it. He became a prophet of his own prosperity. If Onnoghen forgot that he had the money, Eleyinmi remembered his own before he had the property. Perhaps Onnoghen exonerated him because of the solidarity of remembrance between them. They have written their own version of Milan Kundera classic titled: A Book of Laughter and Forgetting.

    Except that no one is laughing, and laughing in the East European writer’s novel was also a mockery of the laugh. It is what Nobel laureate Samuel Becket called risus purus, a laugh laughing at itself. Onnoghen and Eleyinmi are kindred spirits in forgetting the present. Eleyinmi was a man of faith. He claimed a property before it came, and it came. Onnoghen endorsed Eleyinmi’s spirit that moved the cement and paints and blocks. His spirit moved mountains.

    Laws are a product of society. The law was made for us and not the other way round. We cannot accept a cabal of lawyers who run away in a riot of tendentious opinions and want to impose them on us. They sometimes think the so-called laity is not literate. The best lawyers are not those who just stick to the letters but the spirit. As Paul says in the Bible, the letter of the law kills, but the spirit gives life. Thankfully we have others who stand firm. They are the avenging angels of technicality.

    Some have asserted that the Buhari administration wanted to nail Onnoghen. Granted it is true, it was not Buhari, who tweaked Onnoghen’s memory, or imposed amnesia on the fellow. He should take responsibility and not pass it on to others. Others have argued about timing. I wonder myself and ask, when is the right time for justice? Is there a time for justice and another for injustice?

    If the security agencies did not unveil this illegality during his screening, that is egregious folly. But that is also trying to excuse a man who has done wrong. If his screening was so contentious, that was a stronger reason why filling the form should have been conscientious.

    I have often quoted Shakespeare here that if correction lies in the hand that committed wrong, to whom shall we complain? We cannot trust Onnoghen with the law and justice anymore. He is the last stop of justice. After his seat, it is God. We don’t run a theocracy. Even theocracies are run by men, in what is called the divine rights of kings. Since we don’t want to bring God into this, Onnoghen, now irretrievably tainted, should do the right thing. The SANs should stop grandstanding and return to their billion naira cases and leave the rest of us alone.

    The man should resign and save the nation a circus.

  • SANs back INEC on inconclusive election declaration

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is threatening to take the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to court for declaring the Osun State governorship election inconclusive. It believes the election has been be won and lost. But to some senior lawyers, the PDP may be embarking on a judicial expedition. The Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) say the Supreme Court will have to reverse itself for the party to win in court, report ADEBISI ONANUGA, JOSEPH JIBUEZE and FRIDAY OTABOR.

    THE discourse triggered by the Independent National Electoral Commission’s (INEC)’s declaration of last Saturday’s Osun State governorship election as inconclusive will take a long while to end.

    There have been arguments on whether the electoral umpire erred by not declaring the final results of the keenly-contested poll in which the leading contenders ran neck-to-neck at the close of the first ballot.

    INEC ‘s Returning Officer (RO) for the election Prof. Joseph Fuwape declared the election inconclusive after Ademola Adeleke of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) candidate polled 254,698 to lead Gboyega Oyetola of the APC of the All Progressives Congress (APC) with 353 votes. Oyetola scored 254,345.

    He announced that there would be a rerun tomorrow in Orolu (due to disruptions), Ife South (due to malfunction of Electronic Card Readers), Ife North (due to over-voting) and Osogbo (where no voting took place).

    Supporters of the PDP candidate have been crying blue murder. They have been expressed the view that INEC ought to have returned Adeleke as winner having polled more votes than Oyetola.

    Relying on the electoral guidelines to back the inconclusive declaration,  Prof Fuwape, the Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Technology Akure (FUTA), said the margin between the two leading contestants must be in excess of the total registered voters where an election was cancelled.

    After the final tally of the figures at the INEC state secretariat in Osogbo in the early hours of Sunday, the CRO explained that the margin between the candidate of the APC and that of the PDP was 353 as against the 3,498 registered voters in the contentious seven polling units spread across the four local government areas of Orolu, Osogbo, Ife South and Ife North.

