The Trial Of The Nigerian Judiciary – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

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Usually, any country with any hope of redemption has three bastions of incorruptibility: the academia, clergy and judiciary. Over the years, we came to the depressing and tear-jerking real­ization that our universities and the Church have deteriorated to cesspools of sleaze and mor­al squalor. For long, despite the susurrations of grime and cor­ruption in the judiciary, we held out hope that the judiciary could still be trusted as an impartial ar­biter. Lamentably, the judiciary, the Presidential Election Petition Court, outraged Nigerians with its verdict on the presidential election of February 25th, 2023. That verdict was a travesty of jus­tice; it besmirched the reputation of the Nigerian judiciary.

Refreshingly, the petitioners, Peter Obi of the Labour Party (LP) and Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) have appealed to the Su­preme Court. I am not a lawyer, and, as an unlearned gentleman, I am not informed enough on the arcane of the law to speculate on the possible ruling of the Supreme Court on their appeals. Secondly, I am not clairvoyant, and I lack prophetic powers. Therefore, I can­not prophesize on the outcome of the appeals. However, it is extremely im­portant that the petitioners are staying the course and continuing their quests for justice to the Supreme Court.

To many Nigerians, the appeal to the Supreme Court is a foolhardy, fu­tile and wasteful enterprise. Well, I am buoyed by Jesse Jackson’s earlier re­mark, “If you run, you might lose, but if you do not run, you are guaranteed to lose.” In going to the Supreme Court, they might lose but, if they do not go, they are guaranteed to lose. Secondly, in the words of a one-time American senator and presidential candidate, Barry Goldwater, “Extremism in de­fence of liberty is no vice.” Similarly, extremism in pursuit of justice is not a vice. It is from such courageous, de­termined stances against injustice that democracy is buttressed, the rights and freedom of the people nourished and their political consciousness re-awak­ened. Undoubtedly, the seeds being sown by the petitioners’ relentless search for justice will germinate, and years later, bloom, and through its many branches, reinforce the rule of law and the institutional moorings of democracy in Nigeria.

In addition, what is at stake in the judicial proceedings is more than the victory or defeat of one presidential candidate, as determined by the Su­preme Court judges, but a verdict on the Nigerian Supreme Court. The Nigerian judiciary is on trial. In the earlier trial of the judiciary, the PEPC rendered a ruling on itself. Its ruling was that, despite the import, weighti­ness and gravitas of the office of the judge, Nigerian judges are prone to the same characteristic Nigerian tenden­cies – abuse of office.

Judges, especially, Supreme Court judges, are the final arbiters of all hu­man affairs (on earth), including life and death. Therefore, the office of the judge is inimitable, for very few other public officers have such crucial and conclusive authority over human af­fairs. Thus, the judges should be gov­erned by the most elevated moral and ethical standards, humanly possible. As they deliver their verdict on the Presidential Election Petitions, the Supreme Court will put itself on trial and give a verdict on itself. It can, based on the unvarnished evidence before it, restore the alleged stolen mandate to the victor of the February 25th, 2003 presidential election.

And that will be magnificent for Ni­geria. That judgment will be lapidary; it will engrave the names of the judg­es in honour and glory in the stone of time. It will be a potent proof that in the vast scene of confusion that is our be­loved country, and in the upside-down world of Nigeria, there is still a beacon of hope. It will demonstrate that in the pervading, encompassing anarchy, in­stitutional dysfunction and moral and ethical collapse this country, there is still one bastion of incorruptibility in Nigeria. It will burnish the country’s badly tarnished international image. It will be a watershed, marking the first step in a national renaissance.

The judges of the Presidential Election Petition Court (PEPC) were, allegedly, economically induced. While there is no proof to this allegation, the verdict of the PEPC lent credence to it. After all, why would judges dispense with all judicial principles and stan­dards; and grossly distort the consti­tution and Electoral Act to suit a pre­determined verdict? That parody of justice proved that the judiciary, like every other Nigerian institutions, is susceptible to the sirens of life. A repli­cation of the mockery of justice by the Appeal Court at the Supreme Court will mean that justice in Nigeria has finally gone to the dogs, and that the judges, even the Supreme Court judg­es, have been reduced to hustlers, who, in their bazaar mentality, can pander to even the most atrocious agenda of any highest bidder.

It will mean that the Supreme Ar­biters of Nigeria have abandoned the essence of their oath of office, which is striving for the greatest good, and embraced the greatest evil. For in the words of the ancient Greek philoso­pher, Plato, “…justice is the greatest good and injustice the greatest evil.” It will be a complete moral and ethical disaster for the country; and presage the total loss of our sense of outrage. In the words of a one-time American senator, Daniel Moynihan, “Any nation that has lost its sense of outrage is des­tined for extinction.”

Ezukanma writes from Lagos via maciln18@yahoo.com



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