Yesterday when the news broke that the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) was going to be arraigned before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (stills feels surreal typing this) on allegations of non and under declaration of assets, I resisted the temptation to jump on the bandwagon.
I have reflected for the past 24 hours (and have gone through the full circle of grief) and I feel it is the right time to join the legions of Nigerians who have condemned the latest antics of the Buhari administration.
This is going to be a REALLY LONG thread. I may lose friends for this, but this is no longer the time for mincing or sugar coating words. The gloves are off. You are either in favour of Nigeria’s progress or against. And for the cowardly fencists, the Lord will soon spew you out.
For some, this latest antic of President Buhari and his cohorts is another manifestation of the President disdain for the rule of law while some have argued that he is only seeking to quench his long thirst for retribution against the judiciary. I agree with both.
I also completely agree that this action of the President is not isolated, but today I join the likes of @DemolaRewaju who have argued (and rightly too IMO)that it is nothing but a desperate albeit ill-fated last kick by a drowning administration. I will just add my perspective.
In October 2016, the DSS invaded the homes of some Justices of the Supreme Court & Court of Appeal and some Judges of the Federal High Court. Some of us condemned it and some condoned and even praised it. It should have been obvious to us the monster we created.
You may recall that on the fateful night the house of Walter Onnoghen CJN was also surrounded by the DSS. For inexplicable reasons, DSS later withdrew. I was of the opinion then, and I still do, that the DSS originally planned to arrest him that night but plans later changed.
To understand President Buhari’s disdain for the rule of law you need to look back at his military antecedents and his frustration that things have not completely gone his way this time. How dare you question his decision to lock up Dasuki and El-Zakzaky and throw away the keys?
To understand his long thirst for retribution against the judiciary, you only need to look back at his experience with the judicial system on the three he contested for President and lost. In the few interviews he has conducted, he still speaks about it with so much venom.
In the same way one can’t help but feel embarrassed when he repeatedly talks about two Judges that delivered a dissenting judgment in his favour (which he cluelessly calls as minority report) and both of whom he has since ‘rewarded’ with Ambassadorship positions to the UK and US.
My only problem is that Nigerian Bar Association is speaking up now because CJN & to some extent the NBA President are now the victims. I am having none of it. I still believe the NBA leadership between 2015-2018 should burry their heads in shame. That's a story for another day.
In August 2015, PMB while addressing lawyers at the annual NBA Conf directed lawyers not to represent those charged with looting the treasury. For inexplicable reasons, no one called him out, or schooled him that Rule No 1 for lawyers is that we do not generally reject briefs.
In August 2018, he even went a notch higher by informing the same gathering that national security trumps the rule of law. This is someone surrounded by SANS (including the highly cerebral ones, the now senile one, and the one who may not even be deserving of the rank).
None of his legions of adviers or his speech writer advised him that every person is presumed innocent until proven guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction. No one informed him that it is unlawful to disobey lawful orders of court, even when such orders are against you.
Not long ago, I tweeted that the judiciary faced fewer instances of disobedience of court orders under President Obasanjo and the NBA organised protests and boycott of courts. Yet, under this administration, not for once has such been suggested let alone implemented.
The usual response of President Buhari’s lackeys and supporters is that no one is above the law and so the CJN should face the system and prove his innocence. I am proud of the fact that I resisted the strong urge to employ an expletive laden response. Get thee behind me.
No one is saying the CJN is above the law, but he represents a scared institution of the State, one of the few that has not been completely eroded by this scavenging administration that is hell bent of destroying all institutions of state and return us to the state of nature.
Before I proceed to the substance of this attack on the office of the CJN and the judicial arm, and predict how it would ultimately end up, let us consider the modus operandi of this administration. And you be the judge of whether they are deserving of benefit of the doubt.
The Chairman of the CCT who has shamelessly constituted himself a 'Man Friday' for this government is the subject of a criminal charge instituted by the Spokesperson of the Buhari Campaign, Festus Keyamo SAN on behalf of the EFCC. What has become of that trial?
My former governor, Orji Uzor Kalu who is currently a candidate for the Senate and a member of the Buhari Campaign Council is freely walking the streets of Umuahia and Igbere despite his bail having been revoked by the Federal High Court Lagos.
