The National
Judicial Council (NJC) on Friday fired back to the Nigerian Bar Association
(NBA)’s call for the suspension of judicial officers who are being investigated
over allegations of corruption by the
Department of State Service (DSS).
NBA president
Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN), While speaking at the Court of Appeal Abuja, on
Thursday at the valedictory court session in honour of Justice Sotonye
Deton-West, who recently retired, having attained the age of 70, had called on
the embattled judges to step down from their positions pending when their names
were cleared of all the allegations levelled against them.
But in a
swift reaction to the NBA’s recent position on the matter, the NJC, in a
statement by its acting Director of Information, Soji Oye, described the call
as “unacceptable.”
The
disciplinary body of all judicial officers in the country noted that it was not
unaware of the views expressed by members of the public and lawyers on the
issue, but said that the NJC could only recommend the appointment and dismissal
of any erring judicial official to either the president or the governor of a
state as prescribed by the law establishing the body.
The NJC
admitted that its mandate is limited by the provisions in the 1999 Constitution
that established it.
The
statement reads in part: “NJC is constrained to inform the general public that
its constitutional mandate is to process and recommend to the executive at the
federal and state levels, the appointment, and/or the removal of judicial
officers from office, including exercise of its disciplinary control of
suspending and/or warning judicial officers; after complying with due process
and the rule of law.
“Since the
creation of NJC vide the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,
as amended, it has exercised its powers and performed its functions within its
constitutional limitations.
“Thus, the
current position of the NBA vis-à-vis its recommendation that the affected
judicial officers involved in the on-going investigation of judicial officers
by the DSS, be requested to proceed on compulsory leave until the conclusion of
all disciplinary proceedings against them, is unacceptable to the NJC; as it
breaches the 2014 Revised Judicial Discipline Regulations formulated by NJC,
pursuant to Section 160 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria, as amended.
“It is to be
reiterated also that by the provisions of Section 158 of the 1999 Constitution,
as amended, NJC shall not be subject to the direction or control of any other
authority or person while exercising its disciplinary power of control over
judicial officers in the Federation.
“Members of
the public are hereby informed that the mechanism that will determine a
judicial officer to be directed or requested to proceed on compulsory leave or
be suspended from office, is a disciplinary power that NJC can only exercise
after initiating disciplinary proceeding on the complaint or petition forwarded
against the judge, after he has been found culpable.
“Therefore,
to act on the recommendation of the NBA is not only contrary to the provisions
of Section 158 of the 1999 Constitution, but it means NJC will direct any
judicial officer that has been petitioned even if the allegations contained
therein are frivolous and baseless, to proceed on compulsory leave or be
suspended from office without complying with the rule of law.
“That is not
the understanding of NJC of the intention of the framers of the 1999
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, as amended vis-à-vis its
constitutional powers and functions on initiation of disciplinary proceedings
culminating in suspension of judicial officers.
“Thus, to
act on the request of the departments of government and the recommendation of
the NBA, the 808 judicial officers that had been petitioned and accused of
professional misconduct and or corrupt practices, without investigation by NJC,
would have all been suspended or sent on compulsory leave and the courts would
have been deserted.
“NJC is not
unmindful of the concern of the public on a situation whereby a judicial
officer is being investigated and/or prosecuted for commission of a criminal
offence such as murder or robbery; and whether he is not supposed to be
requested or directed to proceed on compulsory leave or be suspended from
office. In the circumstance, unless the
subject judge accused of commission of the offence of murder or robbery is
petitioned to NJC, it shall not assume the disciplinary power of control over
judicial officers to suspend or direct the subject judge to proceed on
compulsory leave.
“Thus, NJC
can only direct any judge alleged of committing such criminal offences, to go
on compulsory leave or be suspended from office if he has been investigated and
found by NJC culpable of misconduct.”
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