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On professional conduct & professional development…

By Steve Sun

‎Professional “Conduct” as the name implies, has to do with those things, which members of any given profession have to be mindful of, so as not to bring the profession into disrepute.

‎A male lawyer for instance, can sleep with his female client even if she’s married.
‎This type of conduct is certainly morally condemnable, but will not be classified as professional misconduct.

‎Recently, there was actually a case of a female lawyer who was doing a divorce matter for her female client and then went ahead to marry the ex-husband of her female client immediately after the divorce.🤪😂
‎One woman’s trash is another woman’s treasure indeed.🤪😂😂

‎If a male gynaecologist on the other hand, sleeps with his patient, whether she’s married or not and whether it’s consensual or not, he can land himself in serious trouble with the authorities, including of course the MDCN.

‎Conversely, if a sick patient gives five thousand dollars in cash to his medical doctor for safekeeping and along the line, the doctor uses $1k for an emergency; he can always return the money to his patient later and it won’t be a problem; but as a lawyer, you dare not tamper with your client’s money which happens to be in your possession! You could get yourself disbarred.

‎Upskilling or CPD, on the other hand, has nothing to do with professional conduct as Chief Ozekhome SAN recently opined in his well-considered treatise.
‎Incorporating the so-called MCPD into our Rules of Professional Conduct is therefore evidently ultra vires the powers of the NBA and/or the GCB; and we shall soon be asking the FCT High Court to so hold.

‎There is, however, a bifurcation of the Legal Profession, unlike the medical profession.
‎There is the Bar and there is the Bench.

‎Of course, an incompetent lawyer can do irreparable damage to a case, but if a client realizes that a lawyer is incompetent, such incompetent counsel can be debriefed and a more competent lawyer will take over; but if a litigant realizes that a Judge is incompetent, there’s little or nothing that can be done. You can only apply for reassignment or recusal on grounds of bias and not on grounds of perceived incompetence.
‎An incompetent Judge is therefore a serious danger to the general public, unlike an incompetent lawyer.

‎That is why Niki Tobi, Justice of the Supreme Court of Nigeria (of blessed memory) stated that the law is the Judge’s clientele.
‎The full quote goes as follows: There are times when counsel ask for a relief with the full knowledge that the law is not on the side of his client. In such a situation, counsel merely tests the legal strength of the Judge, who in his capacity as the unbiased umpire and master and expert of the law, should give judgment according to the law. While the parties are the clients of the lawyers, the law is the Judge’s, clientele and constituency and he must apply it properly without fear or Favour. That is the oath he took on the day he was sworn in as a Judge qua judex. See Inakoju & Ors,. v. Adeleke & Ors. (2007), 4 NWLR (Part 1025) 423.

‎The point being made, therefore, is that MANDATORY CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT should be for the bench and not for the Bar.

‎While CPD should be encouraged for the Bar, it should be mandatory for the Bench, because a lot could go wrong when society is confronted with Magistrates, Judges and Justices who are not very competent. Because why should some Justices now upend the Marriage Act by suggesting that the Act allows polygamy for Muslims?
‎NO, IT DOESN’T!

‎The NBA, as a major stakeholder in the justice sector, should therefore channel its energy and resources towards strengthening the National Judicial Institute (NJI) so that our courts (especially our superior courts) can be armed with the much-needed requisite expertise and so that they can evolve with the times and not be left behind.

‎Of course, we all know that the NBA’s aggressive push for the so-called MCPD obviously has to do with beefing up their revenue stream and nothing more!Nevertheless, it’s important to x-ray the legal arguments for the unsuspecting members of the legal profession and indeed for the benefit of the unsuspecting members of the general public.

‎Let lawyers breathe.
‎Thanks for your attention.

Steve Sun🌞
‎President/Founder, ADLAW.

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

Time for NBA Owerri to stand out and stand tall, or henceforth remain a timid dwarf

By Chinedu Agu

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE CHAIRMAN, NIGERIAN BAR ASSOCIATION, OWERRI.

There was once a town where a chief priest was the custodian of truth and justice. The people looked up to him to speak whenever evil men defiled the land. But when thieves began to plunder the market, he said nothing. When warriors began to terrorise widows and orphans, he turned his eyes away. Seeing that the one who ought to speak was silent, the wrongdoers grew bolder, their hands heavier, their cruelty without shame. In time, the people began to whisper: “If the custodian of truth no longer speaks, then truth itself is dead.” Thus, the town sank deeper into rot, not because evil was powerful, but because the voice that should have rebuked it chose to remain mute. And as the Latin maxim reminds us, corruptio optima pessima est — the corruption of the best is indeed the worst.

Prof. Wole Soyinka, Africa’s first Nobel Laureate in Literature, captured this tragedy in words that ring louder with each passing day: “The man dies in all who keep silent in the face of tyranny.” The graveyard of nations is filled not merely with the bones of tyrants, but with the silence of men who should have spoken.

Mr. Chairman, I write with a heavy heart because silence, especially the silence of the Nigerian Bar Association Owerri Branch, has become deafening in the face of judicial desecration in Imo State. Our bar, once the bastion of courage, now carries the burden of complicity through its muteness. And as it is said in our villages, when the flute refuses to play in the festival, the masquerade dances awkwardly. Today, governance in Imo State dances awkwardly because we, the Bar as a pressure group, have refused to play the flute.

