LAWYERS MOVE AGAINST APPOINTMENT RECOMMENDATION TO BUHARI BY NJC-PREMIUM TIMES
Some
Nigerian lawyers have asked President Muhammadu Buhari to reject 33 candidates
recommended to him by the National Judicial Council (NJC) for appointment as
High Court judges of the Federal Capital Territory.
The
lawyers, under the aegis of Open Bar Initiative, in a petition to Mr Buhari
said 17 of the NJC’s nominees were not just “unqualified”, but that they were
able to make the NJC’s list because of their “connection” or “family
affiliation” with top officials of the nation’s judiciary.
The
petition dated May 6, 2020, is signed by Silas Onu and Chidi Odinkalu, the
conveners of the Open Bar Initiative and five other members of the group.
The
Open Bar Initiative, a group of Nigerian lawyers, says it is dedicated to
defending the integrity of the legal profession in the country.
The
group said in a press statement that it has forwarded the petition to the
Senate President, Ahmed Lawan, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Femi Gbajabiamila.
Among
the nominees said to be unqualified for appointment as a judge in the petition
is Hafsat Abba-Aliyu, 42, the daughter of Justice Uwani Abba-Aji of the
Nigerian Supreme Court.
Another
is Njideka Nwosu-Iheme, 36, the daughter of Justice Mary Odili of the Supreme
Court.
There
is also Fatima Abubakar Aliyu, 35, said to be the daughter of the immediate
past president of the Court of Appeal, Justice Bulkachuwa. And Mimi
Katsina-Alu, 46, the daughter of late Justice Katsina-Alu, a former Chief
Justice of Nigeria, and Ibrahim Mohammed, 40, the son of a former grand-khadi
of the FCT.
There
is also Nwabulu Chineze, 57, said to be a sister to the presiding Justice of
the Court of Appeal, Akure, and Enenche Eleojo, 46, a personal assistant to the
chief judge of the FCT High Court.
There
is one that is outstandingly interesting. Olufola Olufolashade, according to
the petition, was not even among the shortlisted candidates. The name was said
to have been “smuggled” into the list by an unnamed top Supreme Court justice.
The
petition said the selection process violated the NJC’s laid down rules and
procedures and the High Court of the FCT (number of judges) Act, 2003.
It said “the selection process is fraught with judicial insider
dealing which risk turning the judiciary into an instrument for advancing
personal interest and patronage”.
The Open Bar Initiative said in its press statement, “The
suggestion that judicial service in Nigeria is an inheritance transmitted from
parents to children is not supported by the Constitution or any other
instrument under the Nigerian laws.”
It said the NJC’s selection process was manifestly an abuse of
the high constitutional responsibility invested in those who must nominate
judges for appointment.
The result of this abuse, the group further said, is that good
candidates have been arbitrarily excluded from consideration in favour of
unqualified candidates whose only claim to the job is the name or the job of
their parents, husbands, uncles or other judicial insiders.
“These
are not just unqualified nominees; they are bad nominees because only bad
people will want to become judges through smuggling,” said Mr Odinkalu. “They
will make bad judges. We should resist them and their sponsors.”
Soji
Oye, the spokesperson for the NJC, did not respond to calls and a text message
seeking comments for this story.
Below is the full list of 33 persons recommended by the NJC to
President Buhari for appointment as judges of the FCT.
1. Muhammad Mustapha Adamu
2. Madugu Mohammed Alhaji
3. Josephine Obanor Enobie
4. Kayode Agunloye
5. Enenche Eleojo
6. Nwabulu Ngozika Chineze
7.
Abubakar Babashani
8. Aminu Muhammad Abdullahi
9. Nwecheonwu Chinyere Elewe
10. Ibrahim Mohammed
11.
Sadia Mu’azu Mayana
12. Mimi Anne Katsina Alu-Apena
13. Kanyip Rosemary Indinya
14. Aliyu Yunusa Shafa
15. Mohammed Zubairu
16. Binta Dogonyaro
17. Christopher Opeyemi Oba
18. Adeyemi Ajayi Jadesola
19. Abubakar Husseini Musa
20. Adelaja Oluyemisi Ikeolupo
21. Mohammed Idris Sani
22. Frances Erhuvwu Messiri
23. Fatima Abubakar Aliyu
24. Jude Ogor Onwuegbuzie
25. Hamza Mu’azu
26. Edward Ajenu E. Okpe
27. Agashieze Cyprian Odinaka
28. Fashola Akeem Adebowale
29. Aliyu Halilu Ahmed
30. Hassan Maryam Aliyu
31. Hafsat Lawan Abba-Aliyu
32. Olufola Olufolashade Oshin
33. Njideka Nwosu-Iheme
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