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Buhari (r) with Saraki (m) and Tinubu |
The leadership of International Society for Civil Liberties
& the Rule of Law has watched with total dismay and shock as it concerns
sustained attempts by leading political figures in Nigeria and their team of
lawyers to steadily pervert the course of justice using judicial gambling and
legal technicalities. Of particular concern to us are alleged false assets
declarations and operation of domiciliary bank accounts while in gubernatorial
office involving the duo of Senators Ahmed Bola Tinubu and Abubakar Bukola
Saraki; of which they are standing trial before the Code of Conduct Tribunal in
Abuja the Capital of Nigeria.
For the records, the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) is a
creation of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), created by Section 153 (1) (a) of
the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended. The CCT is
also a creation of Section 315 of the Constitution, having been created by an
Act of the National Assembly of Nigeria and recognized by the Constitution. The
CCT is one of constitutionally recognized and statutorily created special
courts in Nigeria. Other constitutionally created special courts are the
Elections Petitions Tribunals, the Customary Court of Appeal and the Sharia
Court of Appeal. There are also statutorily created courts like the National
Industrial Court and the judicial panels of enquiry. Other quasi judicial
bodies are the National Human Rights Commission, etc.
These special judicial bodies are deemed in the eyes of the
law to share same status and operational modes with regular high courts
(Federal and State High Courts). In other words, their decisions cannot be
entertained in regular high courts (State and Federal High Courts) except in
the Court of Appeal and except as case may be or in rare circumstances, in
matters of procedures. Specifically, Section 12 of the Code of Conduct for
Public Officers as contained in Part 1 of the Fifth Schedule to the
Constitution expressly forbids or ousts the jurisdiction of the regular high
courts in respect of adjudicating on matters or violations of the provisions of
the Code of Conduct.
In recent case of AHMED v AHMED (2013) LPELR-21143, the
Supreme of Court of Nigeria decided that the Federal High Court; (likewise
State High Court) has no supervisory jurisdiction over the Code of Conduct
Tribunal. For instance, an appeal filled at the Court of Appeal by Senator
Bukola Saraki is meant to set aside the contempt order made by the CCT against
him (a judicial decision); whereas the that of the Federal High Court borders
on prosecutorial procedures before the CCT as adopted by the legal team of the
Federal Government or absence of the Attorney General of the Federation in the
instant case.
The informed and lettered explanation above follows sustained
attempts by leading politicians accused of being in conflict with the
provisions of the Code of Conduct Act of 2004 to belittle and rubbish the
relevance and potency of the Code of Conduct Tribunal in Nigeria; by labeling
it a court of inferior records or a jurisdictionally castrated court. We see
this beyond the letters of the law and their manipulative skillfulness.
It is also a clear case of resorting to judicial gambling
and technicalities with intent to pervert the course of justice and rule of law
in Nigeria. Our main concern is that the duo of Senators Saraki and Tinubu
should not have ignored the summons of the CCT at the first place; particularly
on moral and popular grounds. This is more so when the CCT is empowered
statutorily to adjudicate on matters under which they were judicially summoned.
In all these, the duo of Senators Saraki and Tibunu has portrayed themselves
before Nigerians as lawless and “guilty as accused or perceived”.
It is no longer news that the Nigerian Judiciary has uprooted
its hallowed foundation laid on three-way traffic of justice (justice to the
accused, justice to the victim and justice to the society). Today, judicial
abominations abound in its hitherto hallowed confines. Perpetual injunctions
are now granted so recklessly restraining the investigative securitization
agencies from carrying out their constitutional duties of criminal
investigations. Even court judgments have been entered in this country against
the armed forces of Nigeria restraining them from performing their
constitutional securitization duties.
Elections Petitions judicial assignments in the country have
also broken the world record as the easiest and shortest way to acquire illicit
wealth in the country’s judiciary. Lobbying to be appointed into its membership
is very high and alarming and hotel rooms and higher education campus cultists
are now used as couriers or middle persons to deliver the huge bribe sums
usually trimmed and enveloped using leading hard currencies. In all these,
members of the outer Bar or counsels to the litigants are inescapable
accomplices. No matter how clear or literal judicial matters particularly
electoral matters are, prospectus winners must bribe to win; otherwise
prospectus losers who can bribe become instant winners courtesy of judicial
technicalities; for in law, there is always an exception in every issue.
