Monday, 25 August 2014

Landlady’s children arraigned for cutting tenant’s private parts

Offehin on the hospital bed
The police have arraigned two men– Olowogbemi Solomon (24) and Olayeye Damilola (22) – for allegedly robbing a tenant, Olayinka Offehin, and cutting his scrotum.
The incident happened in the Ikotun area of Lagos.
PUNCH Metro had reported on July 31 that the men, who were children of Offehin’s landlady, attacked Offehin and his family members while they were asleep.
Our correspondent reported that the two men allegedly stole N800, 000, and cut the scrotum of the victim during the incident.
The police arraigned the duo before an Ebute Meta Magistrate’s Court on three counts of robbery and attempted murder.
The police prosecutor, Sergeant Cousin Adams, said the offences were punishable under sections 295, 228 and 231 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.
The charges read in part, “That you, Olowogbemi Solomon and Olayeye Damilola, did attempt to unlawfully kill one Olayinka Offahin by slicing his scrotum with knife….”
Adams asked the court to remand the defendants in prison for the first 30 days pending legal advice from the Directorate of Public Prosecutions.
However, the defence counsel, Ojieh Friday, said the charges preferred against the defendants were “frivolous”.
He said, “This is basically a tenancy issue; there was no robbery. At worse, this should be a case of assault occasioning harm. The charges were written in bad faith and we want the court to look into this.”
The Magistrate, F.J. Adefioye, asked the Investigating Police Officer, Sergeant Moses Godgift, of the Criminal Investigation Department, Yaba, to tell the court the outcome of police investigation.
Godgift said, “In the course of our investigation, the following facts were brought to light.
“The two defendants and the complainant were living in the same building. The defendants were the stepsons of the landlady.
“The men, in an attempt to kill the complainant, stabbed him on his scrotum. They also robbed him of his money and property. It was based on these findings that they are arraigned before your honour.”
The magistrate ruled that the two defendants should be remanded in custody.
“Having listened to the prosecutor, and conducted a preliminary investigation by hearing from the IPO, this court is convinced that there is probable cause for remand. This court therefore upholds the application of the prosecutor and rejects the request of the defence learned counsel.
“The defendants are to be remanded in prison for the first 30 days pending legal advice from the DPP,” he said.
The matter was adjourned till September 17, 2014.

Vulcanizer in court for stealing BRT tyre

Some BRT buses
A 34-year-old man, Kazeem Shina, and one Dare Ajayi, have been arraigned before an Ebute Meta Magistrate’s court for allegedly stealing a tyre belonging to the Lagos State Bus Rapid Transport.
Shina, who worked with the BRT as a vulcanizer, was said to have colluded with Ajayi to sell the tyre, when they were caught.
The tyre was said to be worth N80,000.
It was learnt that Shina had pleaded with a BRT driver who had driven into the Ojota office of the company to refuel his tank, to assist him in conveying the tyre to a place where another vehicle had broken down.
The BRT driver was said to have been accompanied by a boy.
However, when they got to the place, no vehicle was seen by the driver, arousing suspicion.
The driver was said to have left the boy with the tyre and left.
Upon his return to the place he dropped off the boy, he was said to have discovered the tyre was no longer there.
He later traced the boy and found him taking the tyre to an unknown destination.
It was learnt that when the boy saw the driver, he abandoned the tyre and took to his heels.
After investigation, the police arrested Shina and Dare and arraigned them on two counts of stealing.
The charges read, “That you, Kazeem Shina, Dare Ajayi and others at large on August 10, 2014, at about 12pm, at Iponri Lagos in the Lagos Magsiterial District, did conspire among yourselves to commit felony to wit; stealing.
“That you did steal one big tyre with ream valued the sum of N80,000 only, property of BRT company, Lagos.”
The police prosecutor, Corporal Cyriacus Osuji, said the offence was punishable under sections 409 and 285 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, Nigeria, 2011.
The Magistrate, E.O. Ogunkanmi, admitted the defendants to bail in the sum of N200,000 with two sureties each in like sum.
“The sureties must be gainfully employed and resident in Lagos State. They must also depose to an affidavit of means and show evidence of tax payment. One of the sureties should be a blood relation of the defendants,” he added.
The matter was adjourned till October 13, 2014.

Court dissolves 17-year-old marriage over disagreement on sex

A Mapo Customary Court in Ibadan on Friday dissolved a 17-year-old marriage between Rukayat and Rasaq Muniru, over disagreement on sexual intercourse. 
The judge, Mr. Ademola Odunade, in his judgment, held that the court dissolved the marriage because it considered the wellbeing of everyone important.
“The court had fulfilled the mandatory adjournments, but Muniru still refused to show up which meant admission of guilt. 
He ordered Muniru to pay a monthly feeding allowance of N6,000 as well as take responsibility for the education of the children.  
Rukayat had told the court that Muniru was so shameless that he did not mind having sexual intercourse with her in the presence of their grown up children. 
“Muniru rented a single face-to-face apartment room for me at Olunloyo Area of Ibadan with four grown up children, boys and girls, because he has married another wife. 
“He sees nothing wrong in having sexual intercourse with me in their very presence as matured as they are, 15, 13 years of ages. 
“Whenever the children saw us making love, I used to remind him of the negative implications it might have on them, especially the need for another room for them. 
“Anytime I refused him sex, he beats the hell out of me, injures me and tears my clothes.  On a number of occasions, I reported him to his parents but there was no change. 
“Muniru does not cater for the children and does not even want to know whether they are educated or not,” Rukayat said. 