Imo State groans today under the weight of the collapse of the justice sector:

  1. Since May, we have had no Attorney-General, the chief law officer of the State, as though the law itself is in exile.
  2. Since 15 November 2024, there has been no Acting Chief Judge, a travesty unknown to any constitutional democracy.
  3. Vacation Courts, which serve as the last refuge for the oppressed during recess, are absent, leaving our people to the cruel jaws of detention without trial.
  4. The Tiger Base Unit of the Nigerian Police now struts about like a militia, detaining, brutalising, and humiliating citizens with reckless abandon, knowing that there is no functioning judiciary to check their excesses.

Yet, Mr. Chairman, in all these, NBA Owerri has chosen to stand aloof, as though silence is a mark of wisdom, when indeed silence here is nothing but cowardice dressed in borrowed robes.

I dare say: if Owerri Bar cannot rise when the judiciary is in chains, when will it rise? If it cannot speak when citizens are brutalised without access to courts, when will it speak? If it cannot defend the sanctity of the justice system, then of what use is its toga of nobility?

It is for this reason, Mr. Chairman, that I urge you: do not wait until the next monthly General Meeting. Summon an emergency meeting of the branch this week, where these matters will be placed squarely before the Bar. Justice delayed is justice denied; so too, action delayed is action lost.

Mr. Chairman, let me remind you that the noble motto of the Nigerian Bar Association is “Promotion of Rule of Law.” This is not a hollow chant for banners and letterheads; it is a solemn charge that we, as officers in the temple of justice, must live out daily. To promote the rule of law is to resist lawlessness, whether it comes from government, police, or even the judiciary itself. To promote the rule of law is to speak when others are gagged, to act when others are paralysed. It is to rise tall where others crouch in compromise.

This is why I titled this letter, “Time for NBA Owerri to Stand Out and Stand Tall, or Henceforth Remain a Timid Dwarf.”

History will not forgive a Bar that refused to stand out when its people were devoured. Posterity will not remember us for our dinners, AGC appearances, or football trophies; it will remember us for whether we stood tall when justice was on its knees.

Mr. Chairman, it is time to choose:

Will NBA Owerri continue to be a timorous dwarf, hiding in the shadows of compromise, or will it stand out and stand tall as the conscience of the society?

Will you, as Chairman, choose the applause of transient political masters, or the enduring honour of history’s verdict?

Will you remain silent, waiting for another voice, or will you, like the trumpet in the night, rouse the conscience of the Bar and the people?

The NBA in Owerri must demand the immediate swearing-in of the Acting Chief Judge; the immediate appointment of not just a constitutionally-qualified but also suitable lawyer as the Attorney-General; and the dismantling of the Tiger Base terror machinery. Anything less is a betrayal of our oath, our calling, and our history.

And if these demands are not met in seven (7) days, then the Bar must wield its ultimate weapon of protest: a total boycott of the courts in Imo State, upon resumption. For what courts do we attend when there is no Chief Judge? What justice do we seek when the seat of the chief law officer is untenanted? What dignity do we preserve when the police are the only judges in town? To continue to file processes and argue motions in such a hollow system is to confer legitimacy on illegality.

Sometimes silence is treason, but at other times, continued participation in a charade is complicity.

We cannot forget that in not-so-distant times, when the administration of Owelle Rochas Anayo Okorocha trampled heavily on the rule of law in Imo State, the administrations of NBA Owerri then stood firm and resisted the onslaught. Those Chairmen — from Ama Akalonu to S.C. Imo, SAN, from L.U.N. Nwakaeti to D.O. Nosike — refused to bend, and in doing so, they wrote the name of the branch, and theirs in gold. That proud legacy is what gives weight to the name “NBA Owerri” today.

It is that tradition of standing out, standing tall, and rejecting dwarfism that must not be lost, for once a Bar that once stood tall learns to crouch, it risks being remembered only for its silence.

To remain quiet in times such as this is to endorse tyranny. To speak is to stand tall, even if alone. And as it is said, the tree that refuses to bend in the storm is not weak—it is remembered as strong.

Mr. Chairman, the choice is yours: Stand out and stand tall, or henceforth remain a timid dwarf.

Chinedu Agu
Past Secretary, NBA Owerri and Member, Advisory Council.
7 September, 2025.

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

On El-Rufai, Aláròká and terrorists

By Lasisi Olagunju

Why did Bola Tinubu offend Nasir El-Rufai? He should have kept him. There are three principalities the Yoruba dread to offend: The first is Osó (wizard), the second is Àjé (witch); the third is the most dreaded, their name is Aláròká. How do I translate that into English? I cannot, but you will get to know what it means when you hear the Yoruba say: Eni gbé adìẹ òtòsì, ó gbé ti aláròká (Whoever steals a poor man’s chicken has stolen from the one who will shout about it from street to street). The proverb is a warning against having as enemies those who have legs, and have mouths and who thrive on noise.

On Sunday last week, El-Rufai was his oppositional best on Channels Television, levelling allegations, issuing threats and giving assurances. The state breeds and feeds terrorists and bandits for political gain, he claimed. That was on Sunday. On Friday, he went one step further. If he had been told two years ago that he would be in a church against his Muslim brother, the president, El-Rufai would have said “A‘ūdhu billāhi mina sh-shayṭāni r-rajīm (I seek refuge in Allah from the accursed devil).” But he was in a church in the South-East last Friday doing just that, suited up like a pastor, preaching sermons of democracy and deliverance and promising to lower the flag of today’s lord in the Villa. That is the problem with all aláròká; once they start, they don’t stop unless and until they are done. This one will not stop. Where he will be today, and tomorrow and what message he will carry depends on what the Nigeria police do with him. He has been asked to submit himself to the law, allegedly for being rude to the law.