The former Governor of Akwa Ibom who is also the subject of criminal investigations by the EFCC was sanctified by the President after he dumped the PDP and defected. Same for the current APC National Chairman Adams Oshiomhole and the former PDP National Chairman, Adamu Muazu.
This is not forgetting the Babachir Lawal's of this world, the Abba Kyari's, the former DSS Boss Lawal Daura, none of whom the prosecuting agencies have the balls to draft a charge and/or arraign 1 year, 2 years after being indicted. The list is endless.
It is an insult to our sensibiities that the CCT is purporting to act on a petition received by the CCB on 09/01/19. 24 hrs later the CCT drafted the charge and they are now ready to arraign the CJN on 14/01/19. If you don’t see anything wrong with this, then I can’t help you.
This is the same CCT that wasted the precious time and money of tax payers to embark on a fruitless effort to try the Senate President, Bukola Saraki only to suffer brutal losses up to the Supreme Court.
This is the same CCT and under the same Chairman that set Senator Bola Tinubu free on grounds that he was not confronted with the allegation before it was filed, one must then ask whether the CJN was confronted with the petition to respond before they rushed to file.
It has also emerged that the petition was written by a former aide to President Buhari. As livid as I am, I can still bring myself wonder why and how a Govt can be so vacuous that they cannot even execute a proper hatchet job that would not unravel in a matter of hours.
The most important question to ask is why decide to further heat up the polity with a few weeks to the general election? What does the present government benefit so much from Aso Rock that they are willing to do anything to remain in office, even if it means burning this country?
For those who will tell us that President Buhari is not aware of what is going on, not only is this disingenous, it does not speak well of a President to suggest that he does not know what is happening in the arm of govt which he heads, in any case the buck stops at his table.
Was the President not advised by his army of SANs that there is a subsisting CA judgment that any misconduct attributed to a judicial officer must first be reported to, and handled by, the NJC and it is only after then that the prosecuting agencies of the FGN can proceed?
For those suggesting the NJC is not the appropriate body to investigate since it is headed by the CJN. This is intellectual laziness or dishonesty, or both. Nothing stops the CJN from recusing himself & allowing the NJC investigate the allegation. This is how a democracy works.
I am not a lawyer in the case. And even if the CCT was to qualify as a court of competent jurisdiction in this instance, the case against the CJN has not commenced and so I am perfectly entitled my views and even predict how I expect the case to play out starting from Monday.
I expect that over this weekend, the team counsel has prepared an Objection challenging the competence of the CCT from trying the CJN by reason e.g. that a condition precedent has not been satisfied. And the failure to fulfil a condition precedent robs a court of jurisdiction.
Secondly, I expect that the defence team will object to the CJN being arraigned before the CCT on Monday because the Tribunal lacks jurisdiction. This is different from an objection of the ground of an imperfect or erroneous charge which Sec 221 of the ACJA prohibits.
It is also different from a challenge as to validity of a charge of a charge which Sec 396(2) ACJA stipulates can only be taken after arraignment and a ruling delivered at the time of the delivery of judgment.
Apart from insisting that the CJN should not enter the dock, the defence team must also insist that the preliminary objection (again different from that contemplated under Secs 221 & 396(2) of the ACJA) be taken and determined first before arraignment and trial.
In the unlikely event that the CCT Chairman is ready with a [bench] ruling, I also expect the defence team to be ready with a Notice of Appeal which must be filed on the same day. Thankfully the SC has granted a stay of proceeding of a CCT trial despite Sec 306 ACJA precedent.
There is a popular saying that where there is pervasive unlawfulness, it becomes unlawful to be lawful. We need to wake up and realise that we are dealing with a cohort that does not play by the rules and will do anything to cling to power.
Since we all want to be mad, let me see how that trial will start on Monday.
At this time we have to recall the campaign that some of us embarked on before the CJN's name was finally sent to the NJC by the then Ag Pres. Could this be a ploy to remove him through the back door and complete President Buhari’s blatant intention to install his kinsman as CJN?
Could this be another antic to deflate attention from the Inspector General of Police who President Buhari has illegally perpetrated in office beyond the stipulated retirement age, and without even an attempt to explain to Nigerians?
Or is it that it has dawned on President Buhari and his cohorts that he cannot win a free and fair election in in February and they need an amenable CJN to perfect their rigging strategy? Or is the end game to keep the current CJN on his toes to do their bidding?