    The 3,498 votes were voided in Orolu Local Government Area (three units with 947 votes); Ife South Local Government Area (two units with 1, 314 votes), Ife North Local Government Area (one unit with 353 votes) and Osogbo Local Government Area (one unit with 884 votes).

    But some senior lawyers have been bringing their experiences to bear on the debate. They believe INEC was on track by declaring the election inconclusive.

    Those who bared their minds are Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs). They include:  Jibrin Okutepa, Chief Emeka Ngige and Ahmed Raji.  A law teacher, Wahab Shittu, also said the INEC’s decision was in order. Another SAN, Mike Ozekhome, however, differed.

    Ngige said INEC has the power to order a rerun, adding that had it gone ahead to declare a winner, the tribunal could have nullified the election on the basis that some voters were disenfranchised.

    He said it would have been wrong to declare a winner when voting did not take place in some places.

    Ngige said: “So, INEC did the right thing. That was what they did in Anambra in 2013. INEC conducted a rerun in areas where election did not take place. That time, nobody found anything wrong with the Returning Officer answering a phone call. He needed to consult, because it’s a team work. That’s what the Osun Returning Officer also did.

    “You can see that the PDP is preparing for the rerun but is sending a dummy to their opponents that they’re aggrieved and are going to court. They know in their heart of hearts that what INEC did is the right thing. If they win the rerun, all the complaints will vanish, and they will start praising INEC.”

    The SAN added that apart from Anambra, precedents were set in Imo and Kogi and states.

    Recalling the rerun in Imo, he said: “There was a rerun in one local government where election was disrupted by violence. Even though Rochas Okorocha had gotten the required number, INEC refused to make a declaration in favour of Okorocha.

    “Okorocha went to the Federal High Court to stop INEC from conducting the rerun, but the court refused to grant any injunction. The election took place and Okorocha won,” Ngige said.

    Raji urged parties to take a critical look at the Supreme Court decision in the case of Faleke vs INEC

    He said: “Since the PDP has said it is going to court, the best thing is to wait for the court to decide. That is the golden rule.

    “However, if they have not gone to court, and it’s still a moot point, I think the case of Faleke vs INEC should be looked into properly, where the Supreme Court would seem to have endorsed the doctrine of inconclusive election in Nigeria.”

    Okutepa pointed out that it was not the first time INEC would declare an election inconclusive. Besides, he said the electoral umpire had judicial approval from the Supreme Court.

    His words: “I was deeply involved in the case of Hon James Abiodun Faleke vs INEC and others.

    “In that case, Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), led me and other eminent senior counsel to argue that the reliance by INEC on its manual for election was unconstitutional because the Constitution has already set out the parameters on how and when a governor should be declared elected in Nigeria.

    “We argued that as at the time INEC declared the result of Kogi State election for governorship inconclusive, the late Prince Abubakar Audu and Hon Faleke had won the required spread and majority of lawful votes.

    “There was no necessity, we argued, for the rerun in the polling units whose results or elections were cancelled.

    “We further made the point that since election is to be done by those who have their permanent voters cards, reference to people on the register of voters was wrong because there was evidence that not all those whose names were on the voters register collected their PVCs.

    “The trial tribunal, the court of Appeal and the Supreme court did not agree with us. Unless we approach the Supreme Court to overrule itself, what INEC did in Osun State is within its powers to do.

    “I, therefore, suggest that politicians should get set to go and do the rescheduled rerun in those polling units to determine the winner of the election,” Okutepa said.

    Shittu agreed with Okutepa, saying the declaration of Osun election inconclusive was not new.

    He said: “There is precedence established in the case of Abiodun Faleke Vs INEC. The attempt by the Chief Wole Olanipekun to fault lNEC’s position declaring the Kogi election inconclusive was rejected by the appellate court.

    “My position is that the decision in Abiodun Faleke v INEC upholding the right of lNEC to declare elections inconclusive relying on constitutional provisions, the provisions of Electoral Act, guidelines of lNEC inclusive of its manual as quoted in the Faleke’s case remain a good law.

