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Access to Justice faults CCT on Onnoghen

Access to Justice (A2Justice), a non profit organization, has faulted the decision of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) which convicted the former Chief Justice…

Access to Justice (A2Justice), a non profit organization, has faulted the decision of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) which convicted the former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Walter Onnoghen, on false declaration of assets.

This is coming on the heels of the 16 grounds of appeal filed at the Court of Appeal, Abuja by Onnoghen immediately after the CCT judgment on Thursday.

Joseph Otteh, the Director, A2J, in a chat with Daily Trust yesterday, said a cardinal rule of law requirement is that courts and tribunals which exercise judicial powers should be independent of other arms of government and appear in the perception of reasonable observers, to be so independent.

“Unfortunately, the CCT did not offer this guarantee of independence, neither its perception, far from it. The CCT had from the word go, drawn the handwriting on the wall indicating that it was bent on a particular outcome, and that it would look neither to the left nor to the right in the blind pursuit of that goal”, he said.

He said that undoubtedly, Onnoghen’s trial before the CCT was in every way, grossly and grievously unfair, and no fair-minded court or tribunal could have descended to the depths the CCT delved in trying to convict Onnoghen on the charges against him in order to remove him from office.

The CCT, according to him, was so desperate to convict Onnoghen that it had to overturn or side-step its previous judgments on similar matters, decisions such as those given in a prior case involving another Justice of the Supreme Court.