Specifically, Senator Ahmed Bola Tinubu has severally gone
to court and obtained its favour with intent to intimidate, frustrate and cow
concerned citizens, who acted on behalf of themselves and other silent majority
from asking questions over stupendous wealth associated with his name and
ownership. The litigants or applicants, on behalf of other Nigerians, are not
saying that Senator Tinubu cannot acquire wealth, but how those wealth were
acquired considering his gubernatorial and hitherto career background. Former
Governor Peter Odili had reportedly sought and obtained perpetual injunction
from being criminally investigated to ascertain whether his wealth is in
commensuration with that of a successful medical doctor and a gubernatorial
pensioner. Former Governor Rotimi Amechi of Rivers State has refused to appear
before the Rivers State Government constituted panel of enquiry to give account
of his gubernatorial stewardship. Other instances abound.
As if these were not enough, here comes the case of Senate
President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, who resorted to judicial gambling and
technicalities to evade the Code of Conduct Tribunal’s summons; thereby
perverting the course of justice and rule of law. Also Senator Ahmed Bola
Tinubu has continued to evade the CCT proceedings by resorting to judicial
technicalities as well. While Senator Saraki and his team of lawyers raised the
issue of procedural blunder (absence of AGF as prosecuting entity), Senator
Tinubu and his team of lawyers also laid their refusal to appear before the CCT
in Abuja on jurisdictional incompetence.
The Federal Government legal team is also questioning the
jurisdiction of the Federal High Court in interfering in the proceedings of the
CCT. In all, the fact remains that the duo of Senators Tinubu and Saraki would
have lost nothing if they appeared before the CCT. Following the foregoing,
therefore, the rule of law is endangered in Nigeria. The principle of equality
before the law no longer holds water in the country. There are now law for the
rich (crooks and saints) and law for the poor. The pre Magna Carta imperial
period in England, during which the royal class was above the law and the loyal
class was under the law, has arrived in Nigeria.
On the other hand, the case of Retired Col Sambo Dasuki
(former NSA) is very outstanding and a
positive case in point. Despite obvious persecutorial elements found in his
ordeal with the DSS as presidentially packaged, he still submitted himself to
the hands of the DSS to be arraigned before a Federal High Court on
unsubstantiated and more punitive (on conviction) charge of illegal possession
of firearms and the Federal High Court in her wisdom granted him bail on self
recognition. Yet he never sought a court order stopping his arraignment. It
gladdened and still gladdens our heart to note this.
Conversely, rather than taking a recourse to morality, due
process and rule of law, the duo of Senators Bukola Saraki and Ahmed Bola
Tinubu went for rule of individualism and judicial gambling. While elements of
persecution may not be ruled out in Senator Saraki’s ordeal, but two wrongs can
never make a right. In other words, he ought to have submitted himself before
the CCT and cleared himself of the accusations. He can on the process raise his
objections including issue of procedural competence before or outside the CCT
as case may be. He also has right of appeal even to the Supreme Court if he
feels the CCT is biased and compromised. Senator Tinubu’s own refusal to appear
before the CCT in Abuja is also condemnable and a total affront to the rule of
law and the 1999 Constitution. Court summons globally are strictly rested on
the principle of obey before complaining.
The political implication or consequence of the foregoing is
its possibility of plunging Nigeria into anarchy and lawlessness. Also the
manner in which the contempt order or bench warrant of arrest was applied and obtained by the Federal
Ministry of Justice against the Senate President is presidentially reckless and
witch-hunting. It has also vindicated our earlier position that absence of the
Federal Executive Council including the Attorney General of the Federation
literally meant that President Muhammadu Buhari has been running an
administration without Government since 29th May 2015; slating to approximately
120 days; which is unheard off in the
history of democracy in Nigeria.
Signed:
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Board Chairman
International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law
+2348174090052 (office)
Obianuju Igboeli (Miss), Esq., Head, Civil Liberties & Rule of Law
Program
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