    “If lNEC is vested with powers to conduct elections, it should retain incidental powers to follow constitutional provisions and its own established guidelines.”

    But, Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN) disagreed. He said INEC’s announcement that the election was inconclusive “is a dangerous subversion and travesty of the electoral process, a blow to our hard earned constitutional democracy and an ominous sign of the farce to expect in 2019-subversion of the people’s will.”

    Citing several judicial authorities, including Section 179(2)(a)(b) of the 1999 Constitution, Osunbor vs Oshiomhole (2007) 18 NWLR (part 1065) 32, and Nyesom Wike v Dakuku Petersude (2016) 7 NWLR (part 1512) 574, Ozekhome said that INEC ‘s decision “is more of a political hubris than one anchored on solid laws, whether the Constitution, or Electoral Act.”

    He added: “The Returning Officer’s duty was simply to announce the winner, having declared all the results, and not to usurp the role of the Election Petition Tribunal, by altering the texture and tenor of the outcome, through its order for a rerun.

    “Recall that during the Kogi State bye elections of August 2018, over 19 000 votes were cancelled and voided. This tremendously outstripped the 12,000 votes difference between the two leading candidates.

    “Yet, in Osun State, only 3,498 votes were cancelled in Orolu, Ife South, Ife North and Osogbo local government areas. How can that affect the humongous votes garnered by Adeleke?

    “PDP and Adeleke should immediately head for the courts to seek an order of mandamus compelling INEC to declare him winner.

    “Alternatively, he can approach the Election Petition Tribunal with all the votes cast, urging it to declare him winner.”

    President of the Committee for Defence of Human Rights (CDHR), Malachy Ugwummadu, who led over 50 observers to monitor the the Osun election, believed the PDP has a right to challenge the declaration.

    He said: “On the one side is the issue of the superiority of the constitution over and above other legislations and regulations.

    “Where, therefore, INEC guidelines authorise the commission to declare inconclusive an election which otherwise ought to be a concluded election under Section 179 (2) A & B of the 1999 Constitution, that would amount to a direct breach of Section 1 (3) of the same Constitution.

    “In any case, Section 69 of the Electoral Act 2010 is simple, straight forward and suffers no ambivalence on the issue on declaration of results in an election to the office of either the president or governor once a candidate receives the highest number of votes subject to sections 133, 134 and 179 of the Constitution.

    “The other side of the debate is premised on the fact that INEC has a corresponding power pursuant to Section 153 (2) of the Constitution to issue guidelines for elections. But such guidelines certainly cannot override the express provisions of the Constitution.

    “In the circumstance, the PDP reserves the right to contest the propriety or otherwise of what has just happened.

    “Further participation in the rerun election will have its own implication having taken steps to invalidate the position of INEC.”

    Former APC chair John Odigie Oyegun said the INEC was in order to declare election inconclusive, explaining that the commission acted in line with the Electoral Act.

    Oyegun told reporters in Benin that the federal government should be commended for allowing democracy to thrive.

    He said Osun people freely expressed their will and ensured that the votes count.

    Odigie-Oyegun urged Osun voters to reward the good work of the APC tomorrow for ensuring free, fair and credible election in their state.

  • Academia sans academics?

    •ASUU and the government must partner to banish this horror and save the university system

    The news coming from the Nigerian academic front is dire — that less than four out of 10 teachers, needed to power the university system, is available. That short-fall of six, going to seven, is a national emergency. How can it be rectified, so the Nigerian university system doesn’t entirely collapse?

    That is the save our soul (SOS) message from the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

    According to Prof. Biodun Ogunyemi, ASUU president, a 2012 Federal Government-commissioned needs assessment, of the Nigerian university system, showed that all the public universities had 37, 504 lecturers. That was barely more than half of the manpower requirement, at that time.

    To show a consistent manpower shortfall, over the years, the ASUU president also quoted an earlier survey, by the Nigerian Universities Commission (NUC), the regulatory agency for the university segment, of Nigeria’s tertiary education. That came up with a 60, 000 university lecturer needs. Yet, at that time, only a third, 20, 000, were on the universities’ pay roll — 40, 000 short.

