A human rights group, Socio-Economic Rights and
Accountability Project, has said the order of Justice Taiwo Taiwo of the
Federal High Court in Ado-Ekiti, which ordered the unfreezing of the
accounts of Governor Ayodele Fayose may not be of any benefit to the
governor.
Justice Taiwo had on Tuesday ordered the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission to unfreeze the bank accounts of Fayose,
which the anti-graft agency froze while investigating corruption
allegations against the governor.
But SERAP, in a statement on Wednesday by its Executive
Director, Mr. Adetokunbo Mumuni, argued that the EFCC might not unfreeze
Fayose’s accounts since Justice Taiwo is a judge of a coordinate
jurisdiction with Justice Mohammed Idris of the Lagos State High Court,
who granted the EFCC the order to freeze Fayose’s accounts.
SERAP accused Fayose of engaging in judicial forum-shopping
by going before Justice Taiwo to get a unfreezing order rather than go
to the Court of Appeal to appeal Justice Idris’ order which earlier
froze the accounts.
SERAP accused Fayose of not only playing politics with the
courts’ judicial powers but also squandering scarce judicial resources,
and urged the National Judicial Council to urgently address a situation
where politicians were exploiting the judiciary to obtain conflicting
orders.
“Mr. Fayose can’t dangle the order obtained from Justice
Taiwo Taiwo of the Federal High Court, Ado Ekiti as the ‘talisman’ to
set aside an earlier order by Justice M.B. Idris of the Federal High
Court, Lagos, as it is clear that they are courts of coordinate
jurisdiction.
“SERAP believes that Mr. Fayose cannot use the order by
Justice Taiwo to ward off the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission
from carrying out investigation on allegations of corruption and money
laundering against him, as this is not, at all, covered by Section 308
of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) on immunity.
“The case of Uwazuruike vs. Attorney General of the
Federation (2008) 10 NWLR makes it clear that the order of a court of
coordinate jurisdiction like that of the Federal High Court, Ado Ekiti
cannot affect the proceedings before the Federal High Court, Lagos.
“The persistent attempts by politicians to engage in
forum-shopping by seeking the most favourable order to set aside an
earlier order of a court of coordinate jurisdiction amount to a willful
abuse of court process. Such practices if not stopped will have grave
consequences for the rule of law and the integrity of the judiciary in
the country.”
“Allowing the politicians to abuse the process of court and
play politics with the judiciary tends to cast the judiciary in an
unfavourable light, thus leaving judges at the mercy of the political
class,” SERAP argued.
It added, “SERAP, therefore, advises the National Judicial
Council not to allow politicians to continue to use judges to grant
conflicting orders only for the politicians to turn around to accuse
judges of corruption.”
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