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A new dawn in Judiciary: Edwin Clark celebrates Kekere-Ekun for Upholding Integrity

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Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun and Chief Edwin Clark

Elder statesman and legal icon Chief (Dr.) Edwin Kiagbodo Clark has extolled Hon. Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun for her exemplary leadership as the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN). 

He described her appointment as a transformative moment for Nigeria’s judiciary, celebrating her commitment to justice and integrity.
In an open letter dated November 24, 2024, Chief Clark, a 97-year-old veteran of the legal profession and former Minister of Information, reflected on Justice Kekere-Ekun’s illustrious career, including her impactful tenure in the Court of Appeal, Kano. 
He praised her decisive efforts to combat corruption and restore faith in Nigeria’s legal system, a mission he said has earned her the trust of Nigerians.
In his letter, Clark revisited the controversial ousting of former CJN Walter Onnoghen in 2019, calling it a dark chapter in Nigeria’s judicial history. 
He condemned the actions of former President Muhammadu Buhari and his Attorney General, Abubakar Malami, for undermining judicial independence, and criticized the National Judicial Council’s inaction during the episode. Despite the challenges, Clark expressed satisfaction that Justice Onnoghen’s dignity has been restored.
He urged Justice Kekere-Ekun to continue her reform efforts, emphasizing that a credible judiciary is critical to Nigeria’s stability and progress. 
Clark also called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to ensure that the rule of law prevails and that no individual enjoys impunity, regardless of status.
In closing, Clark expressed his prayers for the CJN, applauding her courage and foresight in addressing the judiciary’s challenges.
He reaffirmed his belief in her ability to lead the judiciary toward a brighter and more accountable future.
The letter Reads in Part,
“It is a heart-filled with joy I write to congratulate you again on your well-deserved appointment as the Chief Justice of Nigeria.  This no doubt, is as a result of your total commitment, dedication and loyalty to your country.  
“I pray the Almighty God to continue to guide, protect, and give you the courage, wisdom and determination to carry out your new assignment in order to justify the confidence reposed in you by Mr. President and the people of Nigeria.  
“However, I hope my letter will not come to the Hon. Chief Justice as a surprise but if it does, I respectfully apologize for any embarrassment or inconveniences it may cause you.
“Again, I wish to respectfully introduce myself to your Lordship.  I am Chief (Dr.) Edwin Kiagbodo Clark OFR, CON and 97 years old.  I have been a member of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) since 1965 with over 60 years’ post-call. 
“Hitherto to the Nigerian Bar Association, the NBA was not operating democratically even in the two important branches, Lagos and Warri. The most senior lawyer was the chairman of the NBA and that was why in Warri Justice Ayo Irikefe who later became Chief Justice of Nigeria and Sir Webber Egbe QC SAN were the leaders of the Warri Bar Association until it was decided in 1966 that the NBA should be democratized and members should be elected to fill the various positions. 

“I was the youngest member of the Warri Bar Association and I was elected as the first Secretary of the Nigerian Bar Association, Warri under the Chairmanship of late Justice Rufus Ogbobine and late Dr. Mudiaga Odje (SAN) until 1967, and at the same time the Lagos NBA was also electing their officers.  
“I am a member of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple where I was called to the English Bar in 1965. I have spent most of my time in the service of our great country starting from 1967 as a member of the Midwest Consultative Assembly under Gen David Akporode Ejoor, first military Governor of Midwest Region – where his government was attacked by the Biafran forces. 
“At the end of the war, I was appointed Commissioner for Education by Col Samuel Ogbemudia and during that period, I held the position for Commissioner of Finance and Establishment between 1968 and 1974 until I was later appointed by General Yakubu Gowon in December, 1974 as Minister of Information, replacing Chief Anthony Enahoro.  
“I was a Senator in the 2nd Republic; 1st Pro-Chancellor of University of Benin and also 1st Pro-Chancellor of Federal University of Technology, Minna.
“I have today decided to extol the Chief Justice of Nigeria for resolving into finality the humiliation meted to the brilliant former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen. The almighty God will definitely reward you when the day come at any time.
“This is my second open letter I am addressing to you, our new Chief Justice of Nigeria and praising you for your appointment as CJN, after you took over from your predecessor in office, Justice Olukayode Ariwoola who was taking us deep into unknown destination.