    Now, with a slew of private universities, it only shows, on teaching manpower needs alone, the Nigerian university system is in dire straits. If you add the near barren operating environment, coupled with the poor record of research, the soul of universities worldwide, due to acute shortage of funding, the sorry state of Nigerian universities comes out in bold relief.

    Yet, it is no time for umpteenth lamentation and trading of blames, which suggest the Nigerian case is beyond redemption. It is not. No situation, no matter how critical, is ever beyond redemption for a thinking mind. So, it is time to wail less and think more.

    Such critical thinking should emanate from ASUU itself. For too long, it has been a bout of finger-pointing, for the other side to conjure magic. No magic would come from anywhere. Indeed, no solution would come without a correct analysis of the problem. So, it is time for effective ASUU-government partnership.

    ASUU, with its intimate knowledge, can come out with a comprehensive breakdown. Is it that universities lack the capacity to employ because their pay cannot compete with other sectors? If that were so, the problem might not be shortage per se. That means there could be qualified hands, but the universities are too poor to hire. That is lack of funding — and in what creative ways can this challenge be scaled?

    It could also be that, even with funds available, some expertise are just not available for hire. If so, why not poach overseas? But if overseas recruitment is expensive and not feasible for now, what can be done to chart the curriculum towards producing and filling such shortfalls? ASUU can at least produce a document in that direction; and partner with the government to implement its suggestions. If both sides work hard at it, the gaps could be filled, even in record time.

    But even if ASUU does its own part, successive Nigerian governments have been legitimately accused of deafness and blindness on the education question. This attitude is not good enough.  Nor the argument, that education and training should contend with other sectors, cogent enough.  Human infrastructure must be priority. That makes all the difference between progress and backwardness.

    So, the governments (federal and state) must collaborate with ASUU to put in a solid process to correct this dire teaching manpower problem. We could start by working policies that give the current crop of students and fresh graduates incentives to choose an academic career. But here, it is moot point that such a policy can’t fly without boosting the culture of research, radically improving the academic work environment and imbuing, in the Nigerian academic, renewed pride and sense of self-worth, through renewed scholarship and welfare.

    Employing 100, 000 university teachers, in a country of 180 million people, shouldn’t really be a Herculean task, if serious thinking is put into it. That is why ASUU and the governments must partner, to save the university system.

  • NBA, Eastern Bar, SANs mourn ‘legal giant’ Aguma

    More tributes have poured in for Rivers State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice Chief Emmanuel Aguma (SAN), who died on August 10 in London. Legal Editor JOHN AUSTIN UNACHUKWU reports.

    The Judiciary is still in shock following the death of Rivers State Attorney-GeneralChief Emmanuel Aguma (SAN) on August 10 in London.

    The late Aguma was Port Harcourt Branch Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) from 2006 to 2008. He served as Secretary between 2000 and 2002.

    A member of the NBA National Executive Committee and a Legal Practitioners Disciplinary Committee (LPDC) prosecutor, he was conferred with the rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) in 2015.

    Rivers State Governor Nyesom Wike had directed that flags be flown at half-mast for two days from August 11 to mourn the late Aguma.

    The NBA, through its General Secretary Aare Isiaka Olagunju, described the late Aguma as an astute lawyer, very versatile and a complete Bar man.

    “He created a lasting impression on anyone who came across him owing to his warm reception to all. He was a key promoter of the need for discipline and sanctity within the profession.

    “It is indeed a monumental loss to Nigerian legal profession and young legal practitioners who look up to him for guidance and mentoring.

    “The President of the NBA A.B Mahmoud (SAN) expresses his heartfelt condolences to his wife Ifenyinwa, entire members of Aguma family home and abroad, members of NBA Port Harcourt branch and the people and government of Rivers State of Nigeria and entire members of the NBA on the loss of a husband, father, uncle, colleague and undoubtedly one of the brilliant minds and shinning stars of the legal profession.

