Act now to save Nigeria, Wike charges NBA

Rivers State governor, Nyesom Wike, has urged Nigerian lawyers to engage in judicial activism as a deliber­ate measure to addressing the slow dispensation of justice, and attempts to stifle the rights of the citizens.

The governor gave the charge on Monday during the 61st Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar Associ­ation (NBA) Conference in Port Harcourt.

Governor Wike said no excellence can be achieved in the nation’s judicial system when judges lack the courage to enforce the law with equal measure because they are con­stantly under some form of po­litical intimidation or pressure to please vested interests.

He wondered why the NBA has continued to focus less on promoting and fight­ing for the values of good gov­ernance, democracy, judicial independence, human rights and the rule of law when there is urgent need for them to do so.

“Never in our political history has Nigeria been so badly governed and denied of good governance with the federal government woefully failing in its basic duties to provide for the wellbeing and security of its own citizens as we have experienced in the last six years.

“On a daily basis the eco­nomic, social and political rights, including the rights to personal security, freedom of speech, association, dissent and peaceful protests, as well as the right to personal lib­erty are being violated with impunity by the present cen­tral administration and its security apparatus.

“The invasion on personal liberty has been brazen and indiscriminate, such that even judges of the superior courts, including Supreme Court justices, have in the recent past been victims of midnight assaults on their premises and subjection to unlawful arrests and impris­onments.

“Lately, the new devious trend is to tag security risks to innocent Nigerians and opposition elements and use the Immigration Authority to seize their international passports without a prior court order.”

Governor Wike said it is not enough for the Federal Government to issue Execu­tive Order 10 and do nothing more pragmatic about re­sourcing the judiciary to the fullest possible extent, includ­ing enhanced judicial welfare and conditions of service.

– Media Report

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