“I remember being involved in Kano State politics, where I saw you, Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun as one of the judges in the Court of Appeal, Kano State. 

“You were one of those judges who did everything to clear corruption from the body politiy of Kano State at a time when the newly elected Governor of Kano State, Sen Ibrahim Shekarau was in office. 
“In my open letter to the former Governor of Kano State, Sen Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, I referred to your name as one of the judges in the Court of Appeal fighting corruption without fear or favour and this was what you said, “it is trite that the exercise of discretion must be done judiciary and judiciously taking into account all the circumstances of the particular case and balancing the interest of all the parties in other to determine whether it is just and equitable to grant the order sought”.
“The next time I heard of you was when you were unanimously nominated by the National Judicial Commission (NJC) without any hesitation as the new CJN. Nigeria hueved the sigh of relief. Many Nigerians since then have congratulated you for starting the serious and genuine clean-up of the Nigerian Judiciary including all its associates because you believe it has been your home for years. “You must clean it up and Nigerians are behind you and they are praying for you everyday because without an efficient and incorruptible judiciary, Nigeria will end up as a failed country.
“As for the former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen in his own case, ‘a Daniel has come to judgement’. I knew he was not fairly treated; he was oppressed and humiliated by President Muhammadu Buhari and his Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami SAN. At this juncture, let me say this, President Tinubu’s government must not allow sacred cows to exist in Nigeria no matter whose ox is gored. 
“There is no one who is above the law in his own country. The Prime Minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu and the Russian President Vladimir Putin are today being looked for, for trial but they are on the run. 
“A president of a country is just one of the ordinary members in the country, but once elected, enjoys immunity. There is nowhere therefore in the constitution or any legal document where it is stated that immunity is for life.
“Today in Nigeria, we have corrupt Presidents and some of them today are accusing their successors of corruption without looking back at what they themselves stole while in office but no one dares to touch them. “Perhaps, it is an irony of fate for the former CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen who was one of the Supreme Court Justices whose judgment favored President Muhammadu Buhari in his presidential election case in the Supreme Court in 2011. 

“While the other four (4) Justices led by the CJN and strongly supported by Justice Niki Tobi voted in favor of President Jonathan.
“President Buhari in compensating the justices whose judgement favored him in 2011, he sent one of the Supreme Court justices on retirement to London as the High Commissioner of Nigeria in London, a high-profile assignment. 

“The second Justice who got similar appointment was my good friend when we were together in the British council hostel called Hans Crescent, Knight Bridge, London  in 1961. Many Nigerians were shocked that a man of such an age and ill health was allowed for personal aggrandizement. 

“The story was different in the case of the third Supreme Court Justice, who voted for President Buhari; he allowed him to rise to the post of CJN but he saw that, that was not good enough for him because if Justice Onnoghen was to remain the CJN, the mess and mischievous things they wanted to carryout during the Presidential election in 2019, Justice Onnoghen will not accept it and the best thing was to remove him and this was the secret plan between President Buhari and his Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami.

“The show of shame that took place at the time was so disgraceful, callous, unjust and so barbaric that instead of the President of Nigeria who swore to an oath of office that he would maintain security and welfare of Nigerians chose to stoop so low in order to humiliate a fellow Nigerian because he wanted to be president of Nigeria at all cost for a second term. It is a shame which Nigeria has just recovered from.

“Is it not disgraceful and unpatriotic to invite such person to council of state meetings, public functions or any government functions, pretending these were good Head of State and President of Nigeria? No.

“I was much concerned about the injustice that was being executed by President Buhari with impunity. To humiliate a whole Chief Justice of Nigeria, another tier of the government, must be condemned and infact brought to trial in the law court for this unpatriotic act.

“President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday, 25th January, 2019 suspended Justice Walter Onnoghen, the erstwhile Chief Justice of Nigeria and swore in an Acting CJN, Mr. Ibrahim Tanko Mohammed without the involvement of the NJC. 