In the end I agree that the actions of the Buhari administration in attacking the CJN less than two months to the pivotal general elections can compared to the actions of someone whom the gods have allowed to go mad in order to kill him.
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Sometime in 2009 while serving as a Judge of the SUG High Court of Abia State University, Uturu I was appointed into a judicial panel of inquiry headed by my learned brother as he then was, Hon. Justice Ifeanyi Idika to investigate an act of alleged sabotage by Motorcycle Riders.
The background to this was that for years, Motorcycle riders in ABSU historically increased their fares during examination period to take advantage of students. So the SUG President devised a cerebral means to tackle this. He brought in competition by buying KEKE NAPEP tricycles.
I can't remember the exact figures but the tricycles were operating at half the regular fares that Motorcycles were going for. Something had to give. One morning the students woke up to the news that the KEKE NAPEPs had been grounded. How? Someone poured salts in their engines.
On my way to work today, while catching up on my myriads of unread WhatsApp messages, I decided to scan through the compilation of newspaper headlines and one caught my attention, "Senate mulls life imprisonment for kidnappers." I got confused 😕 What's the Senate's business?
I was confused because the last time I was taught Constitutional Law in school, I knew it was not within the legislative competence of the National Assembly to make law on crimes (except in specific cases) except for the FCT. So I decided to read at least 3 versions of the story.
It turns out that there is indeed a bill before the Senate sponsored by Senator Ibikunle Amosun which has already scaled 2nd reading. The bill seeks to introduce stiffer punishments & punitive measures to combat and prevent kidnapping or abduction in Nigeria.
That it is contained in a law (not the Constitution) does not make it valid. The 1999 CFRN is supreme and its provisions have binding effect on all bodies and persons. Where any law is inconsistent with the CFRN, such law shall be null and void to the extent of the inconsistency.
The Supreme Court has made clear the essence & purpose of ex parte applications and the circumstances under which interim orders can be granted. Indeed in the old line of cases (from the golden era) led by Kotoye v CBN, the Court explained the transient nature of interim orders:
In 1995, this is what the Supreme Court said per Wali JSC in Seven-Up Bottling Company Limited v. Abiola. I also did not see any ambiguity until now.
On Tuesday 8 August 2000 the then Senate President (my personal fav) the Late Dr Chuba Wilberforce Okadigbo was removed from office on allegations of corruption/misuse of public funds. That same day I first learnt of the extraordinary exchange between him and Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe.
We all remember Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe (Zik) as the 1st indigenous Governor General of Nigeria & the 1st President, who was removed from office in the infamous coup of January 1966. What is less known in this history deprived era is that Zik subsequently tried in vain to be President.
At the end of the 2nd Republic Presidential elections in 1983 which was contested by Shehu Shagari (NPN), Awolowo(UPN), Zik(NPP), Aminu Kano(PRP), Ibrahim Waziri(GNPP) and Tunji Braithwaite(NAP), the FEDECO Chairman, Ovie Whiskey announced Shagari as the winner of the election.
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria who knows, or reasonably ought to know, that ex parte orders have limited life span, typically 7-14 days, asked a court to make an order freezing the accounts of Nigerian citizens for 120 days! And a judge who is deemed to know better granted 90 days!
Apologies, the learned Silk actually asked for the accounts to be frozen for 180 days!
Yesterday I was talking about how Nigeria's political class learns something, from say the UK, only to turn it into something unrecognisable, typically an instrument of subjugation. And this applies is virtually all aspects of our daily lives. One of such is the rank of SAN.
THERE IS STILL HOPE FOR NIGERIA AFTER ALL: THE #ENDSARS PROTESTS AND WHAT IT (PERSONALLY) MEANS TO ME.
A TRUE LIFE STORY THAT I HOPE SOME CAN RELATE WITH. AS I TYPE THIS ALL THE EMOTIONS OF THE PAST 24 MONTHS ARE COMING BACK.
A THREAD!
On 24 January 2020 while aboard the Emirates Airways Flight EK30 from London Heathrow Airport to Dubai, United Arab Emirates from where I was to take a connecting flight to Lagos, I found myself lost in thought, which was predominantly one of melancholy.
What was the source of my mood? The feeling or realisation that I might have failed. I had just graduated from King's College London where I bagged a Master's Degree in International Business Law and I was returning to my home country.