Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and a holder of the national title of office of the order of the Niger which ranks as one amongst the tops in national roll of honors has served Nigeria creditably for nearly five years as Federal Attorney General and minister of Justice.
Whilst he served his father land by virtue of the executive appointment extended to him by then President Dr Goodluck Jonathan, Mr Adoke (SAN) successfully saw to the passage and endorsement into law of the Administration of justice Act; Cybercrimes prevention Act (2015) and also worked tirelessly to preserve the sanctity of the Rule of Law. Interestingly, Mr Adoke got free hands from the appointing authority because his stay in office enjoyed relative and comparative stability in the political annals of the nation State.
Upon his (Mr Adoke SAN)exit on may 29th 2015 and the subsequent emergence of another democratic dispensation for another four years under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, the country has just welcomed the new minister of justice and Federal Attorney General in the person of another Senior Advocate of Nigeria Mr Abubakar Malami from Kebbi State, in the North-West of Nigeria.
The new minister said he would hit the ground running to ensure that he truly brings justice to bear on all violators of the Nigerian law. He indeed has a handful of prosecutions to anchor because of the obvious reality that at this period of our national life when impunity and disrespect to the tenets of our constitution have all but become the hallmark of our political experience. We are living at a time that most Nigerians know that justice is now for the highest bidder and bribery and corruption of judges have reached unprecedented height, thereby necessitating the cacophony of calls for justice sector reforms. Rich litigants now have a way of using their financial powers to muscle their ways through and obtain fraudulent verdicts to the consternation of all right thinking patriotic Nigerians.
For instance, the terrain of the justice system in Nigeria is littered with several cases of unresolved crimes such as the murder while in office in 2003 of the then Federal Attorney General and Minister of Justice Chief Bola Ige (SAN).
As a matter of public policy the new minister of justice has already listed out his areas of thematic preferences to include the strict enforcement of the law, to end the specter of impunity; pursuit of the implementation of the new administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), to enhance quick dispensation of justice.
The Minister of Justice should reinvigorate the office of public prosecutor and build up effective and efficient capacity to the highest professional dimension of all the lawyers in his office, who must patriotically implement the agenda of the new government. The office of the Federal Attorney General is obliged to partner with the Attorney Generals of the 36 States and the justice department officers of the ministry of Federal Capital Territory to ensure that prosecution of crimes follows constitutional timelines and that the system is not compromised and corrupted which inevitably slows down prosecution.
The Federal Ministry of Justice must also ensure that it sets up a functional desk directly under the purview of the minister to relate and partner with credible civil society groups working in the human rights and justice sector.
As a way of providing professional oversight, the Federal Ministry of Justice must set up a workable and user friendly website whereby all cases filed in the different courts are uploaded and minute-to-minute details and follow ups are uploaded. The political mantra of change popularised by President Muhammadu Buhari must be implemented in the justice sector for good governance to take effective roots in modern day Nigeria.
The Ministry of Justice headed by Mr Abubakar Malami should also upload the case list with such details as the parties, the particulars of prosecution, the forum of such trial and the contact person to relate with should further information be sort.
There is the need for the ministry to begin vigorous advocacy campaigns, enlisting the participation of the justice sector and human rights oriented civil society groups to get all the states of the federation to sign and implement the Freedom of Information Act of 2011 and the Child Rights Act (2003). The AGF should vigorously pursue the passage and implementation of an effective whistle blowers’ protection legislation, so that all acts of brazen corruption by political office holders of all dimensions are exposed, named, shamed and put to criminal trial in competent courts of law.
Still speaking about prosecution of criminal cases let the Federal Attorney General not allow untrained police operatives to ever handle prosecution of cases such as terrorism, murder and corruption related matters, as doing so will further expand the frontiers of impunity in Nigeria.
The Nigerian state must set up institutional mechanisms for the swift, decisive and effective prosecution of all terrorism related and financial and economic crimes. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and The Independent and Corrupt Practices and related offences commission must be merged and tested and trusted experts retained and motivated to carry out comprehensive anti-graft fight.
Onwubiko is Head of Human Rights Writers Associations of Nigeria (HURIWA).