Wednesday, 2 April 2014

NBA Warri Petitions I-G over Killing of Two Members

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Warri Branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has petitioned the Inspector-General of Police (I-G) over the gruesome killing last week of two lawyers at Ozoro, Isoko North Local Government Area of Delta State while on their way to the court.

The lawyers are demanding that justice be done in the case involving two of their defenceless, law-abiding colleagues, Messrs Horace Eguono Dafioghor and Samuel Ekuwangju who were shot dead en route to the High Court Ozoro for a ruling in the petition filed by the deceased.

The late lawyers, who were both from the Whytfort Jurisconsult Chambers located on Udu Road, Ovwian Town in Delta State, were initially simply said to be handling a certain "high-profile case" when they were gunned down in cold blood.

Details to follow

APC asks CJN to sanction judge

 
The All Progressives Congress on Tuesday asked the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloma Mukhtar, to sanction Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja  for engaging in mischief capable of bringing the  Bench into disrepute.
The party accused Ademola of going beyond “the reliefs” sought by the ruling  Peoples Democratic  Party  in its suit by restraining  its lawmakers  from engaging in any act that could lead to a change of leadership in  the House of Representatives.
It, however, said in a statement by its Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, that  it was wrong for anyone  to insinuate that Ademola  ordered   its lawmakers who defected from the   Peoples Democratic Party to vacate their seats in the House.
According to the party,  the judge lacked the competence to  deliver such a verdict since the issue of whether or not the lawmakers  could  defect was not before him.
The  party  said it would  appeal the ruling  since Ademola’s perpetual injunction  was  not only unconstitutional, but also defeated  the very purpose for which the legislators were elected into the House.
“Justice Ademola’s unsolicited comments were clearly gregarious, unnecessary, and superfluous and have no foundation in law or fact, hence should be ignored,” it advised.
The statement partly reads,“APC asked the CJN  to act urgently to sanction Justice Ademola for engaging in mischief that could bring the Bench into disrepute.
“If this case had been issued a day later than Monday, we would have said the judge was caught in the web of April fool. Alas, he indeed made the ruling on Monday, hence the need for us to take it very seriously for several reasons.
“Firstly, the question whether the House of Representatives members should vacate their seats was not a question before Justice Ademola for determination.
“The only question for him to determine was whether the APC members, with their numerical strength at that time, had the right to change the House leadership such as the Majority Leader, Chief Whip and their deputies. So, Justice Ademola had no business commenting on seats being vacated.”
The APC also said it was  highly unprofessional and unethical for a judge to delve into a matter that  was  subjudice in another court.
It  stated that the question of seats being vacated or otherwise was  being heard by Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the same  Federal High Court in Abuja, who on  March 29,  2014, said the issue was still   before him and was  not ripe for judgment.
The APC recalled that it had on December  14, 2013 warned against any attempt by the PDP and the Presidency to turn back the hands of the clock as far as the cleaning up of the Judiciary  was concerned, by inducing a   disreputable judge to do its bidding.
The party urged its supporters not to panic as the judgment was clearly intended to cause mischief, adding that the plan by the PDP and the Presidency had  fallen like a pack of cards.
Also in Abuja, the Minority Whip of the House, Mr. Sampson Osagie, accused Ademola of taking sides with the PDP-led Federal Government in delivering the judgment.
Osagie, who led members of the APC caucus  to a news conference  shortly after the House rose on Tuesday, also accused the judge of    overstepping  his bounds by “injecting opinions” not sought in the originating suit .
He  recalled that all that the PDP sought in the case was to restrain the lawmakers from effecting a change in the leadership of the House.
He noted that the PDP had hinged the prayer on the fear that by APC’s growing numerical strength in the House, its  lawmakers  could change the leadership of the House.
The lawmaker  argued that the judge’s action had made Nigerians to give several interpretations to the verdict.
“The only import of the judgment is that the defected lawmakers  cannot participate in the removal of the leadership of the House. There is nothing more to it; the judge was not called to offer any other personal opinion,” Osagie added.
He said,  “Our colleagues have appealed the judgment, a copy of which has been served on the House.”
The  legislator described the development as an act of “desperation” by the PDP to cling on to power in the face of the opposition by the APC.
“What we are experiencing is the high-handedness of a ruling PDP government that is desperate to hang on to power”, he said.
He assured Nigerians that the APC would remain focused in the face of the alleged manipulation by the PDP to hold on to power.
The PDP caucus remained calm on Tuesday, contrary to expectations that its  members would raise the matter on the floor.
The session started and ended without a mention of the court judgment.
The only noticeable reaction on the floor was that the PDP members were seen jeering jokingly at some of the  defected  lawmakers, urging them to “return home.”
The APC members were heard responding, “no shaking”, “no going back”, “APC for life” and “forget the  PDP.”
However, The PUNCH gathered that the calmness in the PDP  camp was due to a few minutes meeting the members held preceding the sitting.
At the meeting, which was convened by the Majority Leader of the House, Mulikat Akande-Adeola, the caucus reportedly reviewed the  judgment and agreed to maintain calm until they had been served with a copy of the judgment.
“There is no point taking any hasty decisions without first being served a copy of the judgment officially,” a member of the caucus  told The PUNCH.
When contacted on why the caucus was silent on the judgment, the  Deputy Majority Leader, Mr. Leo Ogor, replied that further reactions would await the service of the judgment.
Ogor said, “We are waiting to be served a copy of the judgment.  We don’t have a copy for now served formally on us.”
Asked whether his position was the  outcome  of the meeting held before the sitting, he replied, “That is what I am telling you.  We have not been served with the copy of the judgment.”
Efforts made by our correspondents  to get the  PDP   spokesperson, Chief Olisa Metuh, to comment on the verdict were not successful.
Metuh, who was said to be attending a retreat in Bayelsa State, did not  pick his call.
He also  did not respond to a text message sent to his mobile telephone  line.

