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How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi - Politics - Nairaland

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How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 5:39pm On Dec 02, 2023
"It’s now so bad that courting the votes of the electorates is no longer an important component of the democratic process since politicians can get from the courts what they lost at the ballot box. That’s a dangerous state for any democracy to be in."

Twitter: @farooqkperogi


The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), one of Nigeria’s most prominent pro-democracy NGOs, invited me to make a virtual presentation from my base in Atlanta to a national seminar it organized last Thursday on “targeted judicial reforms and enhanced judicial integrity in post-election litigation.” Unfortunately, I couldn’t make it, but here are the thoughts I would have shared on the topic.

It’s oddly ironic that the judiciary, which should be the bulwark of democracy, has become such a dreadful terror to democracy that people are seeking to protect democracy from it. The courts have become the graveyards of electoral mandates. Judges have not only descended to being common purchasable judicial rogues, but they have also become juridical coup plotters.

The major preoccupation of pro-democracy activists is no longer how to keep the military from politics and governance but how to save democracy from the judiciary. In other words, in Nigeria, our problem is no longer fear of military coups but the cold reality of frighteningly escalating judicial coups.

A "judicial coup," also called a juridical coup d'état, refers to a situation where judicial or legal processes are deployed to subvert the choice of the electorate or to unfairly change the power structure of an existing government.

In other words, a judicial coup occurs when the courts are used to achieve political ends that would not be possible through standard political processes. In a judicial coup, the courts make rulings or interpretations of the law that drastically alter the balance of power, often favoring a particular political group or leader.

This can include invalidating election results, removing elected officials from office, altering the constitution through interpretive tyranny, or other significant legal actions that have profound political implications. smiley

Before 2023, judicial coups happened in trickles and were barely perceptible. The big, bad bugaboo used to be INEC. When the Supreme Court made Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi the governor of Rivers State on October 25, 2007, without winning a single vote, we thought it was merely a curious, one-off democratic anomaly that was nonetheless morally justified because Celestine Omehia—who won the actual votes cast on April 14, 2007, and sworn in as the governor on May 29—was illegally replaced as PDP’s candidate after Amaechi won the party’s primary election.

Our collective toleration of this strange supersession of normal democratic procedures to produce a governor conduced to more aberrations.

On January 14, 2020, the Supreme Court produced its first unofficial “Supreme Court governor” in Hope Uzodimma of Imo State when it used dazzlingly fraudulent judicial abracadabra to subvert the outcome of the governorship election in the state.

The Supreme Court’s judicial helicopter zoomed past PDP’s Emeka Ihedioha who won 273,404 votes to emerge as the winner of the election; flew past Action Alliance’s Uche Nwosu who came second with 190,364 votes; zipped past APGA’s Ifeanyi Ararume who came third with 114,676 votes; and glided gently into the yard of fourth-place finisher Uzodimma of APC with only 96,458 votes.

It then declared that the fourth shall be the first, enthroned Uzodimma as the governor, and dethroned Ihedioha whom Imo voters and INEC had chosen as the legitimate governor.

I recall being too numb by the scandal of the judgment to even experience any sensation of righteous indignation. Then came the Ahmed Lawan judgment, and I was jolted to my very bones. A man who didn’t run for an election, who admitted he didn’t run for an election, and who gave up trying to steal an election that he himself admitted he didn’t run for, much less win, was declared the “winner” of the election.

Because I closely followed the case and shaped public discourse on it, I was so incensed by the judgment that, in a viral February 6 social media post, I called Supreme Court justices “a rotten gaggle of useless, purchasable judicial bandits,” which prompted an unexampled official response from the Supreme Court, which dripped wet with undiluted bile.

However, many judges, including some conscientious Supreme Court judges, agreed with me. For example, in his farewell speech last month, Justice Musa Dattijo Muhammad re-echoed my sentiments about the Supreme Court and cited former Court of Appeal justice Oludotun Adefope-Okojie who, in her own farewell speech, approvingly quoted my description of Supreme Court justices as “a rotten gaggle of useless, purchasable judicial bandits.”

