28th
January, 2019
PRESS
RELEASE:
DON’T INSTITUTIONALISE CORRUPTION: MURIC TELLS
NBA
Members of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) today resolved to embark on a two-day warning boycott of courts in protest against the suspension of the former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Samuel Nkanu Onnoghen. The ex-CJN was suspended from office last week by President Muhammadu Buhari on allegations bordering on graft. However, NBA rejected the suspension claiming it did not follow due process.
The two-day warning boycott will begin tomorrow Tuesday, 29th January, 2019 and will continue on Wednesday, 30th January, 2019. The NBA announced its decision at the end of its National Executive Council (NEC) meeting held in Abuja. Reacting to the boycott, the Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) advised the NBA not to institutionalise corruption. The Islamic human rights organization told members of the legal profession to avoid taking sides with a man who has already admitted that he committed an offence.
“This boycott is sheer hocus pocus. It
is poor Nigerians who will suffer from the NBA’s boycott. They have allowed
their emotions to run away with them. The problem with our lawyers is that
they see every problem, including political, as a legal problem. They do not
look at other angles or think of other possibilities and solutions. They tend
to corroborate an African proverb which says, ‘If the only tool you have is a
hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.’
“We are talking about a man who sat at the helm of our judiciary here. This man has admitted that he ‘forgot’ more than a billion naira in his bank account. That, to us, is preposterous. It is alarming. Unfortunately those who know better because they are ‘learned’ are the same people staging a boycott to protect the billionaire Justice.
“Why can’t it happen here if it can happen elsewhere. Just last year, on June 20, 2018 to be precise, a judge of the Supreme Court in West Virginia, United States of America, Justice Allen Loughry who was accused of using his office for personal gains was suspended. His offence involved $363,000 worth of office furniture, having expensive office furniture taken to his private house and using government vehicle and gas card for personal use.
“That
happened in a sane society They have lawyers there too and his colleagues did
not identify with the wrongdoer. So we need to ask ourselves if we truly want
to sanitise this society. Perhaps it was this kind of sentiment that made
Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, to conclude that, ‘To fight corruption in a corrupt
system, you don’t follow due process, you follow the necessary process.”
Vladimir Putin
“We
are tempted to ask, ‘Where is the human face in the practice of law in Nigeria?
We know the thief. He confesses to us. But we are the same people who will
tutor the thief to change his confessional statement. We tell him to claim it
was made under duress. We are the same people who appear for the Evans and the
Oyenusis yet we go to the mosque on Fridays and attend church on Sundays. Do
you think God is blind?
“MURIC appeals to the NBA to put
humanity on the front burner in matters like this. NBA should not wish away
Justice Onnoghen’s offence. It should be Nigeria first. No single person is
bigger than Nigeria. Crimes like the one the ex-CJN is accused of are what
turned this country into a wild jungle and NBA must join other patriotic
citizens who are presently working day and night to return Nigeria to the
comity of sane communities.
“We
further appeal that the NBA creates an enabling environment for ordinary
Nigerians to have access to justice. We should not be seen protecting the rich
and powerful all the time, particularly a powerful man who has already admitted
that he is the owner of incriminatingly humongous bank accounts when poor Nigerians
are sentenced to long terms in prison just for stealing one tuber of yam. Ayn
Rand has a strong message here, ‘When the law no longer
protects you from the corrupt, but protects the corrupt from you, you know your
nation is doomed’.
“It was the late sage, Chief Obafemi
Awolowo, who said, ‘Any wealth accumulated on a selfish basis, at the expense
of the state in defiance of social justice helps to create a disorganized
society in which everybody will eat everybody, and no one person can be safe.’ Do
the respected members of the NBA want to support the creation of such a chaotic
society?
“MURIC
has taken the ex-CJN to the court of public opinion and he lost woefully.
Nigerians are flabbergasted that the ex-CJN has N1,131,684,554.00 (one billion,
one hundred and thirty-one million, six hundred and eighty-four thousand, five
hundred and fifty-four naira) in his personal accounts and still counting. It
is appalling, repugnant and nauseating.
“We
advise NBA not to pursue vested interest. Nigerians see the Onnoghen affair as
a struggle between those who fight corruption, those who despise it, those who
embrace it and those who benefit from it. If NBA will not stand up to be
counted among those in the first group, it must not be seen to identify with
the third and fourth camps. The second rank is a safer ground for the purpose
of posterity.
“We appeal
to the NBA not to resume its boycott of courts soon after the two days. This is
because it is poor Nigerians who suffer each time there is a boycott of courts.
The legal profession is sine qua non
to the dispensation of justice anywhere in the world and that is why lawyers
are respected by all.
“Resumption
of boycott is unnecessary because Justice Onnoghen himself in a separate case
in 2013 acknowledged the special powers of the CCT. In the case of AHMED V
AHMED & ORS (2013) LPELR – 21143 (SC) delivered on 12th July,
2013, the ex-CJN held that, ‘The CCT has exclusive jurisdiction to deal with
all violations contravening any of the provisions of the Code of Conduct Bureau’
and that ‘the provisions expressly ousted the powers of ordinary regular courts
in respect of such violations’. He further concluded that ‘Any allegation that
a public officer has committed a breach of or has not complied with the provisions
of this Code shall be made to the Code of Conduct Bureau’.
“As
we rise from this session, we remind honourable members of the NBA that law is
a noble profession and a good number of our lawyers, both senior and junior
ones, are men and women of integrity. This profession is for the bold, the
assertive and the man of decency and candour. We advise NBA to think outside
the box. Onnoghen appears to have dragged its name in the mud. What NBA should
do to reclaim its good name is to step aside and allow the ex-CJN to defend
himself at the tribunal.
Professor Ishaq
Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights
Concern (MURIC)
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