THISDAY

NJC: Anti-corruption Courts Deliver 324 Judgments in Six Months

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Alex Elumanh

The National Judicial Council, NJC, said yesterday that a total of 324 judgements were delivered by the Special Courts that were designated in 2017 to try graft and financial crime cases within the past six months.

Giving its progress report on some of the on-going highprofil­e corruption cases in the country, the legal body, stated in a statement signed by its Director of Informatio­n, Mr. Soji Oye, observed that 12 cases were struck out on various grounds, while 62 pending cases were reserved for judgement.

NJC stated that the breakdown was contained in a report card that was submitted by the Corruption and Financial Crime Cases Trials Monitoring Committee (COTRIMCO).

The Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN0, Justice Walter Onnoghen, who is also Chairman of the NJC, had last year, constitute­d the COTRIMCO with a mandate to tour the six geo-political zones of the country to dig out reasons why trial of some high-profile cases have been held up for years.

NJC’s finding shows that over 30 of such pending cases involved former governors, ministers and lawmakers who allegedly looted public funds running into billions of Naira.

Two former governors of Taraba and Plateau states, Reverend Jolly Nyame and Joshua Dariye, were recently convicted and sentenced to 14 years imprisonme­nt by a Federal High Court, sitting in Abuja for stealing and misappropr­iation of public funds.

The NJC, said its corruption trial monitoring committee which is headed by a retired Justice of the Supreme Court, Justice Suleiman Galadima, had in the last six months, crisscross­ed the country to monitor and ensure compliance with the directive of the CJN to ensure speedy dispensati­on of such cases.

He added that before the formation of the Committee, the Chief Justice, during a Special Session of the Supreme Court to mark the commenceme­nt of the 2017/2018 Legal Year, directed all the Heads of Court in the country to designate Special Courts solely for the purpose of expediting hearing on such pending cases.

The CJN further ordered that a list of such cases should be compiled and handed over to the COTRIMCO, saying upon receipt of the lists, the committee divided itself into three sub-committees to cater for the easy monitoring and evaluation of the said cases in the different zones of the country as follows: Zone A: Abuja and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Zone B: Northern Zone and Zone C: Southern Zone.

Giving a breakdown of how the courts in each zone carried out their duties, the NJC said: “Of the total number of 324 judgements delivered, the Supreme Court, in Zone A, delivered 52 judgements and reserved seven cases for judgement from the list of 125 cases pending before it, leaving an outstandin­g number of 73 cases.

According to NJC, “The Court of Appeal, Abuja Division, within the period, also disposed of 74 appeals and reserved 11 for judgement from the list of 137 cases in its docket.

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