President Muhammadu Buhari has recommended major reforms in the judiciary to conclude criminal cases within 12 months.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of the 60th Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), on Wednesday, President Buhari explained that the situation became necessary given the current and pre-existing challenges confronting the system.
“Why can’t we have time limits for all cases? Why can’t we put in place the rules that will say that a criminal trial all the way up to the Supreme Court must end in 12 months, and that a civil trial must not exceed 12-15 months? I think that, for me, will be stepping forward,” the president said.
“Step forward means taking responsibility. It may also mean making progress, boldly taking on the challenges of the future.”
The president, who was represented by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, listed a few areas where “I believe we need to step forward and resolve some of the nagging problems of our systems of administration of justice.”
The president recalled his experience at the Presidential Election Petitions Tribunals in 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2019. He said until recently, court trials had been “terribly slow” and capable of frustrating genuine efforts aimed at promoting general progress of the society.
He said: “I am not a lawyer but I have been both a casualty and a beneficiary of the judicial process. I was before the courts for two and a half years- 27 months from 2003 in the now-famous case of Buhari and Obasanjo. It took me two and a half years to fight for a four-year presidential mandate.
“In 2007, I was again in court for 20 months, almost two years, also as petitioner and later then appellant in the case of Buhari and INEC. And in 2011, again as petitioner in the case of CPC and INEC, I spent another eight months in court. At the end, I lost all three cases. I wondered then why it needed to take so long to arrive at a verdict.
“In 2019, my status improved, I was now no longer petitioner, I became the first respondent in the case of Atiku and Buhari and the whole process took barely six months.”
The president also faulted the conflicting pronouncements, which require reforms, saying “the second issue for me is the multiple and sometimes conflicting orders of courts. Recently, my party, the APC, had an internal crisis. In the six-week period before I chaired the meeting of the party to resolve the issues, there were at least 10 different conflicting rulings of the courts across the country.”
Fewer judges for more cases
Documents obtained from the National Judicial Council (NJC) showed that over 155, 757 cases were pending before the courts as of April, 2020.
Records show that judges in the entire country handling the increasing number of cases in the country are less than 2,000 in number.
Also, findings show that although Section 230(2) (b) of the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 provides for the appointment of 21 justices for the Supreme Court, the court currently has only 12 justices. Two justices; Justice Rhodes-Vivour and Sylvester Ngwuta are expected to retire next year.
Eight justices were elevated from the Court of Appeal to the Supreme Court of which none have been confirmed by the Senate. They are: Justices Adamu Jauro (North East); Emmanuel Agim (South South); Samuel Oseji (South South); and Helen Ogunwumiju (South West).
The others are Justices Tijjani Abubakar (North East); Mohammed L. Garba (North West); Abdu Aboki (North West); and Mohammed Saulawa (North West).
While there are 81 justices of the Court of Appeal, which complies with the provision of Section 237 (2) (b) of the Nigerian Constitution, 1999, which provides for not less than 49 justices, there are 80 judges presiding over thousands of cases at the Federal High Court.
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