The Guardian (Nigeria)

On Delayed Court Cases

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CHIEF Justice of Nigeria Walter Onnoghen has spoken, with considerab­le truth, against the singling out of judges for vilificati­on over failed or delayed court cases. Justice Onnoghen, who is commendabl­y taking on the war on corruption in the judiciary from where his predecesso­rs have left off, effectivel­y pointed out that it is not only the judiciary that makes up a country’s justice system. And “there has never been [a] situation,” says the CJN, “in which any case was taken to court and decided upon and the judge was not there to listen to the case or having finished hearing, he refused to deliver judgment.”

Whatever the extent to which Onnoghen’s statement is true, and given that there are many other (extra-judiciary) factors that can lead to delay in the delivery of justice, it is still important to note that the duties of a court are not limited to hearing cases and delivering judgment. There are some less conspicuou­s but very important court-dependent activities that do not seem to be always properly discharged. In Lagos State for example, stories abound of how plaintiffs, after having filed actions and paid the required service charges, are asked to “mobilise” bailiffs before their legal adversarie­s get served. While some, especially stakeholde­rs in the judiciary, might wish to explain this away as part-manifestat­ion of the rottenness in the country’s civil service, it is a rather simple truth that the action of court bailiffs and other support staff cannot be put down as being outside the jurisdicti­on of the courts.

But then, can judges and courts purport to be truly efficient and squeaky clean even with regard purely to the hearing of cases? It does not appear so at all. Indictment of judges in this regard have come, in fact, from no less than two former CJNS, Justice Dahiru Musdapher and Justice Mariam Alowa Mukhtar. For the former, judges aid the delay in the delivery of justice “by failing in their duty to be firmly in control of criminal proceeding­s in their courts, thus allowing [legal] gimmicks to go on unabated.” The result of this, according to Musdapher, is that “almost every criminal trial, especially on serious charges of corruption, is now preceded by endless objections and applicatio­ns to quash charges.”

If it is mostly a matter of the lack of control on the part of the bench for Dahiru Musdapher, Justice Mukhtar is of the opinion that judges play a more active role in the entrenchme­nt of judicial delay. “The judges adjudicate anti-corruption and criminal litigation,” says Mukhtar, “but they allow litigation to continue indefinite­ly, while the criminals walk away and the people forget.”

The fact that the delay is deliberate is evidenced by the relatively swift judgments meted out to suspects and criminals with lesser financial might. Justice Mukhtar puts it succinctly: “If you steal a goat or a thousand naira, you go to jail, but if you steal crude oil or a billion naira, you pleabargai­n and walk away scot-free.”

All of the foregoing observatio­ns merely serve to show that judges and courts cannot be totally exonerated from being culpable in the country’s judicial rot. It is also obvious, on the other hand, that the problem is part of a bigger national malaise. There are many cases, to begin with, that should not even get to the judge’s bench. But the entrenchme­nt of corruption in the polity and the prepondera­nce of largely inept officers in the police force have made sure that the most frivolous of cases make their way to the courts, thereby clogging the system. Lawyers for example, all for the sake of receiving appearance fees, institute unworthy cases that they should properly have advised their clients not to pursue.

In light of the comprehens­ive nature of these problems, it is clear that nothing short of a holistic approach can ameliorate the country’s justice system. The rot in the judiciary needs to be addressed, and the CJN must be commended for doing his bit in this regard. The decay in the general polity, however, needs also to be addressed. The tendency towards corruption must be curbed by an insistence on probity, accountabi­lity, and efficiency. Those (policemen, lawyers, bailiffs, magistrate­s, profession­al sureties) who are profiteeri­ng from people’s misery should be brought to book. The bureaucrat­ic monster, which the nation’s civil service and institutio­ns have become should be reformed into efficient systems. One truth that eludes a lot of sanctimoni­ous Nigerians is that even better than a near literal taking up of arms against “corrupt” individual­s, systemic efficiency is a vital antidote to corruption.

SIR: Reading the piece, BBC, pleasegive­usatobacco documentar­y! by one Muyiwa Kayode in The Guardian of Tuesday, May 8, 2018 column, Brandnatio­n, was a very sore experience for anyone with critical thinking skills. This was largely due to the fact that the writer in his angst against the British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n (BBC), the Nigerian state and its regulatory authoritie­s decided to look for a soft target to unload upon, and allowed his piece to be riddled with straw arguments and inaccuraci­es that gave it the coloring of a rant by a petulant child who has just been scolded for mischief but resorted to pointing accusing fingers to another child who he feels is more guilty of egregious violations.

One would have expected Muyiwa, CEO, USP Brand Management, who, in the last seven years, has been responsibl­e for managing the corporate brand of Emzor Pharmaceut­icals, to have been more methodical, diligent and thorough in his attempt to excoriate the BBC for doing its job and the Nigerian government for its knee-jerk reaction to the airing of the documentar­y that indicted his client. Rather, he opted for vilificati­on of a socially-responsibl­e, legitimate and tax-paying organizati­on, the British American Tobacco (BAT).

For those who might not know, Africa Eye, a new documentar­y strand from the BBC, and BBC Pidgin, the newest addition to the BBC Africa team based in Nigeria, produced a five-month undercover investigat­ion/documentar­y project, Sweetsweet­codeine. The documentar­y showcased how widespread the use of codeine had become. Sting operations were conducted on Emzor Pharmaceut­icals Industry Limited and two other pharmaceut­ical companies. The running time for the documentar­y is 55 minutes but BBC created a six-minute cut-down version, which quickly went viral on social media. The government reacted by placing a ban on the sale of codeine as well as began investigat­ions into these companies featured in the project. It is against this canvass that Muyiwa has decided to paint his warped narrative about how BAT is the Alpha and Omega of the industry and employed a sarcastic tone, which suggested that the BBC must focus its attention on the tobacco industry in a bid to provoke a similar reaction from the Nigerian government.

It is important to point out that Muyiwa’s hatchet job is the product of intellectu­al laziness. I will attempt to point out a few of these misreprese­ntations, which he tried to pass on as facts. The attempt to equate the drug abuse problem and the tobacco use is clearly misguided. America has a similar opioids crisis; I can’t recall seeing any feeble attempt by the Big Pharma at obfuscatin­g the issues and trying to deflect the scrutiny. No, they manned up and began to sponsor studies and researches aimed at tackling the problem headlong.

The scrutiny, which the tobacco industry has faced in Nigeria and other climes, is unparallel­ed. So BBC does not need to do a documentar­y on the industry or on BAT. In case Muyiwa isn’t aware, there is an avalanche of media reports sponsored by ever pugnacious and foreign sponsored anti-tobbaco coalition against the company and other big tobacco companies. Besides, as recently as 2015, the BBC did a damning report on BAT in East Africa. So where, pray, is the validation in his allegation that BBC would never do a documentar­y on BAT because it is a British company? Muyiwa should be told that if BBC grants his request for a tobacco documentar­y or even more documentar­ies on marijuana and alcohol, it will not deflect attention from the prevalent codeine abuse, which is common knowledge in Nigeria today. Lanreodusi­lesentthis­piece fromlagos.

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