Towards building Law students’ advocacy skills

Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo
We have heard of programmes such as the MTN Project Fame which seeks to identify raw musical talents with the view to polishing them to stardom, we also heard of the Bank PHB’s Intern, which was aimed at sharpening business skills in young enterpreneurs, but such was novel in the Nigeria legal profession. Recently however SimmonsCooper, a Lagos-based Law firm came up with what it called SimmonsCooper Advocacy Initiative.
Headed by a former Attorney General of Lagos State and Commissioner for Justice, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), SimmonsCooper Partners said they put up the SCAD Initiative in order to prevent strong advocacy skills among Nigerian lawyers from going into extinction.
“There is always palpable excitement when one of the old, reputable wigs makes an appearance in court. The breath of fresh air that characterises a trained advocate in his element is a wonder to behold. But one cannot but wonder where the eloquent, astute lawyers of the next generation are.
“So we began to think of how to preserve posterity and then we came up with SCAD, an initiative designed to identity, develop and hone the advocacy skills of trainee wigs,” CSP said.
The firm explained that the decision to target Law students followed its belief that the culture of good advocacy could only be sustained where the theory taught in the classroom is immediately matched with practice.
“Beyond prestige and esteem, the practice of Law is closely associated with eloquence, advocacy and sound arguments. This necessarily means that an aspiring lawyer must develop a set of skills ranging from ability to identify and build up arguments through thorough research as well as an eloquent presentation of such argument before an audience. These set of skills are prerequisite for any serious lawyer looking forward to achieving professional relevance.
“But sadly, we always wonder whether the Nigerian lawyer, at the point when he is permitted to don the ceremonial wig and gown at the instance of the body of Benchers, is prepared to hold his ground in the field of Law.
“Accordingly, we initiated the mechanism of SCAD, as a platform to stimulate debate on significant national issues and encourage healthy competition among students of Law in all the universities across Nigeria.”
SCP explained that SCAD Compete is an aspect of the initiative which employs social debate to stimulate advocacy skills in student lawyers.
“The young Nigerian lawyer is only fully equipped when he or she can boast of a firm rasp of research writing and advocacy skills.
“SCAD Compete is an aspect of the initiative that encourages social debate, briefs writing and Moot Court competition where participants within and outside Nigeria are invited to submit structured arguments based on a dispute scenario.
“It is an initiative which seeks to arouse the consciousness and contribution of Law students to social, economic and legal issues,” the firm added.
And so they have thrown the SCAD open to students of Law from across the country.
The 2014 edition of SCAD Compete had 10 finalists shortlisted from huge entries received, slugging it out on one platform.
The theme of the discourse for 2014 centred on the prevailing housing challenge in the country, which is said to be fast becoming a cause of serious concern as several Nigerians face the challenge of homelessness.
SCP said such theme was agreed upon following a recent disturbing United Nation’s report, which predicts that by the year 2015, Nigeria’s population of homeless people will have reached 24.4 million people.
Discussing the topic were 10 cerebral and word-savvy finalists, who were taken through a one-day intense training to sharpen their advocacy skills.
They mounted the stage in June at the Oriental Hotel, Lagos.
Their performances were graded by a three-man panel comprising a judge of the Lagos State High Court, Justice Bola Okikiolu-Ighile, Mr. Wale Olawoyin of Olawoyin and Co. and Mr. Babatunde Irukera of SCP

Avoid law, partners tell aspiring lawyers

Few lawyers would recommend law to future generations, according to research conducted for 'The Future of Law Summit.

Only three in 20 lawyers would recommend law to future generations, the 'Future of Law' survey revealed. The research was carried out to coincide with 'The Future of Law Summit' in London on 30 September 2014 where partners and corporate counsel globally will meet to look at industry changes, why law firms fail and how legal practice will look going forward. For further information, contactbenmartin@futurelex.com or www.futureoflawsummit.com

Texas lawyer arrested for soliciting murder of witness

A 57-year old lawyer has been arrested after the District Attorney accused him of seeking to have a man murdered who was to testify against him.

The intended victim was to give evidence in a barratry case against the lawyer, Paul Andrews, over allegations that Mr Andrews had paid a ‘case runner’ to get personal injury cases referred to his firm. Also charged in the barratry case was a second lawyer, Keith Gould, a colleague of Mr Andrews’. If convicted, Mr Andrews could face up to 95 years in jail and a fine of up to US$10,000

Apple fails to get its legal fees paid


Apple may have been awarded $1 billion in its dispute with Samsung but a judge has ruled the company cannot claim for its legal fees.

Apple has failed in its efforts to force Samsung to pay its legal fees for a patent infringement dispute. The company had argued that, since it was awarded $1 billion, Samsung should pay its legal costs. However, Samsung, which was found to have copied aspects of Apple's iPhone design, said the breach of iPhone's design was not exceptional and it should not be expected to pay Apple's costs.