The judicial banditry I talked about has assumed a different, worrying dimension. It has now become full-on judicial sabotage against the soul of democracy itself. In unprecedented judicial roguery, the Appeal Court has invalidated the election of all 16 PDP lawmakers in the Plateau State House of Assembly and handed unearned victories to APC. It also nullified the victory of PDP’s Governor Caleb Mutfwang and asked that APC’s Nentawe Yilwatda Goshwe, who lost in the actual election, be declared the winner.

The case of the judicial theft of Kano State’s governorship election from NNPP to APC is too well-known to warrant restating. In all these cases, the judiciary invoked matters that were extraneous to the actual vote (called “technicalities”) to decide whom to crown as winners of the elections.

It’s now so bad that courting the votes of the electorates is no longer an important component of the democratic process since politicians can get from the courts what they lost at the ballot box. That’s a dangerous state for any democracy to be in.

The judiciary is becoming an unacceptably treacherous but overpampered monster that is exercising powers that are beyond the bounds of reason. It needs to be stopped through a holistic reworking of the electoral act.

The first thing that needs to be spelled out more clearly and more forcefully in a revised electoral act is that pre-election matters are not litigable after the winner of an election has been announced. All pre-election petitions should be litigated before the conduct of elections. Post-election litigations should be limited to the conduct of the elections. Since this happens once in four years, it should not be too much of a burden for the judiciary.

The second change that needs to be enshrined in a revised electoral act is a provision that divests courts of the powers to declare winners and losers of electoral contests. I am the first to admit that this is problematic because it limits the mechanism for redress available to politicians in cases of INEC-engineered electoral robberies.

But in situations where courts can glibly overrule the will of the electorate by invoking procedural inanities that are extrinsic to elections to declare winners and losers, I would rather deal with INEC alone.

The conduct of elections can be improved in the future to the point that manipulations can be significantly reduced. But I can’t say the same for a rapacious, unjust, and mercenary judiciary such as we have today.


In any case, in all functional democracies, it is voters, not the courts, who elect and remove people from positions of political power. If the courts find sufficient evidence of irregularities in the conduct of elections, they can order a rerun. But they should never be invested with the power to declare winners and losers.

The last suggestion I have for the revision of the electoral act is to constitutionalize the imperative to finalize the adjudication of all election petitions before the inauguration of elected officials into their offices. There are two reasons for this.

First, it is disruptive to put elected officials through the hassles of post-election litigation while they are already officially in office. Governance is often put on hold during the pendency of litigations, and lots of state resources are expended to bribe judges, hire lawyers, and bring witnesses. That’s unfair to Nigerians.

Second, at least at the presidential level, once someone has been declared the president and is inaugurated, they automatically assume enormous symbolic power that is almost impossible to reverse. They also have access to enormous resources that they can deploy to influence the course of justice.

Whatever we do, we must curb the excesses of our out-of-control judiciary before it finally murders what remains of our democracy.
https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2023/12/how-to-stop-judicial-coups-against.html

27 Likes 3 Shares

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 5:40pm On Dec 02, 2023
"It’s now so bad that courting the votes of the electorates is no longer an important component of the democratic process since politicians can get from the courts what they lost at the ballot box. That’s a dangerous state for any democracy to be in."

The judiciary is becoming an unacceptably treacherous but overpampered monster that is exercising powers that are beyond the bounds of reason. It needs to be stopped through a holistic reworking of the electoral act.
Words on marble. This is what happens when a gang of crooked criminals engage in state capture

43 Likes 5 Shares

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by zombieHUNTER: 5:44pm On Dec 02, 2023
APc induced Judicial coups...


When evil men are in authority..

the people mourn,..

