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Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Opinionated: 1:58pm On Apr 10, 2019
By Dr Charles Omole

In a previous article, I revealed some of the ways judges and court staff are induced by litigants to “buy” verdicts. Judicial corruption is a global phenomenon, although its worst manifestations are in developing countries.

By 2015, Transparency International (TI) found that 28% of citizens across Sub-Saharan Africa who had contact with a judge or court official paid a bribe. I am sure that is more like 80% in Nigeria. There is no one way to reform the Judiciary and we must find what works for Nigeria rather than simply copy what other nations did. A corrupt judiciary means that the legal and institutional mechanism designed to curb corruption generally will be handicapped. The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct have been an important reference for the development of codes of conduct, there is increasing recognition of the limits of self-regulation by judges. In order to uphold judicial integrity, it is vital to balance legitimate concerns for the independence of the judiciary while keeping judges accountable and minimise abuses.

The judiciary is the public institution that is mandated to provide essential checks on other public institutions. A fair and efficient judiciary is the key to anti-corruption initiatives. There are willing are unwilling victims amongst these judges, but let’s explore some solutions.

Like I stated before; judicial corruption is not just about the judges. The clerks, registrars and admin staff in the courts are the worst culprits in most cases of corruption experienced by the public when dealing with the courts.

Firstly; the judiciary sadly will reflect the condition of the nation as a whole. We cannot have an honest judiciary in a largely dishonest nation. So what we can do is reduce occurrences. Corruption in the judiciary is a complex problem and needs to be addressed using variety of approaches.

Here are 11 ways we can reform:

REMOVE ALL PROSECUTORIAL POWERS AWAY FROM THE POLICE


There should be a reform that limits the job of the police only to investigating crime and passing the files to a separate prosecution agency for determination of whether to prosecute or not in ALL cases.

The police use their power to prosecute some crimes badly at the moment. They use it to fleece Nigerians and also to corrupt the Judges, especially at the Magistrate & High court level.



NEW JUDICIAL GUIDELINES MUST SET TARGETS FOR ALL JUDGES


Judges MUST obtain special permission from the Head of their respective courts if their performance misses the target is all cases. These targets will include for instance; how long it takes for a case to be completed, limit on how many adjournments can be granted etc. These must be targets with consequences.

FAIR & INDEPENDENT APPOINTMENTS PROCESS

Garbage in is garbage out. If the appointment of judges are not based on merit; corruption would have been introduced from the very beginning. Such judges will feel emboldened to continue with the corruption that brought them into office in the first place. Selection criteria should be objective and appointment decisions well documented, with public access to information on the decision-making process.

THREE-YEARLY 1-2-1 REVIEW OF JUDGES

All judges must have a one to one performance review every three years. This must be made compulsory and poor performing judges sacked. This will have the effect of strengthening internal oversight within the judiciary.

DIGITISATION OF THE COURT PROCESS

The governmentt should get rid of the mainly paper-based court processes & embrace modernisation via electronic judicial platforms. You can never get rid of papers in the court process; but you can reduce it drastically.

BETTER PUBLIC TRANSPARENCY OF CASES

There should be better public access and information on all cases in the spirit of Open Justice. The more the public know, the less chance of some backroom deal taking place.

REGULAR INDEPENDENT PUBLIC SURVEY OF COURT USERS


There should be surveys and consultations with court users measuring trends and reports of abuses. This MUST be done by a body independent of Courts and such public engagement will lead to more responsive service from the court staff.

STRONGER SENTENCING GUIDELINES

[img]https://everyrecordtellsastory.files./2013/09/a-judges-gavel-judge-court.jpg[/img]

The more fixed guidelines judges are made to work to; the more consistent judicial verdicts will be and many room for corruption will be blocked. In the UK, anytime a judge wishes to deviate from the sentencing guideline, you are required to write to the Head of Court to explain why. A Strong sentencing guideline will reduce judicial discretion but it has the effect of creating consistency.

BETTER PAY FOR COURT STAFF & JUDGES

Given the salient work they do, judges and court staff deserve better pay and remuneration. This will help reduce inherent temptation to demand bribes.

BETTER & REGULAR TRAINING FOR JUDGES



Every judge must undergo yearly training and regular appraisal. Better and regular training will ensure that reform is seen as capacity building & not as a threat. These training exercises will need to emphasize judicial codes of conduct.

BETTER PROACTIVE INTERVENTION BY THE NJC

NJC’s current laid back posture must end. They will need to be more interventionist to protect the integrity of judicial processes.

NJC must be more muscular in disciplining judges and initiating investigations even if there have been no complaints. NJC should take on a monitoring role of judges and step in to query any abnormal or unreasonable verdicts.


Actually I have over 30 ideas of what we can do to minimise corruption and reform our judiciary in Nigeria but I will stop here for now. I hope there is enough said in this thread to give hope and help initiate needed reforms. The success of any reform efforts is predicated on strong political will and national ownership. Eradication of corruption from the justice system is a joint task involving not only judges and members of the legal profession, but literally all stakeholders, including all branches of government, the media and the civil society.


Source: Some Remedies to Judicial Corruption in Nigeria

9 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Nobody: 3:15pm On Apr 10, 2019
Many of the items you mentioned are already in place. Remember that Judges do not speak to the media, so you may not be informed about what is going on, I am very well informed and I can confirm it to you.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Kendumazy(m): 5:39pm On Apr 10, 2019
I love this

2 Likes

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by semyman: 5:40pm On Apr 10, 2019
Nawa

1 Like

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Truthbites: 5:41pm On Apr 10, 2019
U forgot to add ' educated Executive'...to complement the Judiciary
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by olu77(m): 5:43pm On Apr 10, 2019
Seconded
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Daviddson(m): 5:49pm On Apr 10, 2019
Cacawa2:
Many of the items you mentioned are already in place. Remember that Judges do not speak to the media, so you may not be informed about what is going on, I am very well informed and I can confirm it to you.
You're right. In fact, the Administration of Criminal Justice law signed 4 years ago would have been the destroyer of corruption in Nigeria if this government had followed it up. Like I always say, our problem is not the absence of law, but the lack of implementation of those laws.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by helinues: 5:55pm On Apr 10, 2019
The whole judicial system should be overhauled

1 Like

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by bosunjohns(m): 5:57pm On Apr 10, 2019
Opinionated:
By Dr Charles Omole

In a previous article, I revealed some of the ways judges and court staff are induced by litigants to “buy” verdicts. Judicial corruption is a global phenomenon, although its worst manifestations are in developing countries.

By 2015, Transparency International (TI) found that 28% of citizens across Sub-Saharan Africa who had contact with a judge or court official paid a bribe. I am sure that is more like 80% in Nigeria. There is no one way to reform the Judiciary and we must find what works for Nigeria rather than simply copy what other nations did. A corrupt judiciary means that the legal and institutional mechanism designed to curb corruption generally will be handicapped. The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct have been an important reference for the development of codes of conduct, there is increasing recognition of the limits of self-regulation by judges. In order to uphold judicial integrity, it is vital to balance legitimate concerns for the independence of the judiciary while keeping judges accountable and minimise abuses.

The judiciary is the public institution that is mandated to provide essential checks on other public institutions. A fair and efficient judiciary is the key to anti-corruption initiatives. There are willing are unwilling victims amongst these judges, but let’s explore some solutions.

Like I stated before; judicial corruption is not just about the judges. The clerks, registrars and admin staff in the courts are the worst culprits in most cases of corruption experienced by the public when dealing with the courts.

Firstly; the judiciary sadly will reflect the condition of the nation as a whole. We cannot have an honest judiciary in a largely dishonest nation. So what we can do is reduce occurrences. Corruption in the judiciary is a complex problem and needs to be addressed using variety of approaches.

Here are 11 ways we can reform:

REMOVE ALL PROSECUTORIAL POWERS AWAY FROM THE POLICE


There should be a reform that limits the job of the police only to investigating crime and passing the files to a separate prosecution agency for determination of whether to prosecute or not in ALL cases.

The police use their power to prosecute some crimes badly at the moment. They use it to fleece Nigerians and also to corrupt the Judges, especially at the Magistrate & High court level.



NEW JUDICIAL GUIDELINES MUST SET TARGETS FOR ALL JUDGES


Judges MUST obtain special permission from the Head of their respective courts if their performance misses the target is all cases. These targets will include for instance; how long it takes for a case to be completed, limit on how many adjournments can be granted etc. These must be targets with consequences.

FAIR & INDEPENDENT APPOINTMENTS PROCESS

Garbage in is garbage out. If the appointment of judges are not based on merit; corruption would have been introduced from the very beginning. Such judges will feel emboldened to continue with the corruption that brought them into office in the first place. Selection criteria should be objective and appointment decisions well documented, with public access to information on the decision-making process.

THREE-YEARLY 1-2-1 REVIEW OF JUDGES

All judges must have a one to one performance review every three years. This must be made compulsory and poor performing judges sacked. This will have the effect of strengthening internal oversight within the judiciary.

DIGITISATION OF THE COURT PROCESS

The governmentt should get rid of the mainly paper-based court processes & embrace modernisation via electronic judicial platforms. You can never get rid of papers in the court process; but you can reduce it drastically.

BETTER PUBLIC TRANSPARENCY OF CASES

There should be better public access and information on all cases in the spirit of Open Justice. The more the public know, the less chance of some backroom deal taking place.

REGULAR INDEPENDENT PUBLIC SURVEY OF COURT USERS


There should be surveys and consultations with court users measuring trends and reports of abuses. This MUST be done by a body independent of Courts and such public engagement will lead to more responsive service from the court staff.

STRONGER SENTENCING GUIDELINES

[img]https://everyrecordtellsastory.files./2013/09/a-judges-gavel-judge-court.jpg[/img]

The more fixed guidelines judges are made to work to; the more consistent judicial verdicts will be and many room for corruption will be blocked. In the UK, anytime a judge wishes to deviate from the sentencing guideline, you are required to write to the Head of Court to explain why. A Strong sentencing guideline will reduce judicial discretion but it has the effect of creating consistency.

BETTER PAY FOR COURT STAFF & JUDGES

Given the salient work they do, judges and court staff deserve better pay and remuneration. This will help reduce inherent temptation to demand bribes.

BETTER & REGULAR TRAINING FOR JUDGES



Every judge must undergo yearly training and regular appraisal. Better and regular training will ensure that reform is seen as capacity building & not as a threat. These training exercises will need to emphasize judicial codes of conduct.

BETTER PROACTIVE INTERVENTION BY THE NJC

NJC’s current laid back posture must end. They will need to be more interventionist to protect the integrity of judicial processes.

NJC must be more muscular in disciplining judges and initiating investigations even if there have been no complaints. NJC should take on a monitoring role of judges and step in to query any abnormal or unreasonable verdicts.


Actually I have over 30 ideas of what we can do to minimise corruption and reform our judiciary in Nigeria but I will stop here for now. I hope there is enough said in this thread to give hope and help initiate needed reforms. The success of any reform efforts is predicated on strong political will and national ownership. Eradication of corruption from the justice system is a joint task involving not only judges and members of the legal profession, but literally all stakeholders, including all branches of government, the media and the civil society.


Source: Some Remedies to Judicial Corruption in Nigeria
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by kikake: 6:03pm On Apr 10, 2019
Opinionated:
By Dr Charles Omole

In a previous article, I revealed some of the ways judges and court staff are induced by litigants to “buy” verdicts. Judicial corruption is a global phenomenon, although its worst manifestations are in developing countries.

By 2015, Transparency International (TI) found that 28% of citizens across Sub-Saharan Africa who had contact with a judge or court official paid a bribe. I am sure that is more like 80% in Nigeria. There is no one way to reform the Judiciary and we must find what works for Nigeria rather than simply copy what other nations did. A corrupt judiciary means that the legal and institutional mechanism designed to curb corruption generally will be handicapped. The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct have been an important reference for the development of codes of conduct, there is increasing recognition of the limits of self-regulation by judges. In order to uphold judicial integrity, it is vital to balance legitimate concerns for the independence of the judiciary while keeping judges accountable and minimise abuses.

