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Wednesday, March 24, 2021

El-Rufai demands state judicial councils, denounces unitary NJC

“It is an anomaly to have a unitary judiciary in a federation.”

• March 24, 2021
Nasir el-rufai
Kaduna State governor, Nasir el-rufai (Photo Credit: Twitter)

Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna has called for the decentralisation of the judiciary to fast-track justice delivery in the country.

The governor made the call when the National President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Olumide Akpata, paid him a courtesy call on Tuesday in Kaduna.

“It is an anomaly to have a unitary judiciary in a federation. I am one of the major advocates of the decentralisation of our unitarist judiciary to a federal one.

“We are pushing for the creation of state judicial councils that will handle the appointment of high court judges in states because that is the only way that we will be able to take our fates in our hands.

“I believe that we have enough lawyers in public and private sectors in Kaduna state to get 20 judges tomorrow if the State Judicial Council screens them and makes their recommendations.

“But we are constitutionally constrained as we speak.”

According to him, the heavy caseload of high court judges hinders effective administration of justice and cited the example of Kaduna state, where a high court judge handles about 250 cases.

“I have been making cases for the National Judicial Council to double the number of high court judges in Kaduna state, which will reduce the caseload to about 100 per judge, which is still too high.”

“I am happy that the National Assembly has started the process of removing the bottleneck, and I urge the Nigerian Bar Association to openly support it,” he added.

Mr El-Rufai argued that decentralising the judiciary would be in the interest of the administration of justice.

“It will give more opportunities for qualified lawyers in the private and public sectors and the academia to be part of the judiciary.”

The governor further argued that “bringing in outsiders always brings innovations and new ideas to improve the system.

He stated, “I do not believe that the only path to being a high court judge is to be a magistrate or state counsel.

“There are many other paths as other countries have shown and have produced excellent judges at all levels.” 

Earlier, the NBA president said he was in Kaduna to interact with lawyers to bridge the national body’s disconnect with its branches.

“I am here to bridge that gap, talk to them and understand the challenges in the bar,” he added.

Mr Akpata said the NBA would partner Kaduna on capacity building for lawyers.

“The key issues are welfare and capacity building which we must ensure, and the issue of harmonised salary scheme which was agreed to by the office of the Attorney General,” said Mr Akpata.

(NAN)

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