Fake DSS operative returns to Osogbo court Sept 12

(DSS)
The charge of impersonation against a young man, Victor Aladegbolu, will come before an Osogbo Magistrate’s Court for hearing on September 12.
Aladegbolu, 22, was accused of parading himself as an operative of the Department of State Security (DSS) during the last Osun State governorship poll.
The court, last week, ordered that the accused person be remanded in Ilesa prison custody till the adjourned date.
The prosecutor, Mr. Biodun Badiora, told the court that the accused person conspired with others now at large to commit the offence on August 9, 2014 at about 12:00 p.m at City Hall, Ile-Ife.
Badiora said the accused person, with others, was caught wearing a T-shirt with an inscription of Police logo in the front and DSS at the back, claiming to be DSS officers.
He was apprehended by police officers.
He alleged that the accused person disrupted the conduct of the August 9 election in Ile-Ife and its environs.
He said the offence committed by the accused person was contrary to and punishable under Sections 517 and 109 of the Criminal Code Cap 34, Vol.11 Laws of Osun State, 2003.
Badiora, announcing his appearance, said the state’s Attorney General was taking over the matter from the police to ensure diligent prosecution.
Defence counsel Nnenna Ngwu did not object to the application by the state to take over prosecution.
She said the court had been saved the rigour of stretched trial with the suspect pleading guilty to the two-count charges against him.
The Magistrate, Mr. Olusola Aluko, who rejected the bail application for the suspect, urged defence counsel to apply for bail formally.
He also ordered that the accused person be remanded in prison custody and adjourned the matter
Aladegbolu, who was initially held in police custody before the poll, was released and later re-arrested.
Both the state government and the state chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) had before and during the election raised the alarm over the presence of hoodlums impersonating men of the Nigerian Army, the Police, DSS and other security agencies.
The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Prof. Attahiru Jega, last Wednesday, said  the election was nearly rigged and condemned the presence of hooded security agents.
Also arraigned by the police was a former Chairman of Ilesa West Local Government, Mr. Ibukun Fadipe, who allegedly attacked APC members.
Fadipe was last Thursday arraigned over a case of attack on some people in Ilesa in 2009.
The former chairman, who appeared before Chief Magistrate A.O. Ijiyode, was accused of assaulting Alhaja Mulikat Odeyemi and others as well as damaging the speakers and engine of Isokun Social Elite Club in Ilesa on May 28, 2009.
The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge.
The defence counsel, Oluwaseun Ajoba, urged the court to dismiss the case as all the complainants who were victims of the assault were in court, saying they had withdrawn the case.
The prosecuting counsel, Promise Akanwa, opposed the move as he said the proper procedure was for the counsel to apply for bail.
After much argument, counsel to the accused pleaded for bail, Fadipe could not jump bail as he was an immediate past council chairman.
Ajoba argued that all the complainants, who were direct victims of the alleged assault, could stand as surety for the accused.
The Chief Magistrate thereafter granted the accused bail in the sum of N500, 000 and two sureties, who must be residents in Ilesa.

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Police narrate in Court how teacher raped pupil in toilet

Teacher
A 10-year-old primary four pupil has told the police how her teacher, Adeniran Adebayo, allegedly took advantage of her and defiled her inside the school toilet.
The victim said her health teacher threatened to flog her if she made a noise while he had sex with her in the toilet.
She said one of the female teachers in the school, however, heard her cry and barged into the toilet, forcing Adebayo, a father of two, to stop and hurriedly dress up.
The incident happened at a private school on Olateju Ilesanmi Street, Baruwa, Ipaja area of Lagos.
Narrating the incident to a Lagos State Chief Magistrate’s Court at Ebute Meta on Wednesday, the Investigating Police Officer from the State Criminal Investigation Department, Yaba, said the victim repeated the account three different times.
He said, “I interviewed the victim after the matter was brought to the SCID. She said on the fateful day, she was in school after the closing hours and was waiting for her younger brother, who attended the same school, so they could go back home together.
“While waiting, she decided to get busy with her assignments. She said it was while she was doing the assignment that the teacher came and said she should follow him.
“He then took her to a toilet within the school premises and threatened to cane her if she screamed, unzipped himself, undressed the pupil and made love to her.
“The girl said she was crying while this was on. It was a female teacher, who was passing by that heard her cry. The female teacher came closer to have a better look and immediately the suspect saw her, he quickly zipped up. The pupil said the female teacher told him that being a teacher, he should never have taken advantage of the girl.”
The police officer said after the victim repeatedly affirmed the account, he decided to call the supposed witness.
“When I called her and interviewed her, she said she didn’t see anything. I called the girl again, and she narrated the same story to me,” he added.
The Chief Magistrate, O.O. Olatunji asked the defendant if the story was true.
Adebayo said, “I am the health teacher of the school. I married five years ago, and have two sons. There are six male teachers in the school. On that day, I didn’t call the girl. I only stood at the gate and asked her and her brother to go home. That was all.
“I was surprised that after four days, they came to my office and arrested me. The toilet in question has never even been used by anybody.”
The chief magistrate in his reaction said the account of the suspect was not credible.
“Kids hardly lie, especially when they are between the ages of six to 11. And that’s why I find it hard to believe the account of the defendant. People like you should not be in the society. If like you said there were six male teachers in your school, why did she decide to pick only you? It’s such a big shame,” he said.
Present in the court were the victim and her father. The school management was not represented.
Earlier, the police prosecutor, Etim Nkankuk, had asked the court to remand the suspect in prison pending the release of legal advice from the Directorate of Public Prosecutions.
Nkankuk had said the crime was regrettable because it happened within the school premises “where the character of the victim was supposed to be developed and built.”
He said the victim sustained injuries in the course of the act.
The defence counsel, Olaitan Olabode, had insisted that the alleged offence was bailable.
Olatunji, in his rulling said, “The defendant is granted bail in the sum of N300,000 with two sureties in like sum. The sureties should also deposit the sum of N50,000 into the account of the Chief Registrar.
“One of the sureties must be a blood relation of the defendant. The case file should hastily be duplicated for legal advice from the DPP.
“Meanwhile, the defendant is ordered to be remanded in prison, pending the perfection of his bail terms.”
The matter was adjourned till October 15, 2014.

