Skip to main content

NJC Looking Like Justice Ademola's Defense Counsel, Says Presidential Aide

Mr. Obono-Obla's view was based on the the claim of the NJC that there is no valid and subsisting appeal against the ruling delivered by Justice Okeke discharging and acquitting Justice Ademola and two others of corruption charges.

Special Assistant to the President on Prosecutions, Mr. Okoi Obono-Obla, has hinted that the National Judicial Commission  (NJC) is beginning to have the appearance of the defense counsel to Justice A. Ademola, who was recently cleared of corruption charges by Justice Jude Okeke of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory. Mr. Obono-Obla's view was based on the the claim of the NJC that there is no valid and subsisting appeal against the ruling delivered by Justice Okeke discharging and acquitting Justice Ademola and two others of corruption charges. 

The presidential aide, in an exclusive chat with SaharaReporters, said the claim made by the NJC in a statement issued on Saturday is grossly misleading. Contrary to what the NJC claimed, said Mr. Obono-Obla, there is a valid and subsisting appeal against Justice Okeke's ruling.

"The ruling appealed against was delivered on 5 April. We filed a Notice of Appeal on the 7 April 2017. The law gives us 90 days to file Notice of Appeal from the date of delivery of the ruling. We also filed additional grounds of Appeal on the 6 June. The period for us to compile records will start to run from 7 June to expire on 8 August 2017," said Mr. Obono-Obla. 

However, he added, the court of Appeal invited both parties to attend court on 6 June to reconcile records of Appeal. He maintained that as long as the Notice of Appeal has not been struck out, the appeal remains valid and pending. He wondered if the NJC has transmuted into a defense counsel to Justice Ademola. 

"Why is the NJC descending into the arena? Is the NJC not supposed to be neutral? A judge that has been arrested, interrogated, released on bail, docked and tried for corruption has lost the credibility, integrity and moral authority to be a judge. He should leave the bench in the interest of the integrity of the judiciary. A judge must be above any modicum of suspicion; scrupulously clean. A judge must be like Caesar 's wife. I call on the NJC to recommend to Mr. President the dismissal and retirement of all judges that have been arrested and questioned by law enforcement agencies and those standing trial, including the one that was tried and acquitted," he said. 

Image

Topics
Legal