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Nigeria’s Supreme Court Should Order Longer Dictionary and More Notepads

Nigeria’s Supreme Court Should Order Longer Dictionary and More Notepads

The Supreme Court of Nigeria feels our pains with all those nonsensical calls (see press release below). After what happened in Imo State, nothing is new. But it seems to feel the pressure to explain itself after Ahmad Lawan was validated over Bashir Machina in All Progressives Congress (APC) Yobe North senatorial district primaries. I know nothing about the law but if the Supreme is offended, maybe, it could order a long dictionary and longer notepads to explain these calls. 

Mr Ahmad Lawan was running for president on the day APC Yobe North had primaries for Senate, and Machina  was reported to have won. That his party did another one and chose another person even when he was still in the game could be a party’s decision. Yet, where is the defender of the common man here? 

Premium Times summarized: “As of the time the senatorial primary election for Yobe North senatorial district had been concluded, Mr Lawan was jostling for the presidential ticket of the APC which he eventually lost. Bashir Machina emerged as the winner of the senatorial primary election. But the APC would later claim to have within 24 hours after the presidential primary contest organised another primary election won by Mr Lawan, a case the Supreme Court’s decision lent credence to.”

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Mr. Machina , stay strong and never lose confidence in yourself. I sympathize with you. Your experience is the reason many do not really want to get close to that jungle of party politics in Nigeria. Many do hope that Nigeria’s Constitution will allow independents one day. But while that happens, the Supreme Court should have order a longer dictionary and more notepads to explain itself better.

READ SUPREME COURT’S STATEMENT IN FULL

PRESS RELEASE

BE MINDFUL OF UNWARRANTED ATTACKS ON JUDICIAL OFFICERS

We have watched with utter dismay some unfortunate events that have been unfolding in the country, particularly within the political landscape, for some days now.

It is so disheartening to learn that some individuals and groups of persons who ought to know better and even assume the revered positions of role models to a larger proportion of the citizens are now sadly, the very ones flagrantly displaying ignorance and infantilism in the course of defending the indefensible.

In an ineptly scripted toxic article, one Farooq Adamu Kperogi, who described himself as a Nigerian-American Professor, decided to plunge into an abysmal pit of irredeemable ignorance by venting convoluted anger on Supreme Court Justices with a view to pleasing his paymasters.

We have made it abundantly clear at different occasions that Judicial Officers are neither political office holders nor politicians that should be dressed in such robes.

Our silence must not be mistaken for weakness or cowardice. Certainly, every Nigerian citizen has inalienable right to express his or her opinion without any encumbrance; but even in the course of expressing such fundamental right, we should be circumspect enough to observe the caution-gate of self-control in order not to infringe on another person’s right.

Even in a state of emotional disequilibrium, we should be reasonable enough to make a good choice of decent words, as every word employed by the pen-happy Kperogi only succeeded in portraying the kind of vacuum that sign-posts all that he has as academic accomplishment. I believe those who possess similar credentials with him are obviously ashamed of celebrating any form of affinity with such a character that has an odious reputation for being a serial verbal assailant over the years, as he sees nothing good in anything good. He has only succeeded in inflicting upon himself a mood of bellicose jingoism which does not represent a mark of honour for any discerning mind or academic, the world over.

Courts don’t advertise or scout for cases for adjudication; but at the same time, we are duty-bound to adjudicate on all matters that come before us with a view to giving justice to whoever justice is due, irrespective of status. No Court in any clime is a Father Christmas; so, no one can get what he or she didn’t ask for. Similarly, all matters are thoroughly analysed and considered based on their merits and not the faces that appear in Court or sentiments that attempt to becloud the sense of reasoning. So, for anyone in his or her right frame of mind to insinuate that the Justices have been bought over by some unknown and unseen persons is, to say the least, a bizarre expression of ignorance, which definitely has no place in law or even in the realm of pedestrian reasoning.

We are not surprised with the surge of these well-orchestrated verbal assaults on Judicial Officers across the country at this period of elections. It is a thing we are used to and are ever ready to absorb whatever comes our way; but there should be some level of decorum and dignity in what we say and do.

Politics should not be played without recourse to good conscience and acceptable moral conduct, as everything is evolving globally. Calling on the Chief Justice of Nigeria to resign or attacking Justices that sit on various panels, as exhibited by a faceless group that calls itself ‘’Progressive Minds Forum,’’ is rather prosaic.

If political parties fail to organize themselves well by managing their internal wrangling maturely and now chose to bring themselves to the Court, we are duty-bound to adjudicate in accordance with the provisions of the law and not the dictates of any individual or deity, as some people would want us to do.

If political parties conduct themselves well and orderly too, the Courts would definitely handle less cases and the political atmosphere will be much healthier than it is currently.

We shall continuously do our best to discharge our constitutional responsibility to keep the country together and move the nation along the path of peace, progress and development. Attacks by groups, political parties or individuals under any guise will not deter us, rather it will boost our resolve to do more for the country.

It is not only petty but equally very unreasonable for anyone to hurriedly link the Hon. CJN Ariwoola to his state of origin and tribe simply because of a particular judgment of the Court. The major problem of Nigeria has always been the undue emphasis of religion and ethnicity in all our dealings. As long as we continue along that path, progress will remain a mirage. As at this moment, over 600 cases have so far gone to Court from just party primaries which were conducted by political parties without any encumbrance or interference from any external bodies. So, will the political parties, Kperogi or any individual now accuse the court of causing such unpleasant intra-party wrangling that defied all internal conflict resolution mechanisms? Most times, some people try as much as possible to disingenuously stand logic on its head to show their level of unimaginable dexterity.

Those who have cultivated the unfashionable penchant of always attacking the Judiciary over every judgment or ruling given should better have a rethink and start channelling such robust energy into some ventures that are more developmental than destructive. We are not politicians and should not, by any stroke of imagination, be cast in that mould either. Nobody’s interest can ever supersede the interest of everybody. Nigeria is bigger than everyone of us. A word is enough for the wise.

DR. AKANDE AWENERI FESTUS

DIRECTOR OF PRESS AND INFORMATION

SUPREME COURT OF NIGERIA


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1 THOUGHT ON Nigeria’s Supreme Court Should Order Longer Dictionary and More Notepads

  1. The author said they are not politicians, but the entire press release sounded like a party spokesman responding to or attacking an opposition party. Nothing in those plenty words felt like something coming from people who sit in the temple of justice, this is too mediocre. The presser needs to be relieved of his job, he simply lacks the competence and credibility to communicate at that level.

    Well, the press release is too empty, so it gave nothing to take home, with regard to the reasoning behind the said judgment. Just a waste of time. Sophistry over substance.
    .
    He hammered on Law and its supposed impartiality when adjudicating a case, but law is not a creation of itself, it remains a product of reason and logic; so when a judge suffers from ethical blindness, he can neither reason correctly nor follow sound logic.

    Some people need to reenter the labour market, this presser didn’t learn his craft well, too subpar to be speaking for the Supreme Court.

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