Alcohol dealer sues police over seizure of goods


The owner of a company dealing in alcoholic drinks, Olaide Iyanuoluwa Nigeria Limited, on Tuesday dragged officers of the Nigerian Police before a Federal High Court in Lagos over alleged unlawful seizure of her  alcoholic drinks worth about  N38m.

The alcohol dealer who said the drinks, Baron Romeo, were imported from the Benin Republic,  told the court that the police seized them on the claim that they were stolen.

While praying for an urgent intervention of the court, the alcoholic dealer said she  had been losing about N350,000 daily since her goods were seized on August 2, 2014.

Among other reliefs, she wanted the court to order the police to release her goods and unseal her warehouse with immediate effect.

She was also asking the court to award N150m as damages against the defendants, in addition to N350,000 daily for the number of days the police had held unto the goods.

Joined as defendants in the suit were one Ekulo International Limited, a rival alcohol dealer, the Inspector General of Police and the Commissioner of Police, Lagos State.

While seeking for the leave of the court to hear the case during vacation, counsel for the dealer, Mr. Abiodun Adesanya, said his client would incure  monumental losses if the case was adjourned till after the court’s long vacation.

He said, “If this case  is adjourned, the plaintiff will keep incuring not only a cost of N350,000 a day, the sealing of the warehouse has  also  prevented the company from carrying out its business as usual.”

From Adesanya’s argument, it was gathered that police officers from the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad, Adeniji Adele,  arrested the plaintif’s trucks loaded with bottles of Baron Romero on August 2, 2014.

According to Adesanya, the police officers who came in company of an officer of the first defendant, a rival company, said the plaintif should contact its rival as to why the goods were being seized.

He told the court that apart from towing away the truck numbered AZ8883RB, containing the drinks, the warehouse of the plaintif was also sealed up.

Having been convinced that the matter deserved to be entertained during the court’s vacation, Justice Okon Abang adjourned till August, 13, 2014.

Court stops panel from probing Omisore


Senator Iyiola Omisore
A High Court sitting in Osogbo has ordered the Commission of Enquiry on Disturbance of Public Peace set up by Governor Rauf Aregbesola to put on hold the investigation of Senator Iyiola Omisore.
The Chairman of CEDPP, Justice Moshood Adeigbe, said at the resumed hearing of the panel in Osogbo on Wednesday that the panel had received an interim order from the court stopping it from probing Omisore, pending the ruling on the application filed by him before the court.
Counsel to the petitioner, Mr. Lekan Olayiwola, urged the panel to allow the petitioner to go on with the hearing of the matter despite the interim order of the court.
But the chairman ruled against him, saying the panel would not disobey the order of the court.
He adjourned the sitting till August19, 2014, when he said the court would have determined the application before it.
Aregbesola had set up the panel following an alleged assault on former Governor Isiaka Adeleke by Omisore and the Minister of Police Affairs, Alhaji Jelili Adesiyan.
However, Omisore, who refused to appear before the panel headed to court where he got the interim order.
The panel had summoned Omisore, who is the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party and the minister, following a petition filed before it by Adeleke.
Adeleke alleged that Omisore, Adesiyan and one Sogo Agboola assaulted him when he went to a hotel in Osogbo, where the PDP delegation who came to the state to conduct the party’s primary election had invited all governorship aspirants to a meeting.
Adeleke, who is now a chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress in the state, also alleged that Omisore and Adesiyan threatened to kill him during the meeting.

Sunday, 10 August 2014

Lawyers split over Nigerian 'Top 100' lawyers

Nigerian lawyers are up in arms over the first local attempt to rank Nigeria’s top lawyers. A number are arguing that the release of the Top 100 lawyers by City Lawyer Magazine could be considered ‘advertising’ which is against the Rules of Professional Conduct for Legal Practitioners (RPC). Others are threatening to take the magazine to court over the rankings. One lawyer, Kizito Ude, complained that the hot list “confirms the fact that RPC is an instrument of subjugation in the hands of the so called senior lawyers against the young lawyer.’ Another, Terhemen Oscar Aorabee, said that “once I lay my hands on a copy I am going to sue all the 100 plus their publisher.”
Transparent 
However, a number welcome the listings which they see as positive for the Nigerian legal profession’s global reputation. The article quotes the publishers saying that the ratings will provide the most transparent and definitive referral guide on legal excellence in Nigeria and emphasised that the publishers would not accept payment of any kind for listings. 