The government will soon learn that neither police invitation nor detention can sew up the honker’s lips. In my part of the country, we say there is no armour against the bullets of aláròká. Never fight or underestimate the aláròká; he is the one whose voice multiplies and complicates a quarrel until the whole village hears. Huffing and puffing, and talking and threatening are El-Rufai’s strongest weapon against his victims. His present noise and the threats his cries contain are the consequences for Tinubu’s ditching of Nasir, his friend and ally. When you offend someone who looks small, you may in fact have provoked the person who has the loudest voice.

The police inviting him won’t shut him up. That was exactly the undertone when Nasir said on that TV programme: “I am not afraid of anybody. I say my mind and I don’t look back.” In those words, he defined himself as the quintessential aláròká, the one whose voice ensures that an injury does not die in silence.

So, President Tinubu and his minders would be mistaken if they thought a cheap police invitation would defeat ‘small-body-big-engine’ Nasir. Whoever has crossed El-Rufai has not just taken a poor man’s chicken; the person has, knowingly or unknowingly stirred up the town-crier who will not stop shouting until everyone knows the story of the soup that burnt down the whole house.

Now, jilted El-Rufai is determined to undo what he did for Tinubu in 2023. That is the role he has chosen for himself. He does this street to street, city to city, dismantling the myth of Tinubu’s invincibility. He now waxes prophetic: “In the 2027 elections, the worst-case scenario is a runoff, and Bola Tinubu will not be on that ballot. At best, he will place third. He has no viable pathway to victory. I’ve done the maths, I’ve done the analysis; it’s simply not there.” He said that and then added the dagger: “He can continue deceiving himself, thinking, ‘I have money, I have INEC, I have the police, I have the army.’ Well, President Tinubu, go and invite ex-President Goodluck Jonathan for a chat. Ask him if he didn’t also have all these in 2015, and yet we removed him. Is the situation similar today? It’s worse.”

But, I am worried. And you should be, too. How innocent is El-Rufai in the rottenness of the system he is complaining about? He could be genuinely clean; he could be genuinely filthy. But if his hands are not clean, shouldn’t he first confess and seek forgiveness before wearing the tunic of the messiah? The Bible’s St. Luke (18:10-14) tells of “Two men (who) went up into the temple to pray: One said, ‘God I thank thee that I am not as other men’; and the other smote upon his breast, saying, ‘God be merciful to me a sinner.’” What was God’s response to the two sinners? Reading it is so instructive as we navigate the dangerous waters of Nigeria with its feuding political elite.

These days, the jilted are rebelling with daring moves and statements. The government is reacting, it is blocking rallies, north and south, and issuing summons. For now, we hear charges of betrayal; tomorrow it may be treason. These things are not new. People in government have historically seen opposition to them as either an act of betrayal or treason or both. They can be both right and wrong; most times wrong. We learnt from ‘Tyranny of The Minority’ authored in 2023 by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard professors of government, that in the early years of the United States’ democracy, “the very existence of partisan opposition was regarded as illegitimate. Politicians, including many of the founders (of America) equated it with sedition and even treason.” Indeed, in 1798, the US Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts “which were used to jail opposition elements and newspaper editors.” The jailed were labeled betrayers. But the repression did not last. It, in fact, blew up in the face of its makers in 1800, just two years after that law was enacted. You ask how? The government lost the 1800 election; the disgusted American voter, for the first time, elected the opposition Democratic-Republicans. You can try, like me, to read that book, particularly Chapter One; its title is: ‘Fear of Losing’. If you are from my country, you will appreciate the details, especially if you also know that those authors also wrote ‘How Democracies Die.’

Betrayal is despicable; treason is evil. American Associate professor of history, Sally Shockro, in her ‘ Blessed Betrayal’ warns that “in a culture centred on honour, a betrayal diminishes the status of the perpetrator, and often the victim as well, destroying the personal fortunes of those involved along with the trust of the community.” Now, can I quickly add this: “if the institutions of power are corrupt, is resistance an act of betrayal or an act of loyalty to the greater good?” This question forms part of the reasoning in Larissa Tracy’s ‘The Shameful Business of Betrayal and Treason.’ The author who asks that question is a professor of Medieval Literature at Longwood University, United States. You can answer the question based on where you stand and on what you stand on. I wish we could pose it to the feuding lords of our manor and know where we and the state stand in their estimation.

They are fighting over the spoils and loot of the last war. The shut-out feel betrayed, genuinely so; now they are all out to crash the temple of power. In Crystal Parikh’s ‘An Ethics of Betrayal’, we are reminded that ‘betrayal’ as a “crime provides its own punishment” and that “where traitor feeds upon traitors, betrayal exacts its own self-consuming vindication.” If Tinubu had not offended El Rufai, we would not have been hearing the secrets we hear these days; very dark secrets couched as bad, wicked allegations. First, El-Rufai on national TV accused the ruling APC and its government of financing bandits and terrorists as weapons of politics. Nasir said this and provoked his kinsman from Kaduna, Datti Baba-Ahmed, into making a counter appearance on the same TV platform. From Datti Baba-Ahmed, we heard what the forest heard that deafened it. The man told Channels TV’s Seun Okinbaloye on Tuesday last week that insecurity in Nigeria is “orchestrated and is political.” He said Nasir El-Rufai shouldn’t be the one crying wolf; he said the man belongs in the pack of the implicated wolves.