The judiciary is the public institution that is mandated to provide essential checks on other public institutions. A fair and efficient judiciary is the key to anti-corruption initiatives. There are willing are unwilling victims amongst these judges, but let’s explore some solutions.

Like I stated before; judicial corruption is not just about the judges. The clerks, registrars and admin staff in the courts are the worst culprits in most cases of corruption experienced by the public when dealing with the courts.

Firstly; the judiciary sadly will reflect the condition of the nation as a whole. We cannot have an honest judiciary in a largely dishonest nation. So what we can do is reduce occurrences. Corruption in the judiciary is a complex problem and needs to be addressed using variety of approaches.

Here are 11 ways we can reform:

REMOVE ALL PROSECUTORIAL POWERS AWAY FROM THE POLICE


There should be a reform that limits the job of the police only to investigating crime and passing the files to a separate prosecution agency for determination of whether to prosecute or not in ALL cases.

The police use their power to prosecute some crimes badly at the moment. They use it to fleece Nigerians and also to corrupt the Judges, especially at the Magistrate & High court level.



NEW JUDICIAL GUIDELINES MUST SET TARGETS FOR ALL JUDGES


Judges MUST obtain special permission from the Head of their respective courts if their performance misses the target is all cases. These targets will include for instance; how long it takes for a case to be completed, limit on how many adjournments can be granted etc. These must be targets with consequences.

FAIR & INDEPENDENT APPOINTMENTS PROCESS

Garbage in is garbage out. If the appointment of judges are not based on merit; corruption would have been introduced from the very beginning. Such judges will feel emboldened to continue with the corruption that brought them into office in the first place. Selection criteria should be objective and appointment decisions well documented, with public access to information on the decision-making process.

THREE-YEARLY 1-2-1 REVIEW OF JUDGES

All judges must have a one to one performance review every three years. This must be made compulsory and poor performing judges sacked. This will have the effect of strengthening internal oversight within the judiciary.

DIGITISATION OF THE COURT PROCESS

The governmentt should get rid of the mainly paper-based court processes & embrace modernisation via electronic judicial platforms. You can never get rid of papers in the court process; but you can reduce it drastically.

BETTER PUBLIC TRANSPARENCY OF CASES

There should be better public access and information on all cases in the spirit of Open Justice. The more the public know, the less chance of some backroom deal taking place.

REGULAR INDEPENDENT PUBLIC SURVEY OF COURT USERS


There should be surveys and consultations with court users measuring trends and reports of abuses. This MUST be done by a body independent of Courts and such public engagement will lead to more responsive service from the court staff.

STRONGER SENTENCING GUIDELINES

[img]https://everyrecordtellsastory.files./2013/09/a-judges-gavel-judge-court.jpg[/img]

The more fixed guidelines judges are made to work to; the more consistent judicial verdicts will be and many room for corruption will be blocked. In the UK, anytime a judge wishes to deviate from the sentencing guideline, you are required to write to the Head of Court to explain why. A Strong sentencing guideline will reduce judicial discretion but it has the effect of creating consistency.

BETTER PAY FOR COURT STAFF & JUDGES

Given the salient work they do, judges and court staff deserve better pay and remuneration. This will help reduce inherent temptation to demand bribes.

BETTER & REGULAR TRAINING FOR JUDGES



Every judge must undergo yearly training and regular appraisal. Better and regular training will ensure that reform is seen as capacity building & not as a threat. These training exercises will need to emphasize judicial codes of conduct.

BETTER PROACTIVE INTERVENTION BY THE NJC

NJC’s current laid back posture must end. They will need to be more interventionist to protect the integrity of judicial processes.