Evil men have snatched power and ran away with it

43 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 5:50pm On Dec 02, 2023
The major preoccupation of pro-democracy activists is no longer how to keep the military from politics and governance but how to save democracy from the judiciary. In other words, in Nigeria, our problem is no longer fear of military coups but the cold reality of frighteningly escalating judicial coups.

A "judicial coup," also called a juridical coup d'état, refers to a situation where judicial or legal processes are deployed to subvert the choice of the electorate or to unfairly change the power structure of an existing government.

3 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Racoon(m): 6:05pm On Dec 02, 2023
Only a criminal-minded fella will not appreciate that Nigeria has entered the worst phase of its democratic journey

45 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by VeeVeeMyLuv(m): 6:14pm On Dec 02, 2023
grin cheesy cheesy grin grin grin
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by RepoMan007: 6:28pm On Dec 02, 2023
The four plus four morons are waking up gradually.

7 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Blue3k(m): 6:32pm On Dec 02, 2023
I keep asking the same question but nobody seems to have an answer. If nobody plans on changing various laws you're essentially asking judges to rule differently based on nothing. If you can't impeach these judges you don't like they have nothing to fear in their lifelong post.

Blue3k:


What solutions do you have in mind? What was wrong with various judgements on legal or logical grounds? I notice everyone complaining about Judges but they're not talking changing laws or restraining judicial powers. It seems alot of people are just concerned they're not getting their preferred judgment.

3 Likes 3 Shares

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by slivertongue: 7:43pm On Dec 02, 2023
The courts have become the graveyards of electoral mandates. Judges have not only descended to being common purchasable judicial rogues, but they have also become juridical coup plotters.

13 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Truths9ja: 7:52pm On Dec 02, 2023
Ever since Gandollar head APC at the National level, I know vividly that Nigeria judiciary will be much compromised cos’ gandollar will be bribing this judges that will seat on APC cases favouring them. It’s very unfortunate seriously. Our democracy has been heavily trashed.

7 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Truths9ja: 7:54pm On Dec 02, 2023
Racoon:

https://www.farooqkperogi.com/2023/12/how-to-stop-judicial-coups-against.html
this is another fact from professor Farouk kperogi here. You are much on points. It’s very unfortunate, our judiciary arm of government have been heavily compromised. It’s now for the highest bidder. I pray governor mutfwang win his Appeal case in the Supreme Court of justice. His case against him is pre election matters for God sake.

5 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by slivertongue: 8:00pm On Dec 02, 2023
In unprecedented judicial roguery, the Appeal Court has invalidated the election of all 16 PDP lawmakers in the Plateau State House of Assembly and handed unearned victories to APC. It also nullified the victory of PDP’s Governor Caleb Mutfwang and asked that APC’s Nentawe Yilwatda Goshwe, who lost in the actual election, be declared the winner.

2 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by MEEVEET: 8:02pm On Dec 02, 2023
You are now talking because it has touched your dare Kano

When you were writing all you wrote during the presidential tribunals you didn't know this one

Bros tell us what the judiciary have done wrong... Call out the judgement and judges else's go and sleep

7 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by garfield1: 10:41pm On Dec 02, 2023
RepoMan007:
The four plus four morons are waking up gradually.
The op is a compound idiot
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by garfield1: 10:41pm On Dec 02, 2023
slivertongue:
The courts have become the graveyards of electoral mandates. Judges have not only descended to being common purchasable judicial rogues, but they have also become juridical coup plotters.

Any evidence or just hallucination induced talks

1 Like

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by garfield1: 10:42pm On Dec 02, 2023
Blue3k:
I keep asking the same question but nobody seems to have an answer. If nobody plans on changing various laws you're essentially asking judges to rule differently based on nothing. If you can't impeach these judges you don't like they have nothing to fear in their lifelong post.