    “It is our prayer that God grants his family, members of the NBA and Rivers State Government the fortitude to bear the loss,” Olagunju said.

    NBA Port Harcourt Branch, in a statement by its Chairman, Mr. Sylverster  Adaka and Secretary Mr. Tonye Sipoto-Pepple, said it received the news with utter shock and sadness.

    “We recall that before assuming office as the Attorney-General of the State and therefore the leader of the official Bar, the late learned silk served the NBA Port Harcourt Branch in various capacities. Noteworthy was his service to the Bar at different times as Branch Secretary and Chairman respectively.

    “Being one known for navigating the office of the Attorney-General and nuances of government deftly, we could not help but observe his unusual absence at recent several state functions in which the Bar was involved, the most recent being the commissioning of the newly completed National Industrial Court, Port Harcourt Division Complex and the renovation of the Court of Appeal, Port Harcourt Division Complex.

    “Surely, he will be greatly missed by his colleagues at the Branch and we pray for the peaceful repose of his soul. We wish his wife (and our colleague), children, extended family and Rivers State Government the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss,” the branch said.

    NBA Criminal Justice Reform Committee chairman Chief Arthur Obi Okafor (SAN) said he was deeply saddened by Aguma’s death.

    He expressed his condolence to the Rivers State Government, family, relatives and friends of his learned friend and brother.

    “Chief Aguma was an active and committed Bar man and a leading light of the NBA, especially the Port Harcourt Branch where he served as Secretary and later Chairman. He made invaluable contributions toward the unity and stability of our noble association.

    “His death is a painful loss to the people of Rivers State and the entire legal community. He will be fondly remembered as a brave and tireless promoter of justice, who served the society with boundless dedication, utmost humility and total commitment.

    “His noble service and contributions to the legal profession shall indeed be missed. I pray that the Almighty God will comfort the family and loved ones at this hour of grief. May his soul rest in eternal peace,” Obi Okafor said.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr Paul Usoro, sympathised with the state government, the NBA and Aguma’s family “on the sad demise of their illustrious Son”

    He said: “Aguma was a quintessential gentleman who, until his sudden demise, served his people with a great sense of responsibility, passion and competence as the State Attorney- General and Commissioner for Justice.

    “His death is certainly a colossal loss, not only to his immediate family but to the people of Rivers State, and indeed the legal profession. We would sorely miss you, Brother Silk.

    “It is my fervent prayer that God accepts Hon. Aguma in paradise and rests his soul well. May God also grant his family and relations the fortitude to bear the irreplaceable loss. Adieu Emmanuel.”

    The Eastern Bar Forum (EBF), in a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. George Igbikikuno, described the late Aguma as a sage and legal icon.

    It condoled with Governor Wike, the government and good people of Rivers State, and the eight NBA Branches in Rivers State.

    “The late Aguma was an epitome of absolute respect for rule of law, respect for human rights, strong stalwart of the EBF and a great, irreplaceable and irrepressible advocate.

    “The EBF will sorely miss him! We pray the Almighty God to grant the family, the EBF and Rivers State Government the fortitude to cope with this irreparable loss.

    “The Almighty God shall remember him in the resurrection. May the soul of Chief Emmanuel C. Aguma (SAN) rest in perfect peace,” EBF said.

    The International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA) said it received the news of Aguma’s death with a rude shock and deep sense of loss.

    “He was the beloved husband of our Country Vice-President/National President, Mrs. Inime Aguma. Until his death, he served Rivers state with an amazing sense of responsibility, passion, courage and competence.

    “He was also a philanthropist who promoted the welfare and good causes of everyone in his environment. He used his good office to ensure that the rights of women and children in Rivers state was preserved by providing free legal representation to them.

    “He also supported all the activities of FIDA Nigeria, most especially in Rivers State.

    “FIDA Nigeria mourns with his wife, our amiable CVP, his children, his mother, Rivers State government, and all his beloved ones.

    “Please stay strong and may God comfort and grant you the fortitude to bear this irreparable loss. The world has lost a beautiful soul,” FIDA Nigeria said in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary Princess F. Frank-Chukwuani.