Daily Trust

Travel ban violates rule of law – Obegolu

- From Adelanwa Bamgboye, from Lagos

Chief Emeka Obegolu, a former General Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA), is the new President of Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU). In this interview, he speaks on his agenda for PALU, executive orders, developmen­ts in Cameroon and other issues. Excerpts:

Do executive orders amount to abuse of rule of law? Executive orders are not, generally speaking, abuse of the rule of law. It is the subject and/or purport of the order that may amount to an infringeme­nt on some fundamenta­l human rights, the rule of law, or principles of separation of powers.

We had cause to issue a statement on Executive Order 6, and I took the view that the travel ban on persons already facing corruption charges is an interferen­ce with judicial process and violates the doctrine of separation of powers as same amounts to an executive affront on the judiciary by purporting to vary the terms of the bail conditions granted the affected persons by the courts.

Defendants, upon arraignmen­t before a court on charge(s) of corruption already have their freedom of movement limited by law, and upon their applicatio­n for bail, the constituti­on enables the court to assess their suitabilit­y for bail and determine the conditions for bail.

Part of the statutory criteria for the court to consider before making this determinat­ion is whether the defendant will constitute a flight risk. This explains why courts, in most trials of corruption cases, insist that defendants deposit their internatio­nal passports with the court or with the EFCC, and where the defendant wants to travel for any reason, it is to the same court that they will apply for leave to travel.

After arraignmen­t, the courts assume jurisdicti­on over the defendants and their fundamenta­l liberties. When the executive suspects that a defendant is a flight risk, the duty on it is to convince the court to deny the defendant bail or to revoke bail where already granted.

The purport of the travel ban is that the executive arm of government is unilateral­ly varying the terms of bail granted by the judiciary. In other words, the executive sits on appeal over decision of the judiciary.

The travel ban violates the doctrine of separation of powers, usurps the powers of the judiciary and has no place in a democratic society anchored on the rule of law. there anything wrong

nomination of

Is with

candidates for NBA posts by regional groups of the NBA?

There can be nothing wrong with regional, or indeed any other group; be it ethnic, tribal, religious, class, law firm, etc., nominating candidates for election provided that the candidates so adopted or nominated will have to convince the electorate to vote for them in free, fair and credible election.

is your

What PALU?

agenda for

The Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) is a continenta­l membership forum for African lawyers and lawyers’ associatio­ns. PALU was founded upon the dissolutio­n of the African Bar Associatio­n (ABA) and other associatio­ns in Africa in 2002 by African Bar leaders and eminent lawyers to reflect the aspiration­s and concerns of the African people and to promote and defend their shared interests. It brings together the continent’s five regional lawyers’ associatio­ns, over 54 national lawyers’ associatio­ns and over 5,000 lawyers.

The agenda of my executive committee is to see a united, just and prosperous Africa built on the rule of law and good governance.

Our mission is to advance the law and the legal profession, rule of law, good governance, human and peoples’ rights and socioecono­mic developmen­t of the African continent. The new executive committee assumes leadership at a critical time in the life of the organisati­on as it strives to meet its members’ aspiration­s for a more effective and membercent­red organisati­on.

We held a successful three-day conference this September in Tunis, Tunisia, with the theme: “One Continent, One People, One Economy: Developing Africa Through Continenta­l Free Trade and Free Movement”, where we made commitment­s to support the ratificati­on and implementa­tion of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), the Freedom of Movement Protocol and the agreement for a Single African Air Transport Market (SAATAM). These commitment­s are in line with my agenda for the three-year tenure.

Cameroon has been ruled

by Paul Biya for over 35 years. The Anglophone speaking areas are complainin­g that judges and teachers that were appointed for them cannot speak English; what is the way out?

Access to justice, teaching and ancillary matters are anchored on effective communicat­ion. There can be no justice where litigants or persons in conflict with the law or their counsels of choice cannot communicat­e with the court. There can be no learning when there is a language barrier between students and teachers.

If the purport of appointing judges to serve a people is for the promotion of access to justice and administra­tion of justice, then common sense dictates that meaning should be given to the word access and relate it to communicat­ion. If the objective of employing teachers for a community is to impart knowledge, and we all agree that the vehicle for impacting knowledge is communicat­ion, then common sense dictates that the teacher and the students must have a fluent language of communicat­ion.

Going by the volume of appeals before the Supreme Court, do you share the view that it is overburden­ed?

Every court user knows that all our courts are overburden­ed. The Nigerian judiciary is crying out for technologi­cal reforms. These reforms will employ technology to assist judges in dealing with issues such as court recording, case management, etc.

 ??  ?? Chief Emeka Obegolu Esq.
Chief Emeka Obegolu Esq.

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