“Justice Tanko Muhammed immediately nominated and screened several Judges to the High Court as proposed members of the Judicial Tribunals to try all the cases after the Presidential election in 2019. Unfortunately, the National Judicial Commission did not challenge the action of Mr. President, while Justice Walter Onnoghen was shamefully humiliated out of the service. 
“Many of us in the legal profession did not believe that this matter had judiciously ended because the 1999 constitution made it very clear that it is the joint approval of the NJC, the President and the Senate that can appoint and suspend the Chief Justice of Nigeria, and hence, for record purpose, I chose to make my remarks in my autobiography, ‘BRUTALLY FRANK’ in chapter 22 page 523.
“The President, during the swearing-in of the acting CJN, said he was served an order of the Code of Conduct Tribunal calling for the suspension of Onnoghen from office pending the final determination of his false assets declaration case before the tribunal.
“He had the guts and temerity to conclude his formal address to Nigerians by saying, “Fellow Nigerians, we can only stand a chance to win the fight against corruption, and position our dear nation for accelerated development when we stand together to contend against it”.
“The Code of Conduct Tribunal convicted Justice Walter Onnoghen of charges of breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers and ordered his removal from office as the Chief Justice of Nigeria.
“The three-man tribunal led by Danladi Umar also ordered Onnoghen’s removal as the Chairman of both the National Judicial Council and the Federal Judicial Service Commission.
“It banned him from holding any public office for a period of 10 years. Convicting the erstwhile CJN on all the six counts, the tribunal chairman, who read the judgment, said, “Having regard to section 23(2) of the Code of Conduct Tribunal and Bureau Act, the defendant has clearly contravened the Code of Conduct for Public Officers and he is hereby convicted.”
“I was so disturbed, I became restless to the extent that I mobilized youths to demonstrate at the court and I remembered amongst the lawyers that came to my house was Hon Ikenga Ugochinyere, then a young lawyer but the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) shamefully was nowhere to be found. 
“The Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) who form the inner Bar behaved worse than the outer Bar. The President of the Nigerian Bar Association Mr Paul Usoro SAN, an indigene of Akwa Ibom State, a state that was part of Cross River State – he and the then CJN were members of the Bar in Cross River State but unfortunately, he hasn’t got the guts and courage to lead a vibrant Bar Association. 

“I called him and confronted him for not speaking up. I asked him that ‘is it because he was facing a criminal charge at the High Court in Uyo that he sacrificed the overall interest of the NBA and Nigerians?

“A coalition of civil society groups described the trial and conviction of Onnoghen as an assault on the judiciary by the executive. 

“The groups comprising the Coalition in Defence of Nigerian Democracy and Constitution, Concerned Nigerians, Free Nigeria Movement and Mad Connect, said in a statement on Thursday, 18th April, 2019 that the judiciary had never been assaulted as it was under the Buhari administration.
“I am therefore very happy to have read that both the judiciary, particularly the Court of Appeal and the former CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen have come to an amicable settlement and I wholeheartedly congratulate him for passing out the ordeal he was subjected to by the former President and I pray God will protect him and for him to always have the courage to fight for his right because Nigeria belongs to all of us and we are all equal citizens.”

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Judiciary

NJC Suspends Rivers, Anambra High Court Judges

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***Recommends Compulsory Retirement for Two Heads of Court Over Misconduct

The National Judicial Council (NJC) has suspended two High Court judges, Justice G. C. Aguma of Rivers State and Justice A. O. Nwabunike of Anambra State, from performing judicial functions for one year without pay, following investigations over misconduct.
Both judges will also be placed on a two-year watch list after the suspension period.

This decision was reached at the NJC’s 107th meeting, presided over by the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Hon. Justice Kudirat Kekere-Ekun, on November 13 and 14, 2024. Alongside these suspensions, the NJC sanctioned three other judicial officers and recommended the compulsory retirement of the Chief Judge of Imo State, Hon. Justice T. E. Chukwuemeka Chikeka, and the Grand Kadi of Yobe State, Hon. Kadi Babagana Mahdi, over age falsification.