Hear him: “Do we understand the gravity of his statement?…What I am about to say is that insecurity is part of APC; insecurity has been APC’s way of getting power. Insecurity has been APC’s way of staying in power.” He then went into accounts which I pray must not be true. He said, without mentioning names, that a former Nigerian president met with and collected huge sums of money from the late Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, to sponsor extremists in Nigeria’s North-East. Hear him: “Go back in time. Do you remember that a former Nigerian president was attacked by terrorists? It was unprecedented; never in the history of Nigeria did that happen. Why did some young men in the forest in the North-East…what business did they have (with him)? When Nigerian leaders leave power, they are liked, they are loved, they are forgiven all their errors and everything. But, this one, they followed and tried to kill him. Why did that happen?” He asked, paused and feigned crying. Then he continued: “What happened to all the donations leading up to 2015? Why did he decide to run in 2015 after crying and telling the whole world that he was no longer running? What was his link with North Africa? What was his link with Muammar Gaddafi? He is not alive, but others are alive to say it.

“I told you about 2015…you see… going after a former president and trying to kill him, what does that tell you? Before that, what had happened? After Jonathan won at the Supreme Court in 2011, the government called for dialogue (with the terrorists) and those young men nominated (the) former Nigerian president. It took three days to repudiate (that nomination). After those three days, go and plot the graph, you will see that between 2012 and 2014, the number of attacks in the North-East skyrocketed.” Datti Baba-Ahmed blamed the escalated terrorist attacks of that period on what he called “hunger, (and) lack of medicine (for the terrorists).” Why? “Because somebody had stopped sending the recurrent expenses of those people who used to come to Kaduna, collect (money) and go back.” He alleged (or claimed) that the funding was stopped as a punitive measure for the young men’s indiscretion of publicly naming their covert funder as their negotiator with the government. “That’s how the cycle went, in protest against ‘why did you call out that name (as your negotiator).’ They (terrorists) couldn’t bear it (hunger) anymore, so they felt the best thing was to go and attack (him). It failed; we are lucky… Jonathan provided him (the former president) with additional cars and money. And it was all about money; all about collecting money.

“The truth is that someone had gone to North Africa and negotiated with Gaddafi; Gaddafi who was an international terrorist said ‘I will help you as I have been doing… I will retire to your country if you become president… He wanted to create a buffer in Nigeria. They gave crazy amount of money to that gentleman (the former president) to go and help these people with the intention of bringing them to fight in Libya. When Gaddafi died, ‘they’ sat on the money. They kept on (giving) the recurrent until (the terrorists) mentioned the name and then they stopped sending the money. Now, all these things are linked. They wanted Nigeria to burn if Buhari did not become the president in 2015. They brought people from neighbouring countries in readiness, to remove Jonathan by all means. The desperation to get Jonathan out of power built up and added to what we call insecurity in Nigeria today.” That is Datti Baba-Ahmed saying all those things after the man who was allegedly involved has died. I heard people asking why he did not say those things when the man was here. I wonder too.

Why did he have to wait till El-Rufai said his own before saying his own? And immediately he left the TV studio, someone in their party, Hon Farouk Adamu Aliyu, came in, sat where Datti sat and pointed fingers at Datti too as a disciple of the ex-president he had just accused of financing terrorism.

The you-be-terrorist-I-no-be-terrorist diatribe should lead us to ask who really these people who have been leading us are. Could it be that people who are supposed to be in the dock have all along been the court? Nigeria has faced unremitting violent insurgencies for decades. It ranks 6th on the 2025 Global Terrorism Index and accounts for 6% of global terrorism deaths in 2023. That is according to the Global Community Engagement & Resilience Fund (GCERF). Hundreds of people have been killed and millions more displaced, and the end is not yet. Now, we hear claims, accusations and confessions from these gentlemen that the cause of everything was politics and quest for power.

Whatever is the worth of the long English of the three political leaders from northern Nigeria, it should get us thinking as a nation in dire need of peace and security. Can the agencies in charge of our security and safety ‘collaborate’ with these gentlemen (Datti Baba-Ahmed and Nasir El-Rufai) to draw up an action plan for us to defeat the enemy? Those two guys sounded like they knew too much. It becomes real when you hear Datti declaring that what he said was just about 10 percent of what he had in his belly, begging to be released. How and when will he be released of the remaining 90 percent? It took Tinubu’s non-accommodation of El-Rufai to make the man angry and say what he shouldn’t say; it took a provocative statement by El-Rufai to draw out Datti Baba-Ahmed. Then Adamu Aliyu. They’ve all been in government, yet it appears we do not know them. Who really are they?

Warts and all, each of them still seeks to sleep with us. We are a nation of helpless landlords who must open their door at midnight to bloody invaders. “They say in Yoruba, Ìjàmbá ṣ’olè bí onílé bájí (The thief is in danger if the landlord awakes). But today, the landlord is in danger if he does not open the door for the thief.” That is classic helplessness – or surrender; an inversion or transposition of order and orderliness. University of Michigan art history professor, David T. Doris, has the above quote in his ‘Vigilant Things’ (2011). He goes on to sum up our situation in words of exasperation: The world has turned upside down (Ayé ti d’orí k’odò).

