The
Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mariam Mukhtar, has said security
agencies in the country take suspects to court before looking for
evidence to prosecute them.
Justice Mukhtar identified the practice
as one of the reasons for undue delays in the criminal justice
administration system in the country.
The CJN spoke at a special session
organised by the Supreme Court to mark the commencement of the 2013/2014
Legal Year, as well as the inauguration of 17 new Senior Advocates of
Nigeria in Abuja on Monday.
She frowned at the “unwholesome practice
of some security agents involved in the criminal justice administration
system,” particularly the arraignment of suspects without first
gathering evidence for prosecution.
“It is common knowledge that our
security agencies usually rush to the courts with suspects, before
looking for evidence to prosecute them.
“The persistent use of the ‘Holden
Charge’ by these agencies to detain awaiting trial suspects, is a major
contributor to the high number of cases pending in our courts,” she
said.
The CJN advised the security agencies to
emulate the practice in other parts of the world, where adequate
evidences were obtained before suspects were arrested and charged to
court.
Admonishing the security agencies to
adopt a more effective approach, she said, “This procedure is a far cry
from what obtains in other democracies, where discrete surveillance is
placed on crime suspects who are painstakingly stalked by security
agents, until such a time when enough evidence would have been obtained
for their arrest, arraignment and prosecution.
“But in Nigeria, suspects are promptly
arrested and often times arraigned in court, even when no evidence for
prosecution has been gathered.
“The backlash from such failure of
proper investigation by our security agencies is the resultant hike in
the number of cases pending in the courts.”
Justice Mukhtar warned that “an extreme
consequence of these glaring lapses may lie in the loss of confidence in
our domestic justice administration system which rubbishes our often
brandished favourable investment climate and translate to a huge
disincentive to potential foreign investors in Nigeria.”
She restated her call for an overhaul of
the country’s criminal laws, which she described as “archaic and
culturally irrelevant.”
The CJN further expressed concerns at the slow pace of administration of justice in the country.
“To exhaust complete remedy in a case,
that is from trial court to Supreme Court, could take up to 20 years
with the original litigants dead and substituted and in some cases the
substitutes also dead and substituted,” she said.
She added that the process of
interlocutory appeals aggravates the situation to the extent that by the
time the Supreme Court decides that they be continued in trial court,
most of the witnesses might have died or alive but senile, with
documents no longer traceable.
Justice Mukhtar also spoke on the
challenges militating against her resolve to restore the fading glory of
this country’s judiciary.
She stressed that, for her to achieve
the objective, “certain indices have to be guaranteed, for instance
government must at all times ensure total compliance with the rule of
law as well as adherence to the principle of separation of powers.”
Speaking of the need for compliance with
the principle of separation of powers, the CJN noted that the National
Judicial Council had the exclusive powers to deal with policies relating
to policy and administration in the judiciary.
Noting that, under a democratic
dispensation, the three arms of government must keep faith with the
doctrine of separation of powers as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution,
she stressed that “the Judiciary must continue to defend its
independence so that it should not merely be apparent but must be seen
to be real.”
“By virtue of Section 153 of the Constitution, the National Judicial Council is the apex body for the nation’s Judiciary.
“By paragraph 21(1), part 1 of the Third
Schedule of the 1999 Constitution, the Council has the power to deal
with matters relating to broad issues of policy and administration of
the Judiciary,” she added.
Also speaking at the event, the
President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr. Okey Wali, SAN, canvassed
the inclusion of NBA’s representatives in the NJC in disciplinary
proceedings against judges.
Wali also spoke of heightened efforts by the NBA to address issues of indiscipline among legal practitioners.
He said seven lawyers were expelled from
the bar in the past legal year after being indicted for various acts of
misconduct, while two others were suspended.
The NBA President also echoed the CJN’s concerns over the “poor funding” of the judiciary.
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