Your action in bad faith, NBA tells President Action
 Congress of Nigeria (ACN) leader Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has broken 
his silence on Appeal Court President Justice Isa Ayo Salami’s ordeal.
To 
him, President Goodluck Jonathan’s “tardiness in” acceding to the 
National Judicial Council’s (NJC’s) request for Justice Salami’s 
reinstatement is a brutal attack on the golden principles of the rule of
 law and just existence in a democratic society. 
Tinubu,
 in a statement at the weekend,  said the President’s action has 
confirmed the popular belief that Justice Salami’s case is more 
political than legal. He described the president’s action as a coup 
against the rule of law.
In 
the former Lagos State Governor’s view, Attorney General Mohammed Bello 
Adoke’s  argument that President Jonathan withheld his consent on the 
recommendation (that Justice Salami be restored to his seat) on the 
claim that it was sub-judice is not right.
The 
former Governor of Lagos State observed that the purported cases relied 
on by the Attorney-General were those filed by failed candidates of the 
ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
To 
him, rather than persecuting Justice Salami, whose perceived sin was his
 adherence to legal principles in deciding some cases that affected the 
ruling PDP, the AGF should be placed in the dock for subverting the law.
Tinubu,
 citing the eminent view of the former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), 
Justice Mohammed Uwais, argued that the president lacks the power to 
subject the decision of the NJC to any form of review because – going 
 by Justice Uwais’ argument -  lacked discretional powers on the Justice
 Salami issue. 
He 
warned that should the Presidency be allowed to have its way, it will 
create a dangerous precedent that will effectively hobble the judiciary 
and prevent other judges from dispensing justice in accordance with the 
dictates of the law.
The 
ACN National Leader urged all jurists, all lawyers, the civil society 
and, particularly, the media, to stand for justice and demand Justice 
Salami’s reinstatement. He argued that the  violation of the rule of law
 and constitutional checks and balances has to stop now before it 
gathers a momentum that brings irreparable harm.  
Said 
Tinubu: “For reasons only they know, the Federal Government seems eager 
to provoke crisis where there would be none, if only they obeyed the 
rule of law. Last year, the Nigeria Judicial Council (NJC) suspended 
Court of Appeal President Justice Salami for a non-existent offence. 
“He 
was suspended for standing firm against the perversion of Justice and 
the abuse of power. At that time, the presidency quickly endorsed the 
NJC action. Earlier this month, the NJC rediscovered its conscience by 
reinstating the honourable jurist to his position. This time, the 
Presidency balked as if it had lost its faculty to speak. 
“Finally,
 the Attorney General said the Presidency would not ‘reinstate’ Salami 
because of pending cases against Salami. Not coincidentally, these cases
 were filed by losing PDP governorship candidates.
“Now,
 Nigerians know this is part of a larger script to end the career of a 
courageous judge and amputate justice and subvert the rule of law. Here,
 the Presidency and PDP are culprits. The facts favour Justice
 Salami, but those who hold power in trust for millions of Nigeria will not let justice prevail. 
“The 
NJC and the consensus neutral opinion of the country’s most eminent 
jurists and legal scholars agree that the law points to only one proper 
course: Salami’s reinstatement. These people hold no partisan political 
brief. Their care is to promote legality.
“On 
the other side stand only the PDP and their legal mercenaries. I ask: 
who is behaving more dangerously partisan in this matter, the ruling 
party that ignores the great weight of considered legal opinion or the 
opposition that is willing to live by and under the law? I rest my case 
and say no more on this specific point. 
“We 
are witnessing something historic. The federal executive has launched a 
compound coup against the rule of law and judicial integrity. The first 
is the subtle assumption of a power the Presidency does not properly 
wield. 
“The 
Attorney General stated that the Presidency would not reinstate Salami 
until the pending cases were fully litigated. This is empty bluster, the
 discharge of cannon minus the cannonball. 
“Under
 the law of the land, the Presidency has no substantive function in the 
matter. Salami’s reinstatement is not dependent on Presidency. His 
reinstatement begins and ends with the NJC. Former Chief Justice of 
Nigeria Mohammed Uwais, in a publicized television interview, was 
unambiguous when he said, ‘Actually from the legal point of view, the 
suspension of a judge, the power to do so is given to the National 
Judicial Council, not the President…So, really to me, I don’t see any 
reason; once the NJC decides he should be recalled, and then he should 
be recalled by the NJC, not the President, technically”. 