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

‘I buy used condoms from prostitutes’ —Native doctor confesses in Anambra

Emeka Anagbo, a native doctor based in Anambra state, has been arrested after confessing to collecting used male condoms from prostitutes to prepare charms.

The suspect, who hails from Umugbo in Ayamelum Local Government Area, was apprehended by youths in the Echara community, Awka North Local Government Area.

A video of the incident, shared on Facebook by Dr. Uche Nworah, captured the moment Emeka openly admitted to the act.

“I agreed with her to sell me used condoms. She delivered them, but later reported me. That is the wrong thing I did,” he confessed in the video.

According to him, he struck a deal with a prostitute who supplied him with used condoms sourced from brothels. However, the arrangement collapsed when the woman allegedly betrayed him by exposing the secret.

Emeka further revealed that the used condoms were vital materials for his fetish practices.

He said, “I use the condoms to prepare charms for witchcraft, conflicts, land disputes, and even police case.”

Ministry of judges welfare

By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

When the House of Lords, as the upper chamber of the UK Parliament is called, debated the Courts Bill introduced by the government of Edward Heath in December 1970, Lord Hailsham was in the Woolsack as the Lord Chancellor. His father, the first Viscount Hailsham, had served his first tour of duty in the same position a mere 42 years earlier. As the debate proceeded on the bill, Lord Hailsham reminded the prospective judge to “approach the Bench with the enthusiasm of a bridegroom approaching marriage, or of a priest approaching priesthood.”

In the British system, the relationships entailed between a groom and his spouse or a priest with his Bishop, excluded multiple partners or patrons; but just as alimentary wellbeing has always been celebrated as the key to the heart of a spouse, politicians intent on cultivating intimate relations with the judiciary disregard judicial independence and invest financially in the appurtenances of judicial wellbeing

In 1992 Matthew Ngulube became the Chief Justice of Zambia, the first to be appointed since the country transitioned from one-party rule. The president was Frederick Chiluba. Ngulube arrived the Chambers of the Chief Justice with credentials that looked impeccable. One and a half decades earlier, he had served as President of the Law Association of Zambia (LAZ), the country’s Bar Association.

Ngulube served as Chief Justice for one decade, presiding over some momentous decisions and transitions in Zambia’s judicial and constitutional history. During this period, he became well known around the Commonwealth as a spokesman for judicial integrity. Outside public view, his record stank.

On 28 June 2002, President Levy Mwanawasa, successor to President Chiluba and, himself also a former president of the LAZ, accepted the resignation of Chief Justice Ngulube. The facts that emerged were shocking.

As Chief Justice, Ngulube was in fact in the payroll of President Chiluba and “received thousands of dollars from a special account managed by Xavier Chungu, former intelligence chief and ex-president Frederick Chiluba’s top security adviser”, amounting to over $168,000. This was a lot of money in a poor country at the time and indeed more than the “equivalent to the Zambian government’s annual funding to a single government department.” From the proceeds of this financial intimacy, Chief Justice Ngulube separately built “a nearly-completed mansion on the eastern fringes of Lusaka, whose cost is estimated at about 700 million kwacha (about 149,000 dollars).”

These payments enabled the government of President Chiluba to buy favorable decisions from the court of Chief Justice Ngulube. The investigations reportedly revealed that the government used him “to subvert the course of justice in all cases involving Chiluba and his aides during the past ten years of his administration.

52 years earlier, in the debate on the High Court and County Judges Bill in the United Kingdom House of Commons in May 1950, Mr. Marlowe, a member of parliament, explained that it was impossible “for a High Court judge to discharge his functions properly if he knows that during the day, he will sit on the Bench with a prisoner in the dock before him and later in the evening may be sitting side by side with the prisoner in the bus.”

When they are not concerned about gifting houses to judges, politicians in Nigeria, for instance, seem overly concerned with the cars that the judges drive. On the last day of July 2025, Adamawa State Governor, Umaru Fintiri, gave away 23 sub-urban utility vehicles (SUVs) to judges in the state as an expression of his “unwavering commitment to strengthening the justice system.”

Governor Fintiri was the latest governor to advance this practice of conducting executive intimacy with judges on four wheels. In this he was merely following in the footsteps of his peer in neighbouring Borno State, Babagana Zulum, who had “donated” 19 cars to judges and Khadis in the state in January 2025 “, to enhance the judicial sector and ensure that our citizens have access to justice as we continue to recover from 16 years of insurgency.”

In one month between July and August 2024, Kogi State’s Governor Ahmed Ododo donated 25 SUVs in two instalments of 14 and 11 respectively to the Chief Judge, Josiah Majebi, for use by judges in the state, “with assurance to supply more soon so that it can go round all the Judges and magistrates operating in the state.” A mere eight months earlier, in December 2023, Governor Ododo’s benefactor and predecessor, Yahaya Bello, on the eve of his departure from office as Governor, had donated 40 SUVs to be shared equally between judges and legislators in the state.

When Catholic priest-turned-governor, Hyacinth Alia, gifted six new SUVs to judges in Benue State in May 2024, he claimed that he did it to enhance “judicial service delivery.”

Eight months earlier, in September 2023, his counterpart in Abia State, Alex Otti, handed over five SUVs to judges of the State High Court because they were reportedly in their fourth year of service in the role without official cars.

