Onnoghen: Christian lawyers blow hot, slam FG over CJN’s trial

Christian Lawyers' Fellowship of Nigeria, CLASFON, has condemned the
decision by Code of Conduct Bureau, CCB, to arraign the Chief Justice
of Nigeria, CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen.

It claimed that the arraignment of CJN Onnoghen over false asset
declaration and operation of domiciliary account charges was
unconstitutional and a naked display of powers by the executive arm of
government.

The group, in a statement in Jos yesterday by Arome Okwori and
Olatunji Omole, its National President and National Secretary,
respectively, asked that the charges against the CJN be dropped as
continuing with it amounted to usurpation of powers of the National
Judicial Council, NJC.

The statement reads in part: "We received with dismay the disturbing
news of the decision of the Code of Conduct Bureau, CCB, an agency of
the Federal Government, to arraign before the Code of Conduct
Tribunal, CCT, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen,
for alleged breaches of the Code of Conduct as contained in the
Constitution.

"It is the view of CLASFON that the decision of the executive arm of
government through its agency, CCB, is misconceived, unconstitutional
and a naked display of arbitrary powers.

"Government action undermines the principle of the rule of law and the
doctrine of separation of powers, which are fundamental principles of
the Constitution.

"The provisions of Sections 153 to 161 of the 1999 Constitution, the
Third Schedule to the Constitution, the National Judicial Policy of
April 2016, the Judicial Discipline Regulations of March 9, 2017, the
Revised Code of Conduct of Judicial Officers of February 2016, made by
the National Judicial Council pursuant to its constitutional powers
and the decision of the Court of Appeal in Nganjiwa v. Federal
Republic of Nigeria (2017) LPELR-43391 sum up the extant law on the
procedure for dealing with cases of misconduct by serving judicial
officers.

"The Chief Justice of Nigeria as a judicial officer and a member of
the National Judicial Council is amenable to the disciplinary control
of the National Judicial Council. (Paragraph 21(b) and (g) of the
Third Schedule to the 1999 Nigerian Constitution.

"From the foregoing, we consider the NJC as the appropriate organ to
deal with complaints of misconduct brought against the Chief Justice
of Nigeria in the first instance."

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