International arbitration Africa style

Economic advances in Africa have come at an astonishing pace in recent years. According to the IMF, four of the six fastest growing economies in the world in 2014 will be in Sub-Saharan Africa. Foreign direct investment has also increased dramatically over the last decade, from US$11Bn in 2002 to over US$ 56.3Bn in 2013. Excluding Libya, Africa’s growth is projected to accelerate to 5.3 per cent  in 2014. Drivers for growth include oil production, mining, agriculture, services and domestic demand.
Africa’s vast linguistic and jurisdictional diversity can seem challenging to those looking to invest. The law in Africa is a diverse mix of common, civil, customary and religious law;  Common law being the system of judge made case law, whereas Civil law being the codified collection of written statutes.  Religious and customary laws play a large part in African society, and are only law to the extent that they are recognized by the state.  Alongside the manifold legal framework, there are over 700 (known) languages in Africa, but working languages include English, Arabic, Portuguese and French.
Efficient way to resolve disputes
As Africa has developed economically, so too has the demand for effective and efficient means to resolve disputes between contracting parties and to protect investments. This article explores some of the main considerations regarding dispute resolution for parties doing business in Africa and focuses particularly on the growing use of arbitration, which is fast becoming the dispute resolution mechanism of choice across the continent.
Litigation or Arbitration?
A major factor in the rise of arbitration in Africa is the general reluctance of foreign investors to submit disputes to the local courts of an African country. Largely, the concerns are:
• Lack of impartiality – will a particular African court favour the interests of a party from that same country, or an entity owned by that state, over those of a foreign investor?
• Corruption – is this sufficiently guarded against in the local courts? This is a particular concern where investors are subject to onerous, far-reaching legislation from their own State, for example the UK Bribery Act 2010 or the USA’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act 1977, whilst local parties are not subject to such rigorous anti-corruption regimes.
• Political instability and civil unrest – what will be the effect of any instability on court proceedings?
• Length of proceedings – in Nigeria for instance, cases can take up to 10 years to get through the commercial courts.
Arbitration on the other hand offers a number of advantages:
• Relative ease of enforcement internationally under the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards (the “New York Convention”) and other international instruments.
• Perceived neutrality of arbitrators and the arbitral process.
• Control over the process – parties can, for instance, often select their own arbitrators to hear the dispute and dictate the procedures to be employed.
• Minimised involvement of local courts, which can only be invoked in specific circumstances under the relevant arbitral law being used.
• Parties can choose a neutral or familiar law or set of rules to govern their arbitration, which may also take into account public international law principles.
For all these reasons, international arbitration is becoming the preferred dispute resolution mechanism for international parties doing business in Africa.
Practical considerations for arbitration in Africa
Choice of seat
A fundamental choice that contracting parties must make in relation to arbitration at the outset is where the seat of that arbitration will be, i.e. which country’s laws will govern the procedure of the arbitration and which country’s courts will oversee it.
There are a number of reasons why parties might choose a seat in an African jurisdiction. It may for instance be more cost effective to resolve disputes close to where the parties are doing business, particularly if there are likely to be many witnesses based there, or an African party may insist that an arbitration is seated in Africa.  However, it should be borne in mind that, despite the growth of arbitration across Africa, some African states have been slow to adopt modern arbitration legislation. Accordingly, it is vital that parties weigh up the options carefully before choosing a seat, taking account of all the circumstances.  Some of the key questions to ask are as follows.
Should the seat of the arbitration be the country where the parties are doing business?
There is some advantage to selecting the country where the parties are doing business as the seat of the arbitration.  For instance, the relevant witnesses may be based in that country, therefore making managing any proceedings logistically easier and more cost-effective than if witnesses were required to travel oversees to provide their evidence. It is also the jurisdiction in which most relevant documents are likely to be located, thus avoiding potential complications around removing those documents from that country.  Conversely, having an arbitration seated in an African party’s home state carries the risk in some jurisdictions that the local courts will favour the local entity when ancillary relief is sought. In addition, because arbitration is relatively new to some jurisdictions, the local courts may not be as favourable towards the arbitral process as others, and may seek to hinder it. If this is perceived to the case, a compromise might be still to seat the arbitration in Africa, but in a neutral jurisdiction instead.
What is the applicable arbitral law in the African state?
A key issue in determining the applicable arbitral law is what, if any, arbitration law is in force in the country of seat. An international investor may for instance prefer a state whose arbitration law follows the international norms to which there are accustomed, for example, the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (“UNCITRAL”) Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration (the “Model Law”), or the Uniform Act adopted by members of the Organisation pour l'Harmonisation en Afrique du Droit des Affaires (“OHADA”).
(i) The UNCITRAL Model Arbitration Law
The Model Law is a standard arbitration law prepared and adopted by UNCITRAL that seeks to harmonise arbitration regimes worldwide. In order for it to apply in a particular state, it must be incorporated by a State into its own laws. The Model Law has been adopted in 10 African jurisdictions to date (Tunisia, Egypt, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Madagascar and Mauritius). The Model Law provides a number of useful features, for example:
• parties are free to agree the procedure for appointing arbitrators;
• the procedure for arbitrators to conduct an arbitration must be just and fair from the outset until conclusion;
• local Courts can assist in the arbitration proceedings on a limited basis and as required; and
• it provides for effective enforcement of an arbitral award - the courts can only refuse to enforce an award in limited circumstances.
(ii) OHADA
OHADA is an organisation of 17 African countries, the majority of which are francophone. The OHADA Uniform Act on Arbitration (the “Uniform Act”) will be directly applicable in countries that are OHADA member states and will supersede any domestic arbitration legislation. Enforcement of awards under OHADA is only possible for awards from OHADA members. If you are seeking to enforce an award from a non-OHADA state in an OHADA state or vice versa, you will have to rely on the local laws of the country of enforcement, or relevant international instruments, such as the New York Convention. The Uniform Act is less comprehensive than the Model Law, but shares many of its features, eg parties can choose the procedure for appointing arbitrators, each party must be treated equally and given the opportunity to present its case and an award may only be set aside or enforcement of it refused on certain limited grounds. Unlike under the Model Law however, arbitrators have no express power to award interim measures. However, the Uniform Act is subject to any rules of an arbitration institution that the parties may choose and many of these sets of rules give arbitrators the power to award interim measures.
(iii) Countries that have not adopted the Model Law and are not OHADA members
If a country has not adopted the Model Law and is not a member of OHADA, the arbitration will be subject to the local arbitration law of that state. Most African countries have some form of arbitration law, but their content and application may vary greatly. In this regard, some jurisdictions may be considered “pro” arbitration, whereas others may be seen as arbitration un-friendly, or a bit of both.  In Ghana, for instance, the Ghanaian courts have the power to initiate or recommend a referral to arbitration where the judge is “of the view that the action or a part of the action can be resolved through arbitration” (section 7(1) of the Ghana Alternative Dispute Resolution Act 2010).  However, despite its apparently pro-arbitration law, the resolution of disputes involving the national or public interest, the environment, or the enforcement and interpretation of the constitution by arbitration is prohibited.  Accordingly, parties should consider the governing arbitration law very carefully before committing to a particular jurisdiction.
Where can an award be enforced?
It is vital that an award granted in an arbitration is capable of being enforced in the relevant jurisdictions – particularly if the other party has assets globally.  Accordingly, another primary consideration when deciding whether to seat an arbitration in an African State is whether that State has acceded to any treaty or convention which provides reciprocal arrangements for the enforcement of arbitral awards, such as the New York Convention or OHADA. 32 of the 54 African states have acceded to the New York Convention. This means that an arbitral award granted in arbitrations seated in those states can be enforced in other states that have also acceded to the New York Convention. The Courts of the country where enforcement is sought have only limited grounds on which to reject enforcement, namely if:
• “the agreement is not valid under the law to which the parties have subjected it or, failing any indication thereon, under the law where the award was made.” (Article V(1)(a)); or
• “the recognition or enforcement of the award would be contrary to the public policy of that country.” (Article V(2)(b)).
Other key considerations
Other considerations for parties when choosing the seat of arbitration include:
• Whether judges in a State’s courts are trained in the practice and procedure of arbitration, so that they support the arbitration process and enforce arbitration agreements and awards.
• Anti-arbitration injunctions should only be granted in exceptional cases that warrant the making of such orders, and must deal expeditiously with proceedings involving arbitrations.
• Recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards must be the norm, with refusal only to be made in the circumstances set out in Article V of the New York Convention.
• Security, political stability and corruption (whether real or perceived) should be evaluated.
• The procedure for enforcement of or challenges to arbitral awards should be relatively simple and expeditious.  By way of example, in Nigeria, except for ICSID awards, which are enforced directly by the Supreme Court as the court of first instance, arbitration cases take between four and 10 years to reach the Supreme Court before a final decision is issued in favour of enforcement of the award, or confirming the arbitrability of the subject matter of the dispute.
Selecting a key arbitration centre
Africa has a number of established arbitration centres.  These centres are an attractive alternative to the more traditional arbitration centres of London or Paris, and may well be less costly. Key examples include:
• Mauritius: The London Court of International Arbitration – Mauritian International Arbitration Centre (“LCIA-MIAC”) was formed as a joint venture between the LCIA and Mauritius in 2012, following the enactment of arbitration legislation in Mauritius. The LCIA-MIAC has its own set of rules which are based largely on the LCIA Rules and so may suit those parties who are familiar with arbitrating through the LCIA but want to resolve any disputes in Africa.
• Egypt: The Cairo Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration (“CRCICA”) was established in 1979 and its rules are based on the UNCITRAL Arbitration rules (as revised in 2010), with minor variations relating mainly to the CRCICA’s role as an arbitral institution and an appointing authority. The CRCICA has four branches within Egypt, including one dedicated to specialist maritime arbitration.
• Côte d'Ivoire: If one of the parties is resident in an OHADA state or the business carried out under the contract is performed wholly or partially in an OHADA state, the Uniform Act provides for arbitration administered by the Common Court of Justice and Arbitration (“CCJA”) in Abidjan.
• Rwanda: The Kigali International Arbitration Centre was launched in 2012. Its rules place an emphasis on reducing costs for parties and include measures similar to the recently amended rules of the International Chamber of Commerce (“ICC”), such as the availability of an emergency arbitrator to provide urgent interim relief prior to the constitution of the arbitral tribunal.