In July 2023, Anambra State Chief Judge, Onochie Anyachebelu, received 11 SUVs from the state government, “the first batch of official vehicles the Governor, His Excellency, Prof. Chukwuma Charles Soludo pledged to allocate to the Judicial Officers.” The Chief Judge thanked the governor “for being timely in commencing the fulfilment of his promise to the Judiciary to that effect, noting that the Judiciary’s expectations on him for the remaining vehicles are high.”

In August 2022, Ogun State governor Dapo Abiodun presented 13 SUVs to judges in the state “to enhance their welfare.”

In September 2020, Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu handed over 51 SUVs and eight houses to judges in the state “as part of his vision to build a strong judiciary.”

In this, Governor Sanwo-Olu bettered his counterpart in Rivers State, Nyesom Wike, who, the previous month, in August 2020, gave 41 SUVs to judges in the state.

Three months earlier, in May 2020, his counterpart in neighboring Owerri, Hope Uzodinma, handed 20 to judges in Imo State to “motivate” them. He added 10 more in July 2024. 

In February 2020, then Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El-Rufai, gifted 24 SUVs to judges in Kaduna State.

In the five years since 2020, advocacy group, Citizen Gavel reckons that eight governors gifted at least 237 SUVs to judges in their respective states. This is a gross undercount.

The Nigerian Bar Association has complained that the practice of gifting cars to judges demeans the judiciary, impoverishes judicial office, and hollows out judicial independence.

In 2014, the Federal High Court ordered government at all levels to pay funds for the needs of the judiciary to the National Judicial Council (NJC). Compliance with this would have ended the undisguised importuning of judges with alimentary blandishments from the executive. 

Instead, the Federal Government has turned that into an art form and appears to have designated a Minister for the Welfare of Judges in all but name. This past week, the Minister, Nyesom Wike, “boasted that about 80 per cent of the accommodation problem bedevilling judges would have been solved before the end of the first tenure of President Bola Tinubu.”

The calibration of this pretence of executive magnanimity with the electoral cycle was an essential part of the announcement. Buying judges has become a central tool in the arsenal of political ascendancy in Nigeria. No one pretends to conceal the appearance of quid pro quo.

At the Annual Conference of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Enugu at the end of last month, a judge from one of the neighboring states of south-east Nigeria was heard openly, fulsomely confessing the support of himself and his judicial colleagues for the present administration. He cited the increase in judicial salaries by over 300% and the increase in age of retirement of High Court judges and warned whoever cared to listen that any political competitors will not receive the support of judges in 2027. How many votes do judges have?

102 years ago, the High Court in England cautioned that it is essential that nothing is “done that creates even a suspicion that there has been an improper interference with the course of justice.” The role of the Ministry of Judges Welfare is to ensure precisely that the opposite is the new normal. He is doing well.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at [email protected]

The views expressed by contributors are strictly personal and not of Law & Society Magazine.

Ezeilo, SAN and Niyi Aborisade differ over creation of state police

  • The time has come for state police — Ezeilo
  • It could easily be abused. Can we really afford it now? — Aborisade

Life Bencher and Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Prof. Joy Ezeilo, has weighed into the debate for the establishment of state police, even as President Bola Tinubu days ago reiterated that the creation of state police is no longer optional but a necessary step to strengthen Nigeria’s security architecture in the face of persistent threats across the country.

However, United Kingdom-based human rights activist and legal expert, Chief Niyi Aborisade, has said that while the creation of state police is a good and necessary idea for Nigeria, the country is not yet ready for its full implementation.

Speaking on Tuesday at the Presidential Villa in Abuja during a courtesy visit by a delegation of Katsina indigenes led by Dikko Radda, the Governor, Tinubu said the federal government remains determined to confront insecurity “head-on.”

In a post shared via her X (formerly Twitter) handle, Ezeilo, SAN wrote: “Who is afraid of the state police and why? I support President Tinubu’s endorsement of the State Police. I have been advocating for this and community policing since 2012, when I submitted a memorandum to the Police Service Commission.

“Given Nigeria’s current security challenges and the substantial security budgets allocated by state governors—often including unconstitutional, opaque, and unappropriated security votes that contribute to corruption—the time has come for state police.

“Policing is local. While there are concerns about potential abuse, these can be addressed through proper legislation and by closing possible loopholes that could be misused. This includes ensuring the independence of the police and establishing proper tenure for police chiefs by law.

“Any governor who misuses this power will face strict accountability and prosecution. I am also willing to offer my legal services free of charge to help develop a model that interested states can adopt.”

Aborisade, a governorship aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Oyo State for the 2027 elections, noted that state police aligns with the principles of federalism, but cautioned that Nigeria’s political and economic realities demand a cautious and measured approach.

“State police is a good and ideal concept in a society like ours with a federal constitution. It empowers governors, who are the chief security officers of their states, to actually exercise control over the security agencies meant to serve their people,” Aborisade said in a statement issued in Ibadan.

Citing the controversial withdrawal of security aides from former Oyo State Governor Rashidi Ladoja during the 2006 political crisis, Aborisade condemned what he described as excessive federal control over state security apparatus.

“That kind of federal overreach is undemocratic. A governor should not be left vulnerable or undermined by the very structure meant to protect citizens,” he added.

Again, Aborisade expressed strong reservations about the timing of state policing, warning that it could easily be abused in Nigeria’s still-developing democracy.

“Our democracy is still evolving — just about 26 years since the return to civilian rule in 1999. Many of our politicians are not yet politically mature enough to handle the responsibility that comes with managing a state police force. There is a genuine fear it could be turned into a tool of oppression against the opposition,” he said.