NJC must be more muscular in disciplining judges and initiating investigations even if there have been no complaints. NJC should take on a monitoring role of judges and step in to query any abnormal or unreasonable verdicts.


Actually I have over 30 ideas of what we can do to minimise corruption and reform our judiciary in Nigeria but I will stop here for now. I hope there is enough said in this thread to give hope and help initiate needed reforms. The success of any reform efforts is predicated on strong political will and national ownership. Eradication of corruption from the justice system is a joint task involving not only judges and members of the legal profession, but literally all stakeholders, including all branches of government, the media and the civil society.


Source: Some Remedies to Judicial Corruption in Nigeria

Judicial Corruption in Nigeria is a fall-out of the corrupt and roguish unitary governance system in Nigeria.

You can't treat one in isolation of the other.

Restructure Nigeria to fiscal federalism. Judicial corruption shall stop.

You did not see the unitary governance system which breeds and feeds corrupt practices in Nigeria.

You decided to beat about the bush.


How did you not expect hyper corrupt practices in Nigeria's feeding bottle govt system where a few politicians form govt in Abuja, collect revenues from all over the country, retain a huge chunk of the revenues to themselves in central government, then share rest to the states and local government areas?

The earlier some people understand that crude oil proceeds are not what make countries rich and advanced, the better.

Continue to chase shadows but leave the substance.

1 Like

Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Nobody: 6:33pm On Apr 10, 2019
cool

I currently have a case in court against someone threatening my life with evidence but the ipo and prosecutor is just demanding money from me and I gave them but they are not satisfied but come to think of it I'm the complainant and why should I bribe for doing your job angry in fact I just tire sad
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Kay17: 7:17pm On Apr 10, 2019
kikake:


Judicial Corruption in Nigeria is a fall-out of the corrupt and roguish unitary governance system in Nigeria.

You can't treat one in isolation of the other.

Restructure Nigeria to fiscal federalism. Judicial corruption shall stop.

You did not see the unitary governance system which breeds and feeds corrupt practices in Nigeria.

You decided to beat about the bush.


How did you not expect hyper corrupt practices in Nigeria's feeding bottle govt system where a few politicians form govt in Abuja, collect revenues from all over the country, retain a huge chunk of the revenues to themselves in central government, then share rest to the states and local government areas?

The earlier some people understand that crude oil proceeds are not what make countries rich and advanced, the better.

Continue to chase shadows but leave the substance.

This comment is a joke...
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Toosure70: 7:26pm On Apr 10, 2019
I love dis
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by gabng(m): 7:27pm On Apr 10, 2019
Truthbites:
U forgot to add ' educated Executive'...to complement the Judiciary

Educated Atiku
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by integrity16(m): 7:44pm On Apr 10, 2019
Please where is the previous article?
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by lordkush: 8:40pm On Apr 10, 2019
gabng:

Educated Atiku
guilty conscience wan kii this one. grin
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by Chinonye02: 2:30am On Apr 11, 2019
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Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by gabng(m): 10:41am On Apr 11, 2019
lordkush:
guilty conscience wan kii this one. grin

Far from it.

Nigeria's lack of interest in education failed you.

You current reasoning is simply a by-product of your level of reasoning & comprehension.

Don't even bother responding. It will take you decades to grasp your predicament.
Re: Some Remedies To Judicial Corruption In Nigeria by tck2000(m): 5:36pm On Jan 04, 2020
kikake:


Judicial Corruption in Nigeria is a fall-out of the corrupt and roguish unitary governance system in Nigeria.

You can't treat one in isolation of the other.

Restructure Nigeria to fiscal federalism. Judicial corruption shall stop.

You did not see the unitary governance system which breeds and feeds corrupt practices in Nigeria.

You decided to beat about the bush.


How did you not expect hyper corrupt practices in Nigeria's feeding bottle govt system where a few politicians form govt in Abuja, collect revenues from all over the country, retain a huge chunk of the revenues to themselves in central government, then share rest to the states and local government areas?

The earlier some people understand that crude oil proceeds are not what make countries rich and advanced, the better.

Continue to chase shadows but leave the substance.

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