As in eh.so sad
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by garfield1: 10:43pm On Dec 02, 2023
slivertongue:
In unprecedented judicial roguery, the Appeal Court has invalidated the election of all 16 PDP lawmakers in the Plateau State House of Assembly and handed unearned victories to APC. It also nullified the victory of PDP’s Governor Caleb Mutfwang and asked that APC’s Nentawe Yilwatda Goshwe, who lost in the actual election, be declared the winner.

What is wrong with that? An appeal court in October declared that pdp cannot sponsor any candidate and the judgment was never set aside.in law,pdp has no candidate in plateau just like in zamfara 2019

10 Likes 1 Share

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by sslcrypt: 10:45pm On Dec 02, 2023
Ok
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Hunti33: 10:48pm On Dec 02, 2023
Our judicial system is too corrupt

2 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Bobloco: 10:49pm On Dec 02, 2023
garfield1:


What is wrong with that? An appeal court in October declared that pdp cannot sponsor any candidate and the judgment was never set aside.in law,pdp has no candidate in plateau just like in zamfara 2019

Stop peddling lies and falsehood garfield1

Kindly provide link to the Appeal court judgement

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by ipobarecriminals: 10:50pm On Dec 02, 2023
angry shut up
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Fatbam005: 10:52pm On Dec 02, 2023
Noise makers everywhere. Every Tom Hicks and Harry have solutions to d problems of Nigeria .
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by DesChyko: 10:54pm On Dec 02, 2023
At this point,all interested Presidents/Governors should just file a case in court and battle it out, instead of bothering us with elections and billion-naira budgets for them.

1 Like

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by PortHarcourtcit(m): 10:54pm On Dec 02, 2023
G
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by nairalanda1(m): 10:54pm On Dec 02, 2023
The problem is that at the end, APC, like PDP before it, is not interested in reforming or expanding the judiciary...it is only interested in staying in power. So, nothing will change.

The thing is, the judiciary is being used by politicans to beat the other side with. The real problem is Nigerians do not want free and fair elections because he who loses an election in Nigeria...that does not mean losses for the person contesting, it also means losses for thousands of his supporters.

I mean, lose an election in the UK and nothing happens, because at the end, most supporters have jobs and lives to go to. For a Nigerian, that's missed opportunities for national cake chop.

The real issue is Nigerians do not want free and fair elections. Look at Lagos, where voter intimidation was in play, along with tribalism during the governorship election, simply because APC felt threatened. Till we are ready for free and fair elections, nothing will change.

4 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by mabea: 11:00pm On Dec 02, 2023
Blue3k:
I keep asking the same question but nobody seems to have an answer. If nobody plans on changing various laws you're essentially asking judges to rule differently based on nothing. If you can't impeach these judges you don't like they have nothing to fear in their lifelong post.

I think the article made some suggestions concerning your question.

2 Likes

Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by nairalanda1(m): 11:00pm On Dec 02, 2023
Blue3k:
I keep asking the same question but nobody seems to have an answer. If nobody plans on changing various laws you're essentially asking judges to rule differently based on nothing. If you can't impeach these judges you don't like they have nothing to fear in their lifelong post.


Like I said to you earlier, this site is not for serious discussion.

Nigerians could give you a lot of good answers, but at the end, they know that when the sun rises tomorrow morning, nothing would change. Not even in three years time.

So what's the use? Let's just abuse each other , and fight for our sides, abeg....
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by garfield1: 11:02pm On Dec 02, 2023
Bobloco:


Stop peddling lies and falsehood garfield1

Kindly provide like to the Appeal court judgement

Read the appeal court judgment sir.everything is there.the appeal court in October affirmed the high court order that pdp cannot sponsor abyone
Re: How To Stop Judicial Coups Against Democracy In Nigeria By Farooq A. Kperogi by Laple0541(m): 11:02pm On Dec 02, 2023
When the social media bloggers and analysts try to assume the roles of lawyers and judges, it’s obvious going to be a big problem.

It’s high time the law started taking care of nonentities like this.

2 Likes

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