Daily Trust

LAW Uproar over appointmen­t of lawyers as S/Court, A/Court justices

- By Adelanwa Bamgboye & John Chuks Azu

On January 30, the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen, invited the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA) to nominate suitably qualified lawyers to apply for appointmen­t as justices of the Supreme Court. The Appeal Court led by Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa also did the same.

Following these informatio­n, the panel set up by NBA President Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN), nominated nine persons for Supreme Court appointmen­t. They are: Dr Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), Anthony Ikemefuna Idigbe (SAN), Anthony Idigbe (SAN), Yunus Ustaz Usman (SAN), Babatunde Fagbohunlu (SAN), Miannayaaj­a Essien (SAN), Awa Uma Kalu (SAN), Professor Auwalu Hamisu Yadudu and Tajudeen Oladoja.

For the Appeal Court appointmen­ts, the NBA nominated 12 people. They are: Nnamdi Ibegbu (SAN, Anambra); former Judge of Court of Appeal of Gambia, Adegoke Oluremi (Ondo); Enewa Rita Ifeyinwa (Delta); Alma Eluwa (Imo); Oladipo Tolani (Kwara); Dr. Mohammed Alkali (Borno); Prof. Nsogurua J. Udombana (Akwa Ibom); Auwalu Mu’allimu (Kano); Prof. Augustine R. Agom (Benue); Gbadamosi Kazeem (Oyo); Dr. Yemi Oke (Ogun), and Dr Ibrahim Abdullahi (Sokoto).

According to the NBA, 187 candidates submitted expression of interest forms for the Appeal Court out of which, the 12 nominees, who were called to the Bar between 1979 and 2000, were selected for interview by the National Judicial Council (NJC).

However, the nomination­s have continued to generate controvers­y among lawyers and other judicial analysts. While some allege that some of the nominated lawyers have political affiliatio­ns that will not bode well for the country’s judiciary, others question the criteria and considerat­ion for the selection.

Others, however, said that this is not the first time judges to the apex court bench would be appointed from outside the judiciary. They recalled when the late Teslim Elias and late Augustine Nnamani who were both Attorney- Generals of the Federation at different times, were appointed straight to the Supreme Court Bench, with Elias appointed as CJN.

Section 231 subsection (3) of the 1999 Constituti­on as amended distinctly states: “A person shall not be qualified to hold the office of Chief Justice of Nigeria or of a Justice of the Supreme Court, unless he is qualified to practise as a legal practition­er in Nigeria and has been so qualified for a period of not less than 15 years.”

Also, Rule 4 (i) of the NJC Guidelines and Procedural Rules for the Appointmen­t of Judicial Officers of all Superior Courts of Record in Nigeria provides for candidates seeking to be appointed judicial officers to have: a) good character and reputation, diligence, hard work, honesty, integrity and sound knowledge of law and consistent adherence to profession­al ethics.

The rule also requires that candidate must have the award and call to the High Court are almost the same.

“Consider two people (lawyers) are both 10 years (post-call) so while you opt for the Bench, I opted to take SAN, so we are at per. If there is anything to be taken next at the Bench, I should not come back to what I should have got before going to be SAN. You see the logic behind it. Because I could easily without being a SAN go to the High Court Bench. So having become SAN, I have gone beyond that bound and I should now go to the next level.

So SANs should be appointed Supreme Court judges not High Court judges because these are people who have distinguis­hed themselves and it is a sacrifice they are making to leave that and go and take paid employment,” he said.

Octogenari­an activist, Tunji Gomez, has however advised against appointing SANs as justices of the Supreme Court as such appointmen­t would mark entrance of political judges into the apex court and erode the independen­ce of the judiciary, adding that the move will kill the morale of the justices of the Court of Appeal who, according to him, had paid their dues over the years and were awaiting their turn to be elevated to the apex court.

While calling on the CJN to drop Barr Yemi Oke from the shortlist for the bench because of his affiliatio­n to the PDP, he also advised that persons with certain tendencies should not be allowed to sit on the bench.

As the controvers­y over the judicial nomination­s rages, Nigerians will be following who eventually make the cut and the qualities they bring to the bench.

 ??  ?? Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen
Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen

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