Choosing another international arbitration centre or seat
Some parties will prefer to use more traditional arbitration centres such as the LCIA in London or the ICC in Paris.   For instance, in 2012, 5.5 per cent of referrals to the LCIA were made by African parties (including two per cent  from Nigeria), an increase from 4.5 per cent  in 2011.
However, a popular alternative for international investors in Africa is now the Dubai International Finance Centre (the “DIFC”). Dubai is a convenient geographical location for African parties, with frequent direct flights to and from Africa and also enjoys a status as an international commercial hub. The DIFC has reported a threefold increase in enquiries received from African parties in the last year, showing that as the popularity of arbitration has risen in Africa, so too has the demand from African arbitrating parties to arbitrate in Dubai.
Another key attraction of the Middle East for parties contracting in Africa is the availability of enforcement under the Riyadh Convention. Eight out of the 20 Riyadh Convention member states are African countries. These are largely Islamic countries. Five of these states (Algeria, Djibouti, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia) have also acceded to the New York Convention, so parties arbitrating in these countries may have multiple options for enforcing an award. Selecting a Riyadh Convention state may be particularly appropriate where a party is an Islamic entity. Crucially, however, under the Riyadh Convention, enforcement of an award can be refused if the judgment or award is contrary to Shari’a law or the constitution, public policy or good morals of the country where a party is seeking enforcement.
Bilateral Investment Treaties (“BITs”)
An important consideration for international investors in Africa is whether any BIT is applicable to their investment. A BIT is an international treaty between two countries which protects investments by parties from those states, made in each other’s states. BITs generally provide protection from expropriation and guarantee fair and equal treatment, as well as providing for international arbitration as the method for resolving any disputes. BIT disputes are often dealt with by the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes (“ICSID”), which was set up by the World Bank in Washington DC and can provide protection where states are parties to the ICSID Convention - which 48 African States are. Investors and host states must have agreed to submit disputes to ICSID, and this can be done by way of a BIT or contract between parties. Currently there are around 760 BITs in place in Africa, for the most part entered between African states and non-African states. Egypt for example has entered over 100 BITs.
In contrast, South Africa has recently sent notices of termination of its BITs to Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Spain, Switzerland and The Netherlands, which appears to buck the growing trend of international arbitration across the African continent.  Once the relevant notice periods expire, new investments from these countries will no longer be protected under the BITs and disputes will not automatically be resolved by international arbitration. South Africa intends eventually to replace all its BITs with domestic legislation. The  Promotion and Protection of Investment Bill (the “Investment Bill”) will apply to all foreign investments. The Investment Bill provides for a narrower definition of expropriation than that contained in existing BITs and does not make any mention of “fair and equal treatment” of investments by the host State, which is guaranteed by most BITs. The Investment Bill also denies investors the right to have disputes resolved by international arbitration, unless otherwise agreed. Instead, disputes must ordinarily be submitted to the South African courts or domestic arbitration or mediation. At the time of writing, there was no publicly available information about when the Investment Bill might come into force, but a period of public consultation on the Investment Bill ended on 31 January 2014.
Recent developments
As a result of the economic boom in Africa, dispute resolution solutions, and particularly international arbitration, are constantly evolving. Key recent developments include:
• The Democratic Republic of the Congo (“DRC”) adopted the New York Convention in June 2013, but has made four reservations to its adoption.  Two of those reservations are particularly significant. First, enforcement will only be available in the DRC where awards post-date the DRC’s accession. Second, immovable property situated in the DRC is excluded from the application of the New York Convention, thereby excluding mining rights from its ambit. Notwithstanding those points, it is likely that the adoption of the New York Convention will increase the attraction of the DRC as an arbitration destination.
• A number of new arbitration centres are expected to open soon. In Kenya, the Nairobi International Arbitration Centre is expected to start receiving cases at some stage this year. The International Chamber of Commerce has also recently announced that it plans to establish an arbitration centre in Ghana.
• In a recent decision, the Nigerian Court of Appeal in Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation v. Statoil (Nigeria) Limited and Others refused to grant an injunction to halt arbitral proceedings, as to do so would undermine the parties’ agreement to submit the dispute to arbitration. This has been welcomed as evidence to show that courts in Africa are supportive, rather than obstructive to the arbitral process. 
Africa as an arbitration destination
Hand in hand with the increasing opportunity in Africa for foreign investors is the need for there to be a means of resolving disputes that is both neutral and cost effective. International arbitration in Africa is starting to fulfil this need. Investors should be encouraged by this trend, but must be wary of the important considerations when choosing a jurisdiction in which to seat an arbitration.
The increasing number of arbitration centres in Africa shows that countries are seeking to attract foreign investment, while at the same time providing easy access to an independent arbitral forum. States are also, generally, showing a greater willingness to accede to internationally recognised enforcement regimes and the local courts are becoming increasingly familiar with arbitration as a valid method of resolving disputes. If the 21st Century is indeed to be “Africa’s century”, the development of international arbitration in Africa must be a key part of this.

