The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Judge faces sack over ‘bereavemen­t’ bribe

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ABUJA. — A senior Nigerian judge falsely claimed he had suffered a bereavemen­t to get cash from litigants and lawyers appearing in his court, the country’s main judicial body said yesterday.

James Agbadu-Fishim “received various sums of money from litigants and lawyers that had cases before him and some influentia­l Nigerians under the false pretence that he was bereaved or that there was a delay in the payment of his salary”, the National Judicial Council said in a statement.

The judge sits in the National Industrial Court (NJC), but has now been “recommende­d for removal by dismissal from office”, it added. The amount of money involved was not specified.

A similar recommenda­tion was made against another judge, Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia, after it was establishe­d that government officials, among others, had paid money into her bank accounts.

Again, no figure was specified. Ofili-Ajumogobia is a federal high court judge and is facing a separate case over corruption allegation­s.

Both have been suspended with immediate effect, pending a decision on their future by President Muhammadu Buhari, the NJC said.

Buhari came to power in 2015 on a pledge to clean up Nigerian public life, which has been tainted with rampant corruption and impunity for decades.

In Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index 2017, Nigeria was viewed as the 27th most corrupt country in the world.

It has said an independen­t, profession­al and well-resourced judiciary is a bulwark against graft. — AFP.

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