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Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mahmud  Mohammed 
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APPROPRIATELY, the Chief Justice of 
Nigeria, Mahmud Mohammed, reminded members of the Election Tribunals he 
inaugurated in Abuja early this month of the judiciary’s shameful role 
in the past, which undermined the country’s democracy. The judges, who 
are to serve as chairmen and members of the tribunals in the 36 states 
for the rescheduled general election, were warned to be at opposite 
poles with politicians and political parties to avoid compromising their
 integrity. Avoid their gifts and illicit communications, even with 
their lawyers, the CJN warned.
He said, “We must never again be used as 
tools to truncate our nation’s democracy. I assure you that any judge 
found wanting would only have himself or herself to blame as the 
National Judicial Council will definitely not spare the rod in ensuring 
that the honour, respect and independence of the judiciary are 
protected.”
Indeed, Mohammed’s concern is not without
 basis. Nothing brought this impunity to a spectacular climax than what 
the late Justice of the Supreme Court, Kayode Eso, referred to as 
“billionaire judges,” after the 2007 elections. The fraud that 
hallmarked the elections of that year was condemned by international 
observers as the worst ever experienced. For evidence, look no further 
than the seven governorship results the Supreme Court annulled.
In one of the most bizarre cases that the
 House of Representatives once threatened to probe, a state governor, 
whose identity was not disclosed, reportedly paid N2 billion to tribunal
 members for his purported victory to be upheld. It was against this 
background that some concerned stakeholders called for a panel to probe 
these judges.
Regrettably, both the political and 
judicial authorities at the time were indifferent. Most disturbing about
 this decadence is the fact that some retired senior members of the 
Bench, under the guise of being “legal consultants,” became the 
middlemen between the litigants and the corrupt tribunal members.
No one is under any illusion that the 
country has seen the last of this abuse. But the tribunal judges can 
live above board by restricting themselves to the provisions of Section 
138 of the Electoral Act 2010, which spell out the grounds for a 
petition to be brought for hearing.
The section deals with persons not 
qualified to contest an election; invalidation of the poll by corrupt 
practices; a respondent not duly elected by majority of lawful votes; 
unlawful exclusion of validly nominated candidates and an act or 
omission contrary to the provisions of the Act.
Yet, some tribunals had in the past 
ignored all this, and relied on superfluous considerations to give 
judgements to the chagrin of Nigerians. On this score, the CJN warned 
that “… the tribunal is not a court of vain inquisition.” Mohammed’s 
homily to the 242 tribunal judges and the concern of Nigerians would not
 have been necessary, if the NJC had been firm and decisive in dealing 
with corruption in the judiciary. The ritual of just easing out corrupt 
judges from office when adjudged corrupt has to stop. When these 
compromised judges get only a slap on the wrist, and thereafter go home 
to enjoy their ill-gotten wealth, it promotes, rather than eviscerates, 
the vice from the system. This was what happened with some errant judges
 that handled 2003 election petitions.
As Itse Sagay, a law professor and Senior
 Advocate of Nigeria, once said, “The number of rogue judges who have 
completely gone out of line with the rules and ethics of the profession 
has increased tremendously.” Today, this is a sing-song of many members 
of the Nigerian Bar Association, the body of Benchers and the larger 
society. Disappointingly, nobody is bold enough to name names. As a 
result, the rot continues to erode the credibility of our justice 
delivery system, with dangerous consequences for the society.
The development raises larger questions 
about our values. A more impartial judiciary is a more trusted Bench. No
 amount of reprimands or sacking of judges who abuse the granting of ex 
parte motions and discretionary powers would bring sanity to the system,
 without recourse to the golden rule of crime and punishment. This has 
been a hard nut to crack here because the legal profession jealously 
protects its own. This is tantamount to sacrificing the moral wellbeing 
of the nation and justice, on the altar of the professional ego of a 
few.
As a matter of fact, nothing could be 
more criminal and damaging to a society than purchasing justice. In the 
United States, Thomas Spargo, a judge, was jailed for 27 months in New 
York for attempted extortion and bribery of $10,000.
In justifying the action, Richard Pilger,
 the prosecutor, told the presiding judge that a strong message had to 
be sent that “corruption in a judge’s seat does not go unpunished,” and 
that, “without a legal system free of impropriety, nothing works.” This 
is the only paradigm that makes sense in cleansing the desecrated temple
 of justice in Nigeria.
The CJN, therefore, must walk his talk. 
Making a clean break from the empty rhetoric of his predecessors is a 
patriotic duty on which he should not waver.

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