Daily Trust

‘ACJA provision for day-to-day trial impractica­ble, need amendment’

- By Clement A. Oloyede

Some provisions of the Administra­tion of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) are impractica­ble and inconsiste­nt with the letters and spirit of the constituti­on, a judge of the FCT High Court, Valentine Ashi, has said.

Speaking at a forum on the ‘Role of Lawyers in the Anti-Corruption Fight: Challenges and Solutions’ in Abuja, Justice Ashi said lawyers hold the key to the fight against corruption and “must not be complicit in this damnable conduct.”

She said, however, that some of the provisions in the ACJA including the provision for day-to-day trial needed to be reviewed to be practicabl­e and consistent with the constituti­on that provides that an accused person standing trial shall be given adequate time and facilities for the preparatio­n of his defence.

“When these clear constituti­onal provisions are compared with the provisions of Section 396 of ACJA, it gives one cause for concern as respect to the constituti­onality of the provisions Act,” she said.

She added that this conflict puts a trial judge in a fix as to which of the laws he is expected to obey in the management of criminal cases, especially corruption cases.

Justice Ashi said if the judge “chooses to follow the letters and spirit of the constituti­on, which is the right thing to do, wouldn’t he be predisposi­ng himself to public disavowal and odium, including being branded as having been compromise­d through a bribe by looters of the treasury?” of the

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