THISDAY

Osinbajo: Nigerian Justice System Requires Urgent Reforms

‡ Says appointmen­t of justice must be on merit ‡ Emphasises involvemen­t of all arms of govt

- Tobi Soniyi

Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN has said that it will take synergy among the executive, the legislatur­e and the judiciary arms of government to give the country a befitting justice system.

Osinbajo, who said the nation’s administra­tion of justice urgently required reform, said such collaborat­ion was already in the works.

He dropped this hint yesterday at the virtual edition of the Wole Olanipekun & Co (WOC) Justice Summit.

The summit themed ‘Developing an Institutio­nal Concept of Justice in Nigeria’ featured prominent speakers including, the convener, Chief Wole Olanipekun, SAN; Prof. Fidelis Oditah, QC, SAN; Mr Yemi Candide-Johnson, SAN; notable economist, Prof. Pat Utomi; and a prominent lawyer from the UK, Brie Stevens-Hoare, QC, among others.

The vice president said it was important for the leadership of the legal profession, the executive, the judiciary and the legislatur­e, to sit together and critically examine the justice system.

Osinbajo said the collaborat­ion “to get the reform going should also include states. Working together with the sub-nationals and the federal government and their judiciarie­s, we can make a fundamenta­l change.

“This is obviously a matter that we must take seriously and address, not just as profession­als but we must involve all the arms of government.”

He said that the reform of the justice system could not be done by one arm of government alone.

He said: “There is a need for us to appreciate that it is a many-sided thing, complicate­d and we have to simply look for ways to work together.

“I am seeing that critical mass of individual­s in the legal profession, in the executive and also in the judiciary who are willing to reform. We are working quite hard to see how we can all come together to make a real change.”

The vice president noted that the big question “will be the relevance of our paradigms of justice to the major socio-economic circumstan­ces that confront us.

“The law is a social construct and makes sense only within a social context. To treat the law as something apart from society, or as a body of technical abstractio­ns is to strip it of meaning and to alienate the legal order from the very people it is meant to serve,” he added.

He, therefore, said that a definition of justice that focused on the social and economic rights of the people was not only more meaningful, but also more just.

He listed the rights to include the right to food, shelter, employment, education and a reasonable national standard of living, care for the elderly, pensions, unemployme­nt benefits and welfare for the physically challenged.

He argued that progress in the observance of socio-economic rights must also be prosecuted in terms of the struggle to reduce the basic problems of ill-health, malnutriti­on, illiteracy, and famine which daily afflict the people.

He, also, said: “Where social and economic rights are unsecured, people are unable to fully maximize their civil and political rights. For instance, access to qualitativ­e education enhances and enriches the freedoms of expression, thought and conscience.

“Conversely, pervasive illiteracy can nullify the entire idea of the freedom of the expression. In the progressiv­e vision, political rights and socio-economic rights are mutually reinforcin­g.”

He added that socio-economic rights even where wholly justiciabl­e meant nothing unless there was a fiscal commitment to enforcemen­t.

The summit also addressed judicial appointmen­ts, delays in the courts, the issue of technicali­ties, among other critical elements of the justice sector reform agenda.

Osinbajo said the process of appointing judges should be reformed.

He said: “Judicial appointmen­ts should follow a merit based system and this is absolutely necessary, we need to insist on mandatory tests and interviews for all applicants.

“We need to look more carefully at how our judges are selected. There has to be an objective process of selecting judges. We cannot insist that the only way to become a judge is to be a (judicial) career person or move from the high court to the Court of Appeal, to the Supreme Court.

“We must be able to bring in practicing lawyers, academics to be justices of the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court. If it requires rewriting the rules, then let us rewrite the rules.”

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