—”His
 point was clear and straight forward-President Jonathan’s business is 
that of being notified of the NJC’s decision and not of approving what 
has already been formally decided. Yet, we are witnessing a flagrant 
violation of the rule of law in which the right of an individual is 
being crudely taken away in broad daylight. 
“The 
authority and eminent position of Justice Mohammed Uwais on this matter 
carries more weight than the shallow political calculations of the 
President and his henchmen. The NJC suspended Salami. Now it has 
reinstated him. 
“The 
only role the presidency can properly play in this matter is as a 
deliverer of messages. That is what our constitution provides. Yet, this
 insecure yet vain presidency cannot see itself as anything but the 
controller of all things.  
“Thus,
 the Attorney General huffs that Justice Salami cannot resume his duties
 when the NJC has already legally reinstated him. At this point, it is 
not Salami but the Attorney General who should be placed in the dock for
 taking an action that he knows is blatantly improper.  
“The 
top lawyer of the federation has proven himself to be a legal gypsy 
whose legal opinion travels in whatever direction the strongest 
political wind blows. 
“The 
Federal Government has transformed itself from subject to the 
constitution into a bully intent on intimidating a fine jurist from 
serving the nation, thus depriving Nigerians of all stripes and 
political hues of their right to the neutral and objective application 
of the rule of law. 
“Even
 under the years of brutal military dictatorship, laws were being obeyed
 and the judiciary was not hamstrung. At least, those of us that were in
 detention got some reprieve by the order of the courts. 
“This
 brings us to the second coup. This goes directly to the independence of
 the courts. Justice Salami is in this predicament not because he did 
anything legally improper. He is in the soup because his objective, high
 quality legal work was seen as a grievous political sin by those in 
power. 
“Justice
 Salami is in trouble because he served his conscience and refused to be
 part of the gang-up to perverse justice. He had the temerity to decide 
cases according to applicable law and fact and this was unacceptable to 
the ruling party. He let verdicts fall where legality led them. This 
means some verdicts went against the ruling party.   This was enough to 
make them conspire against him. Now, the PDP has developed a script to 
intimidate other judges. 
“With
 the Attorney General’s unacceptable and unfortunate statement, the 
curtain has been pulled back. We had hoped this would be resolved with 
dignity in favour of the rule of law, that we could rest assured the 
President would safeguard the legal rights of all Nigerians while still 
being an energetic and tough political opponent to some of us. 
“Sadly,
 this was not to be. For the Attorney General to spurt as he did, means 
he did so at the insistence of his boss. Here, Nigerians are confronted 
with a frightening trend in which our democracy and country are in 
danger. 
“An 
elected President who himself has been a beneficiary of the protection 
of the legal protection under the doctrine of necessity that paved his 
way to the presidency, now leads a power cabal that is disrobing 
Nigerians of their rights and denying them  justice. 
“This
 is a direct assault against the judiciary. Seeing the treatment so 
roughly handled to a senior Justice like Salami, no other judge will 
dare act independently and according to the law.  They will seek 
direction from the executive and then concoct flimsy legal arguments to 
defend what they have been ordered to do. 
“They
 will come to use the color of law to undermine justice. Herein lies the
 danger to us all. This government has shown itself to be greedy.  The 
more it eats, the hungrier it gets.  The more power it has, the more it 
wants. Today, it seeks to devour Salami because of his electoral 
rulings. 
“Tomorrow
 it will be a contract you signed, the land your father purchased, the 
business your uncle built or the newspaper that published an 
unfavourable news report.  If the law courts are no longer able to 
honestly adjudicate the law but function to serve as the sharp knife of 
the imperial court in Abuja, then we no longer operate under a 
constitutional democracy.  
“We 
have become a despotic kingdom where the arbitrary fiat and command of 
the monarch carry the force of law and the constitution is but a flimsy 
sheet of paper.  We have lived this scenario before and it did us no 
good. We should not walk this trail of tears again. 
“Again,
 this matter goes far beyond political partisanship.  It will define the
 very meaning of governance in Nigeria, either for good or bad. It is 
time to select the side that you are on. Either you are for right or for
 power. You cannot be both because the improper actions of government 
have precluded such a combination. 
“Therefore,
 it is time that all jurists, all lawyers and civil society, 
particularly the media stand for justice and demand the reinstatement of
 Justice Salami. The violation of the rule of law and constitutional 
checks and balances has to stop now before it gathers a momentum that 
brings irreparable harm.”
“By 
standing with Justice Salami today, we also take a stand for ourselves 
and the promise of a better future for the nation that we love,” Tinubu 
said. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment