A Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Prof. Yemi
Akinseye-George, has called on the Corruption and Financial Crimes Cases Trial
Monitoring Committee (COTRIMCO) to bring to the public domain the list of high
profile cases it is monitoring.
Akinseye-George said the call became necessary
owing to the public outcry against some members of COTRIMCO, who are said to be
counsel to some of the high profile defendants.
He was speaking at a stakeholders’ conference to
Review Implementation of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA)
2015, organised by Centre for Socio-Legal Studies (CSLS) in Abuja.
COTRIMCO was recently inaugurated by the Chief
Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen, to serve as a check on the
excesses of those described as bad eggs among the judges.
However, in his welcome address, Akinseye-George
who also doubled as President of CSLS, said: “The NJC monitoring committee on
high profile corruption cases should make public the list of high profile
corruption cases they are monitoring. The CJN referred to a list of over one
thousand corruption cases.
“The committee now headed by Justice Galadima
should urgently make its modus operandi public. There have been strident calls
by observers that some members of the committee cannot be expected to monitor
cases they are defending in courts. This is a major issue which must be
addressed urgently.”
The president also called on civil society organisations
and the media to follow closely the activities of the committee as well as the
extent of compliance by heads of courts with the CJN’s directives.
He noted that the ACJA and the Administration of
Criminal Justice Law (ACJL) in the last two years have had positive impact on
justice delivery in the country, and urged governments and the NJC to
“deliberately invest more in improving the welfare of judges, investigators and
prosecutors in order to make them less vulnerable to the corrupting influence
of high profile defendants.”
While urging the Supreme Court to sustain the
progress made with the ACJA as relating to prohibition of stay of proceedings
in criminal trial, with particular reference to Olisa Metuh v. FRN, the senior advocate
called for the introduction of new practice directions to address loopholes so
far observed in the implementation of the ACJA.
He also called for attention to be focused on
activities of investigators, prosecutors and witnesses, adding that “no matter
how well-constituted the specialised courts are, they cannot achieve much
without the compliment of effective prosecutors and defence lawyers.
“A situation where prosecutors are not
forthcoming with their witnesses or defence lawyers engaged in deliberate delay
tactics cannot augur well for speedy dispensation of justice.”
Other speakers at the conference however, called for
adequate funding of the implementation of the provisions of the ACJA.
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