He also raised concerns about the financial implications, noting that many states are struggling to pay salaries and depend heavily on federal allocations.

“Can we really afford it now? Without a stable economy and stronger internally generated revenue (IGR), state police could become an additional financial burden,” he warned.

As a solution, Aborisade proposed a phased rollout of state police.

“Let us test-run state police in six states — one from each geopolitical zone — for two years. That will allow us to study the outcomes, challenges, and strengths before expanding to the entire federation,” he suggested.

He concluded by stressing that while state police is a step in the right direction, proper preparation is necessary to ensure it strengthens, rather than undermines, democracy.

“We must not jump into it because of pressure or sentiment. Let’s prepare the ground politically, economically, and institutionally so that when it finally comes, it serves the people and strengthens our democracy,” he said.

However, President Tinubu has directed security agencies to reassess their operations in Katsina State, where banditry has been on the rise, and announced that advanced military equipment, drones, and surveillance technology would soon be deployed.

He equally disclosed that newly recruited forest guards in the state would receive capacity enhancement to boost their effectiveness.

“The security challenges that we are facing are surmountable. Yes, we have porous borders. We inherited weaknesses that could have been addressed earlier. It is a challenge that we must fix, and we are facing it,” Tinubu said.

“I have today directed all the security agencies to energise further and look at the strategies. We have approved the additional acquisition of drones.

“I am reviewing all the aspects of security; I have to create state police. We are looking at that holistically,” he added.

Tinubu stressed that insecurity would not be allowed to cripple the nation’s development or disrupt the safety of Nigerians.

Read also: From Bank Robber to Scholar: The Knoxville dropout fighting to change how we see addiction

“We will defeat insecurity. We must protect our children, our people, our livelihood, our places of worship, and our recreational spaces. They can’t intimidate us,” he declared.

The president further instructed that he be provided with daily updates on security operations in Katsina, underscoring his administration’s resolve to ensure the state and other troubled regions are secured.

Tinubu recalled that in February 2024, the federal government inaugurated a committee to develop a framework for state policing.

The initiative has received wide support, although as of March, 20 states had yet to submit their reports, according to Vice-President Kashim Shettima.

During the visit, Tinubu paid tribute to the late former President Muhammadu Buhari, describing his passing as a national loss while commending his contributions to Nigeria’s stability.

“The time we lost our brother, President Buhari, is a loss for all of us. It is the will of God Almighty, but he has left in a good way.

“He didn’t hand over a defeated country, a battered political structure, but a legacy of success, and that is the most important thing,” Tinubu said.

Governor Radda, who led the delegation, thanked Tinubu for his unwavering support.

“Mr President, I would like to thank you very much, and I want to say before our elders that there was never a time I came to the President with a request that he rejected,” he noted.

Other speakers, including Aminu Masari, former Governor and Ibrahim Ida, the Wazirin of Katsina, commended the president for honouring Buhari and investing in infrastructure projects in the state.

Ida, however, urged the federal government to prioritise the upgrade of Umaru Musa Yar’Adua International Airport and to intensify security efforts in southern Katsina, where communities have been under repeated attacks.

Re: The place of young lawyers in NBA, Matters Arising, By Maduka Onwukeme, Esq.

They are comparing apples and oranges. If NMA invites me to their conference to address medical doctors, it would likely be on an issue of law, like medical malpractice or other matters.

It is understandable that law is not their field but medicine. NMA cannot invite a resident doctor to address their conference even if he was a former president of Nigeria and then start twisting it that he was to speak on health policy like our people are doing.

If the former president is there as a newly inducted doctor, he must take his place in the pecking order or rank. A resident doctor, even if he has gone to space and returned, has nothing to teach a consultant. It is never done.

Read Also: The place of young lawyers in NBA, Matters Arising

Even in the military medical corps, you could have a situation where a doctor who is below a consultant might be promoted in military rank above his consultant colleagues. When that happens, such doctors, for example, who are not yet consultants but maybe Brigadier Generals, but working under consultants who are colonels, would drive to work and remove their uniforms from the car park to wear their medical gear. They do that to avoid mistakenly running into a consultant in uniform, and the consultant would have to salute them.

You must respect seniority in any system, or you destroy that system.

It is shameful that we allow politicians to either marry lawyers or become lawyers, and what we have is this anyhowness in the profession.

Read Also: The untold story of Peter Agbor’s walk to the Nigerian Bar

If I should go to court with my wife, she would announce appearance before me because though we were called on the same day, she was enrolled before me by 24 hours. I did my enrollment the next day after our call, while she did hers the same day because she was called in the first call session.That is tradition, and we respect it.

It’s funny! People get called and then open a big chamber with no pupilage or experience, and even SANs are going to pay them courtesy visits and do photo ops instead of telling them to go and undertake pupilage first to learn. Then they come to AGC and they are given front seats and made panellists on the excuse that you want inclusion for young lawyers and new wigs

If you truly want inclusion for new wigs, why did you give only Chidoka, Deji and Dino speaking slots? What about the intelligent chap that won 18 prizes and made a double 1st class? What about the best graduating female student? Can she not speak?

Why only popular politicians or activists?

Maduka Onwukeme Esq., is principal partner at ELIX LLP, Lekki Phase 1, Lagos.