LAWYER OF THE WEEK : FUNKE ADEKOYA

 
Funke Adekoya, the managing partner at AELEX Legal Practitioners and Arbitrators is a seasoned legal practitioner.  In recognition of her track record of success in the legal sector, Adekoya was elevated to the rank of Senior Advocate of Nigeria in 2001, the 5th woman to be so honoured with the highest rank in legal practice. A woman of great intellect, she was appointed Notary Public in 1986 and voted as the Most Outstanding Female Legal Practitioner of the Year 2007 by Financial Standard Newspaper and Women Entrepreneurs African Network. She is a member of the Body of Benchers since 1999 and was privileged to become a Life Bencher in March 2007.

FG to Set up Special Court to Try Pipeline Vandals, Power Station Saboteurs

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The Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public Affairs, Dr. Doyin Okupe, yesterday disclosed the decision of the federal government to set up a special court to try pipeline vandals in the country.
Okupe, who disclosed this at the end of a one-day summit for all State Publicity Secretaries of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, said the establishment of the special court to facilitate quick prosecution of vandals and saboteurs would also be backed by a decision for troop deployment to areas prone to pipeline vandalism.
Okupe said though the repairs on the vandalised and blown gas pipelines had commenced throughout the country in order to restore regular supply to the existing power plants and raise the power generated up to the targeted 7,000 mega watts, the war against vandals and saboteurs would be executed in line with the ongoing security action against insurgency and terrorism in some parts of the nation.
According to him: "These people have resolved to continue to play a dangerous political game. They know that all things being equal, President Jonathan will deliver on the promise of regular power supply, and once he does that, the people will vote him into office for second term. Those who are unrelenting at querying the capability of the president to deliver have resolved to sabotage the effort and destroy the Nigerian dream."
"When I spoke with the Managing Director of the Niger Delta Power Holding Company, James Olotu and was told that inaugurating or not, the power plants are not operational due to lack of gas supply. The $16billion project lies in waste due to lack of gas supply.
“They want to kill the Nigerian dream and this is why the president has not been able to deliver on his promise. If the saboteurs had allow the transformation plan to be operational, we would have hit the target of generating over 300 per cent of what was generated in the past. In all these, they are not only aiming at the President but trying to kill the dream of regular power supply to the people."
He noted that the preliminary investigation conducted by the federal government had shown that the saboteurs, suspected to be members of opposition political parties and groups, are ready to lay their lives down to frustrate the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan in the power sector.

Okupe however, announced that the security action planned against vandals and saboteurs may last between six and eight weeks.
"This period will be the lowest for the nation in terms of power generation. When the battle is started and the repairs completed, more power projects will become operational and power supply will improve."

On the proposed conversion of Liquefied Natural Gas for domestic use and power generation, Okupe, said the management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) had commenced arrangement for the domestication of the LNG with the proposed building of conversion plants close to the existing NIPP plants.