Barristers can be fearless, but they must keep to the rules

Our criminal justice system relies on advocates who keep to the rules
Conviction of Lawrence McNulty over his defence of Munir Farooqi helps maintain integrity of criminal justice system
How fearless can a barrister afford to be when representing a defendant at a criminal trial? That was the question I asked here exactly six months ago. The answer, we learned this week, is not as fearless as Lawrence McNulty was when he represented Munir Farooqi at a terrorist trial in the summer of 2011. A disciplinary tribunal of the inns of court has nowconvicted McNulty on four charges of professional misconduct arising from Farooqi’s trial, while acquitting the barrister of a fifth.
The five-person tribunal, chaired by a retired circuit judge, decided that McNulty should be suspended from practice for four months. However, that sentence is itself suspended pending an appeal by the barrister against the tribunal’s findings, which is unlikely to be resolved by the high court before next year.
Four months off work is not as severe as the disciplinary penalty given last week to a vet whose love of animals went further than was decent: Oliver Fraser Lown was struck off for professional misconduct. Even so, McNulty’s suspension shows how seriously the bar regards behaviour that risks prejudicing the administration of justice.
In a closely-typed 31-page ruling, the tribunal recalled that Farooqi had been convicted with two others of engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism. It was the Crown’s case that the defendant had used a market stall in Manchester to radicalise vulnerable young men and encourage them to engage in violent jihad in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The main evidence against Farooqi came from two undercover police officers, who had posed as isolated and vulnerable individuals. They recorded conversations with the defendants over the course of a year.
At the trial, McNulty argued that the undercover officers had set a trap for his client. That meant, according to the barrister, that Farooqi could rely on a defence of entrapment. But the judge, Mr Justice Henriques, ruled that no such defence existed as a matter of law. If it had existed, then McNulty would have been required by law to raise it before the trial had started rather than after two-and-a-half months of evidence and argument.
The main disciplinary charge against McNulty related to his delay in asking for the case to be thrown out on grounds of entrapment. Other charges related to what he had said in his closing speech to the jury.
Dismissing Farooqi’s appeal against conviction and sentence last summer, the then lord chief justice Lord Judge said that McNulty made a personal attack on Henriques and others that was “quite astonishing”. The judge continued:
The comparison drawn between the judge and a dishonest seller of worthless goods was intolerable. The suggestion that some of the counsel for the co-defendants whose approach to the trial was different to his own should be regarded as “sucking-up” to the judge was reprehensible …
This was not fearless advocacy, with the advocate necessarily standing firm in the interests of his client in the best traditions of the bar. Advocacy of the kind employed by Mr McNulty would rapidly destroy a system for the administration of justice which depends on a sensible, as we have emphasised, respectful working relationship between the judge and independent minded advocates responsibly fulfilling their complex professional obligations. It is difficult to avoid reflecting that this behaviour, particularly during the later stages of the trial, had as its ultimate purpose the derailment of the trial by the creation of pressure on the judge to discharge the jury before they retired to consider their verdicts or to procure favourable verdicts by illegitimate means.
These findings by the court of appeal were deliberately kept from the disciplinary tribunal. But, after a six-day hearing, the tribunal members found that McNulty had failed to give the necessary notice of his application to have the charges stayed:
We have asked ourselves whether we are satisfied so that we are sure that the lack of disclosure to the court and to the prosecution was the result of one or more deliberate tactical decisions on Mr McNulty’s part. Having observed him giving evidence for the better part of two days, and noting his apparent total command of his own faculties and the material in the case, we are sure that it was. We have also come to the conclusion that the conduct complained of was prejudicial to the administration of justice because the trial proceeded on a false basis, the prosecution were unable to deal in evidence with matters underlying the applications and the risk of an adjournment was created.
Turning to the allegation that McNulty had deliberately contravened the judge’s ruling by advancing an argument based on entrapment to the jury in his closing speech, the disciplinary tribunal found the charge proved. McNulty’s “allegations were completely unfounded and his conduct had the potential to undermine public confidence in the legal profession and the administration of justice”, it said.
The barrister was given four months’ suspension on each of these two charges, to be served concurrently. He was also given two months’ suspension, concurrently with the other sentences, for a “deliberate and misguided attempt to undermine the authority of the judge and to neutralise his summing-up” and for impugning police witnesses by making allegations that he had failed to give them an opportunity to answer.
Delivering a short but powerful speech in mitigation, William Clegg QC said McNulty had lost all sense of judgment in the case and behaved in a way that he had not done previously or subsequently. He referred to the great strain McNulty must have been under, living away from home during a lengthy trial. Adrian Darbyshire QC, representing the Bar Standards Board which regulates the profession, confirmed that there were no allegations of dishonesty against McNulty and that he was not seeking any particular sentence.
This whole case must have cost a great deal of money to prosecute and try, most of which will have to be borne by other barristers. Was it worth it? Despite his counsel’s failings, Farooqi’s trial proceeded to a verdict and his sentence of life imprisonment with a minimum of nine years was upheld.
My answer is that it was certainly worth it, for the reasons expressed by the former lord chief justice. Our criminal justice system relies on advocates who keep to the rules. Any failure to meet the high standards set by the regulators must be exposed for all to see. Nothing else will deter its repetition.