A 20-man group of Senior
Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) under the aegis of the Justice Reform Project (JRP)
on Tuesday said Chief Justice Walter Onnoghen’s resignation was not enough in
view of “the grave nature of the allegations” against him.
Urging the Federal
Government to sanction other judges whose legitimate earnings do not justify
their wealth, the group said justice should run its course in the Onnoghen
matter.
According to JRP, extending
the anti-graft exercise to other judges will restore confidence in the
Judiciary and dampen the impression that the former Chief Justice of Nigeria
(CJN) was being victimised.
The group, set up to push
for reforms in the judiciary/legal profession, is led by one of the oldest
SANs, Mr Ebun Sofunde. Jibrin Okutepa, Dr Babatunde Ajibade, Prof Ernest
Ojukwu, Osaro Eghobamien, Mrs Funke Adekoya, Kayode Sofola, among others, are
members.
In a statement, JRP said it
noted Onnoghen’s resignation “with concern”, but added that the matter should
not end there.
“His resignation/voluntary
retirement is not an answer to these allegations and the JRP expects that
justice, which is no respecter of persons or position, will be allowed to take
its course,” it said.
JRP urged the Federal
Government to look beyond Onnoghen for three reason main reasons.
“Beyond Honourable Justice
W. S. N. Onnoghen, however, the JRP believes the revelations that have been
made in the course of this affair necessitate that urgent steps be taken to
identify and sanction all other Nigerian judicial officers who are found to
possess inexplicable wealth that cannot be reconciled with their legitimate
income or their asset declarations, two of the allegations made against Justice
Onnoghen.
“These steps are necessary
for a variety of reasons. First, to restore public confidence in the judiciary
and disabuse the notion that all judicial officers in Nigeria are corrupt and
that justice is for sale.
“Second, to disabuse the
notion that Justice Onnoghen’s travails are a mere witch-hunt motivated by
ethnic and political interests rather than the result of a genuine concern for
sanitising and reforming the Nigerian judiciary.
“Third, to eliminate the
suspicion that the Executive arm of government is using the information it has
access to by virtue of its control over the apparatus of the state to take
selective action only against those judicial officers that fail to do its
bidding.”
Besides, the group said
Onnoghen’s response to allegations by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) before the National Judicial Council (NJC) raised significant
questions about how heads of courts manage the judiciary’s funds.
Meanwhile, Legit.ng had
reported that suspended Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Walter Onnoghen
reportedly said that he never confessed to hiding his bank accounts even as the
prosecution claims he is guilty.
This is coming as the Code
of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), which is trying Onnoghen, is said to have fixed
judgment for Thursday, April 18.
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