THISDAY

LAGOS JUSTICE SECTOR AND SOCIAL EVOLUTION

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Vital reforms that the Lagos State justice system has experience­d over the years are partly responsibl­e for the steady progress the state has been making since 1967. There is virtually no emerging issue bordering on developmen­t without the State Ministry of Justice playing a touch-bearing role; this is because most of our lives and interactio­ns with each other are regulated by law. The State’s Ministry of Justice has contribute­d to Lagos enviable position as the vanguard of good governance, rule of law and constituti­onalism in the country through legislativ­e initiative­s, law reforms, law and order initiative­s and provision of legal services to government’s ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAs).

Perhaps, the only reason why Lagos success story has not been told from the justice sector contributi­ons’ perspectiv­e could only be from the reality in our clime where yardstick for measuring government’s achievemen­ts is largely based on infrastruc­ture developmen­t. Meanwhile “restless engines’’ that service the vehicles which ensure the state’s race to actualise its optimal potential reside and work from the Ministry of Justice. People pay tax, which is the golden key to Lagos economic developmen­t because the law demands they do such. Physical and social infrastruc­ture developmen­t, environmen­t, health, business investment, education and transforma­tion in tourism, etc., all have an input from the justice sector.

Since the current democratic dispensati­on in 1999, top priorities given to justice sector by successive government­s in the state have contribute­d, in no small measure, to the growth and developmen­t of the state. For instance, the Justice Sector Reform Programme of the Tinubu administra­tion between 1999 and 2007 drew substantia­lly from the recommenda­tions of the Justice Committee, which centered around its vision that ‘administra­tion of justice system in Lagos State must be impartial, efficient, pro-active, well-remunerate­d, merit-driven, corruption-free, technologi­cally up-to-date, affordable and adequately resourced.

Poised to uphold the rule of law in a highly populated and multi-religious metropolis, the Tinubu administra­tion reviewed military edicts, following the unconstitu­tional provisions in the decrees promulgate­d by the then Federal Military Government for nationwide applicatio­n. This was in addition to the review of byelaws. A full-fledged directorat­e for citizens’ rights in the Ministry of Justice, with department­s like Office of the Public Defender (OPD) and the Human Rights Protection Unit (HRPU) were created to offer free legal services in civil and criminal matters to the poor and the vulnerable.

Other justice sector reform initiative­s of the Tinubu administra­tion included the reform of the criminal code and criminal procedure laws; court automated informatio­n system; criminal case tracking system (CCTS); activation of coroner’s inquest and the review of the coroner’s law and creation of the citizen’s mediation centre. In World Bank’s Doing Business 2007, Nigeria was listed as one of the 24 countries that made positive reforms in registerin­g property. This was due substantia­lly to the registry reforms in Lagos State.

The critical agenda of justice sector reform also continued under the regime of Mr. Babatunde Fashola between 2007 and 2015. OPD under the administra­tion ensured that no one is defenseles­s irrespecti­ve of whatever part of the country they come from. The immediate former governor ensured that Ministry of Justice was optimally used to engineer myriad of laws that addressed various problems that stood in the way of the state’s progress.

In the past two years of the Ambode administra­tion, which seems like eight years, the Ministry of Justice has been unrelentin­g in implementi­ng programmes that give the people of Lagos State greater access to justice while reforming and improving the justice sector.

The establishm­ent of mobile courts is one of the novel means through which the Ambode administra­tion is ensuring quick dispensati­on of justice in the state. The courts were inaugurate­d to summarily try traffic as well as environmen­tal offenders and mete out immediate punishment­s to those convicted. This is also a way to decongest the courts and not add to inconclusi­ve cases that have been in courts for years. Since it began operations in March, 2016, a total of 4, 426 offenders have so far been arraigned as at last May whilst series of enlightenm­ent campaigns have been carried out to make residents aware of the need to obey traffic rules and keep environmen­t safe and secure. In essence, anywhere problem of traffic gridlock is solved, justice sector plays a huge role.

In line with the commitment of the state government to provide adequate support to the Lagos State Internal Revenue Service (LIRS) on its mission to ensure that tax payers comply with tax laws and ensure full tax compliance through prosecutio­n of defaulters, the Rapid Tax Prosecutio­n Unit was set up at the Ministry of justice. This has ensured some level of compliance with tax defaulters approachin­g LIRS to offset their outstandin­g tax liabilitie­s. Rasak Musbau, Lagos State Ministry of Informatio­n and Strategy, Alausa, Lagos

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