Embittered lover allegedly kills ex-NYSC lady after declaring: “If I don’t marry you, blood will flow”

Rights activists and family members are demanding a thorough investigation after Deborah Moses, a young interior designer who just finished her National Youth Service (NYSC), was brutally murdered in her home.

The call for justice and an insistence that the case must not be swept under the carpet came after Deborah, popularly known as Deb’rah Porsche, was reported killed by her estranged boyfriend in her home in Lagos on Wednesday night.

The suspect, identified as Lintex, a native of Otukpo in Benue State, allegedly disguised himself as a dispatch rider to gain entry into the estate where Deborah lived.

When estate security raised suspicions, he reportedly scaled the fence and forced his way into her compound.

According to witnesses, Lintex first attempted to trigger an explosion by tampering with Deborah Moses’ cooking gas pipe outside her apartment.

When that failed, he allegedly broke into her residence and stabbed her multiple times, leaving her lifeless.

Family sources said that Deborah Moses had ended the relationship over a year ago, but continued to face threats from the suspect.

“He used to say, ‘If I don’t have you, nobody will. If I don’t marry you, blood will flow,” a grieving relative disclosed.

Deborah, who had just completed her NYSC and was slowly building her career, had reportedly been avoiding unwanted calls and advances from him before her tragic death.

Neighbours overpowered the suspect after the attack and handed him over to the police.

GWG

A powerful lesson in leadership as Melinda French Gates leaves the Gates Foundation

After more than 25 years at the helm of one of the world’s most influential philanthropic organizations, Melinda French Gates has officially stepped away from the Gates Foundation. The foundation, co-founded with Bill Gates, has donated more than $78 billion since its creation and has been a global reference in health, education, and poverty reduction.

Her departure may seem like a personal move following her divorce from Bill Gates, but Melinda made it clear this is a strategic shift. She now wants to dedicate her time and resources to defending women’s rights, especially in light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

A Farewell Marked by Gratitude

When reflecting on her 25 years at the foundation, Melinda chose one word to sum it up: gratitude.

In her farewell note, she shared:

“Before ending my last day at the foundation, I wanted to thank each one of you for the role you played during my time here and for all the work we did together.”

Instead of leaving with frustration or sadness, she highlighted the privilege of working with a brilliant and committed team for more than two decades. It’s a reminder that true leadership is about valuing the journey, even when it’s been challenging.

$12.5 Billion for Women’s Rights

Melinda French Gates did not simply walk away from the foundation—she is starting a bold new chapter. Along with her departure came the announcement that $12.5 billion will be directed to a new foundation dedicated to women’s causes worldwide.

This major investment shows her commitment to gender equality and signals a powerful shift in focus. At a time when women’s rights are being questioned, Melinda’s move ensures that resources will be dedicated to defending and empowering women across the globe.

Why Roe v. Wade Matters

The mention of Roe v. Wade is no coincidence.

  • In 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court recognized a woman’s right to abortion as part of her constitutional right to privacy.
  • For nearly 50 years, it guaranteed nationwide access to abortion.
  • In 2022, the ruling was overturned, handing abortion laws back to individual states.

This reversal marked a turning point for women’s rights in America. For Melinda French Gates, it reinforced the need to focus directly on defending women and ensuring their rights are protected.

Gratitude as a Form of Leadership

Melinda’s choice of gratitude as her farewell message is more than symbolic.

  • Many leaders focus on power or control.
  • She chose to highlight appreciation and kindness.
  • Gratitude, in her words and actions, became a tool for resilience and perspective.

It shows that leadership is not about pretending everything was perfect. It’s about recognizing challenges, valuing partnerships, and moving forward with optimism. This attitude doesn’t just inspire—it sets an example for how to handle personal and professional transitions with dignity.

What Comes Next for Melinda French Gates

Now, Melinda begins a more personal and targeted mission: advancing women’s rights on a global scale. This includes:

  • Funding projects that directly support women’s health and education.
  • Creating opportunities for women in leadership and entrepreneurship.
  • Defending rights that are increasingly under threat, even in developed countries.

This new focus doesn’t mark the end of her influence—it marks a new phase of impact, one that could shape the future of women’s empowerment worldwide.

A Lesson in Perspective

Melinda French Gates’ departure is more than just a leadership change. It’s a lesson.

We can’t always control what happens in our lives—divorce, setbacks, or challenges. But we can choose how we respond. Her choice to leave with gratitude instead of bitterness reflects resilience and hope.

It’s also a reminder that even the most powerful people must adapt, evolve, and find new missions. For Melinda, that mission is clear: building a better, fairer world for women everywhere.

Melinda French Gates leaves behind a foundation that has transformed global philanthropy, but her story is far from over. With $12.5 billion dedicated to women’s rights, she begins a new journey focused on empowerment, equality, and justice.

Her farewell message of gratitude is more than just words—it’s a philosophy of leadership and life. As she embarks on this next chapter, the world will be watching how her vision for women reshapes the future.

How TikTok harms boys and girls differently – video

What happens when a teenager signs up to TikTok? Within seconds, studies find, they are shown harmful content about issues from eating disorders to toxic subcultures, which keeps them scrolling and TikTok profiting from the ads.

Neelam Tailor puts TikTok’s algorithm to the test. Creating accounts for two fake children, a 14-year-old boy, Rami, and a 13-year-old girl, Angie, she explores the app’s ‘For You’ page to see what the platform really serves young teens, replicating two studies published in 2022 and 2024.

Click here to continue reading.

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