According to the NJC, Justice Aguma aided a litigant inappropriately by transferring a garnishee proceeding from Abuja to Rivers State for enforcement. Similarly, Justice Nwabunike was found to have breached judicial conduct rules by issuing ex parte orders without proper procedures.

The NJC’s report indicated that Justice Chikeka and Grand Kadi Mahdi presented multiple birth dates to extend their service beyond the legal retirement age. The council has ordered both judges to refund all excess salaries received after their actual retirement dates.

The NJC also issued warnings to two other judges, Justice I. A. Jamil and Chief Judge J. J. Majebi of Kogi State, regarding their handling of sensitive cases. Petitions against several other judges were dismissed for lack of merit.

In addition, the council recommended the appointment of 36 judicial officers across several states and pledged to report legal practitioners filing unfounded petitions against judges to disciplinary committees for action. The appointed judges are expected to be sworn in by their respective state governors.

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Judiciary

Tinubu Orders Immediate Release of Minors Detained Over #EndBadGovernance Protests

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In response to public outcry over the arrest and detention of minors involved in the recent #EndBadGovernance protests, President Bola Tinubu has directed the immediate release of all detained children.
The directive, announced on Monday by Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, follows the arraignment of 72 minors on charges of treason related to the protests, which took place across various states in August.

The protests, held in states including Kaduna, Abuja, Gombe, Jos, Katsina, and Kano, saw widespread demonstrations against high living costs and food scarcity.
The arrest of minors sparked widespread condemnation, as many appeared visibly malnourished and even collapsed during their appearance at the Federal High Court in Abuja.
Judge Obiora Egwuatu subsequently granted bail to the minors, setting it at N10 million for each of the defendants.

President Tinubu has also mandated the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction to oversee the welfare and reintegration of the minors with their families.
The President’s orders include the establishment of a committee, led by the humanitarian affairs ministry, to investigate the circumstances surrounding the arrests, detention conditions, and eventual release of the minors.

The public backlash intensified last Friday after reports of the prolonged detention of the minors emerged, prompting the Attorney General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi, to intervene. F
agbemi immediately instructed the police to transfer the case file to his office and assigned the matter to the Director of Public Prosecutions of the Federation for further review.

This decisive action by President Tinubu has been widely seen as a move to address concerns around justice, due process, and the protection of children’s rights in the face of Nigeria’s ongoing socio-economic challenges.

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Judiciary

Senator Sani Musa Calls for Investigation into Detention, Prosecution of Underage Protesters

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Chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance, Senator Sani Musa, has called on Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, to investigate the detention and prosecution of underage protesters involved in the recent #EndBadGovernance demonstrations.
The minors, allegedly in poor health, were arraigned on Friday before Justice Obiora Egwuatu at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

Justice Egwuatu granted bail to 72 defendants, including the minors, setting bail at N10 million per defendant, with two sureties required. The conditions stipulate that one surety must be a civil servant of grade level 15 or higher with a verifiable address within the court’s jurisdiction, and the other must be a parent of the defendant.

Senator Musa, representing Niger East Senatorial District, condemned the treatment of the minors, describing it as “inhumane and unjust.” He also called for the National Judicial Council (NJC) to review the judge’s decision, questioning the appropriateness of detaining minors under such circumstances.

In a statement, Senator Musa said, “I strongly condemn the unjust detention of minors following the #EndBadGovernance protests. It is deeply troubling that, despite the hardships these children have endured, they are being punished rather than shown compassion and understanding.”

He further criticized the judiciary’s approach to the minors, emphasizing that “such actions contradict the principles of justice and fairness.” Musa urged an immediate investigation into the handling of the minors to ensure accountability and protect their rights.

During the court proceedings, the frail and malnourished children were visibly struggling, with some collapsing from exhaustion. Four minors had to be removed from the courtroom due to their critical health conditions.

Senator Musa affirmed his commitment to justice, stating, “This issue must be addressed urgently, and I will continue to stand with my constituents and all Nigerians in the pursuit of justice and good governance.”

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