Buhari makes promise to Nigerian Judges

I Have Run A Good Race, Finished Well — Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari says the degenerate welfare and working conditions of the nation’s judiciary are “serious and would be treated as such,” even as he cautions on the dire state of the country’s economy “currently battling insecurity, corruption and economic challenges,” aggravated by the COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine.

Speaking Thursday at the State House, on the occasion of a visit by the chairman and representatives of the Body of Benchers, a body of legal practitioners of “the highest distinction in the legal profession”, Buhari says a democratic government like the one he leads, “standing on a tripod comprising the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary, cannot stand where one of its three pillars, the Judiciary is not properly nurtured, maintained and sustained to deliver on its very pivotal constitutional duties.”

This was disclosed in a statement by his Senior Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu.

Buhari, therefore, promises to act quickly on the report of the committee he set up on his own back in 2018 to review the welfare and working conditions of the Judiciary:

He said, “Let me assure you that the issues would be given due and urgent attention within the resources available to the government.”

The President also congratulates the Body of Benchers on the successful completion of the “Benchers’ complex at Jabi,” a building described as impressive that would house the body and provide conference facilities, and accepted their invitation to personally commission the structure.

In his presentation, the chairman of the Body of Benchers, Wale Olanipekun, Senior Advocate of Nigeria, described the condition under which judges, especially the Justices of the Supreme Court, work as pathetic, appalling, and below the minimum standards that are required:

He said, “We want to plead with you. We need to bail out the Judiciary. The situation is bad. Let us sympathise with the Judiciary. I know you to have respect and feelings for the Judiciary. You have sympathy, empathy and consideration. The Body of Benchers as elders of the legal profession makes these recommendations to Your Excellency, with a plea that they should be attended to urgently.”

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