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Jonathan Should Come With Clean Hands — Salami.

Leadership. Abuja. Nigeria. 24.5.12

 

The suspended president of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Isa Salami, has asked President Goodluck Jonathan to come to town with equity on the grounds that his suspension came amidst pendency of his suit in the court.
He said it is irreconcilable for Jonathan to cite pendency of suit now that he is recalled by the same National Judicial Council (NJC) that suspended him.
Speaking through his lawyer and a former attorney-general of the federation (AGF), Chief  Akin Olujinmi (SAN), Salami said that his recall ought not to be trailed by any controversy because NJC that did so is a statutory body or a creation of the 1999 Constitution.
Olujimi maintained that the renewal of Justice Dalhatu Adamu’s acting duty for the next 90 days as acting Appeal Court president is illegal and utra vires  because it runs contrary to the provision of section 238 (4 and 5) of the constitution.
Section 238 (4) states that ‘‘If the office of PCA is vacant, or if the person holding the office is for any reason unable to perform the functions of the office, then until a person has been appointed to and has assumed those functions, the President shall appoint the most senior justice of the appeal court to perform those functions.
While section 238 (5) says ‘‘Except on the recommendation of the NJC, an  appointment pursuant to the provisions of subsection 4 of this section shall cease to have effect, after the expiration of three months from the date of such appointment and the President shall not re-appoint a person whose appointment has lapsed’’.
Jonathan had renewed Justice Adamu’s acting capacity for the fourth time on Monday.
The federal government had through  AGF Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) on Tuesday, said that the NJC’s recommendation recalling the suspended president of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Salami, is not binding and would not be acted upon because the matter is subjudice.
Meanwhile, other prominent lawyers, Chief Mike Ahamba (SAN), Mr. Femi Falana and Wahab Shittu, have  berated Adoke for maintaining that the NJC recommendation is not binding on the federal government as the matter at hand is subjudice.
They said that Jonathan’s refusal to accede to the NJC recommendation to recall Salami  shows that the rule of law is in danger.
Ahamba said: ‘‘Jonathan’s refusal to accede to NJC’s recommendation to restore Salami back to his office shows that the rule of law is in danger. Although he has the right to his own discretion over the NJC recommendation, but that ought to be exercised the same way when the body, recommended Salami for suspension.
According to Falana,  ‘‘There is nowhere in the constitution where reference is made to the president on the question of judges’ suspension.
‘’The constitution empowers NJC to investigate and exercise disciplinary control over any judicial officer and there is nowhere in the constitution that requires the president’s intervention in the suspension of the Appeal Court president.
Wahab said: ‘‘I strongly appeal that the federal government should stop playing politics over Salami’s recall. It is telling on the intelligence of the members of NJC and integrity of the entire judiciary. Jonathan should rather tread the path of honour and maturity and approve Salami’s recall.’’

How Germany underdevelops Nigerian academia.

Vanguard. Lagos. Nigeria. 23.05.13

 

Open letter to the German Ambassador:
YOUR EXCELLENCY:

I have found it necessary to address this letter to you in view of certain developments at your Lagos Consulate with regard to visa requirements which have very adverse implications for academic practice in Nigeria. I am scheduled to attend a conference at the Cologne African Studies Centre, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Cologne at the end of the month, precisely from May 30 to June 2, 2012.
This is a sponsored conference organised by the African Studies Association of Germany (VAD.e). There are several such associations across Europe and North America. On Monday May 7, I was at your Consular office in Lagos to submit my visa application and be interviewed. As a ‘business visitor’, specifically one going for a conference, I’m not required to book an appointment before appearance at the Consulate for interview.
Other visa applicants in this category are visitors billed for medical check, frequent visitors and others who have visited some designated countries in Europe and America in the recent past. My attendance at this conference has been voided, no thanks to the demand by officials of your Consulate that I book an appointment for the submission of my visa application.
The processes involved in booking an appointment, submission and retrieval of passport, take between four to six weeks which, as I have said, effectively put paid to all my travel plans.
Of course, that waiting period could be considerably shortened if one would go through some of the syndicates operated by touts with connections right inside the Consulate. This is no wild allegation: it’s a fact well known to people in and around your Embassy. When people get tossed around as is often the case by your Embassy staff, it seems it’s an indirect way of referring them to the touts-operated networks around the Embassy.
But while your consulate now insists on prior appointment for visa applications like mine, contrary to the widely-publicised claim on your Embassy website, it makes no attempt to bring this apparent change in policy to the notice of the Nigerian public, especially the academic community and others directly affected by it.
The failure of your Embassy to do this is in conformity with the general disregard with which officials of the German Embassy in Lagos treat their Nigerian clients.
There is no doubt that your Nigerian Embassy must rank among the most profitable around the world, with applicants paying between N12,000 to N13,000 non-refundable visa processing fee every working day of the week whether a visa application is granted or not.
In situation where there is evidence that your Embassy staff make no verification whatsoever before granting or rejecting visa applications (my last application, if it had gone ahead, would have been the second in two years- which is to say I’m sure of my claims), the non-refundable visa fee amounts to a rip-off.
There are yet other instances of gross abuse and disrespect of Nigerians by your Embassy staff even though  a number of these officials are Nigerians, employed more or less like running dogs, to do the bidding of their German bosses who look askance when these Nigerian officials pour some of the most horrible scorn on their Nigerian compatriots- there are, I insist, yet other instances of abuse of Nigerians by your Embassy I would call attention to shortly.
But let us first understand this: To the extent these officials are members of your staff and act apparently under instruction, you bear responsibility for their action. The Nigerian-born official, a bald, aging figure, who is the first point of contact and receives visa applicants every morning at your Lagos Consulate, is a particularly horrible species of these abusers of human dignity at your Embassy.
It is inconceivable, except within the context of the dirty job he was hired for, that such a person, including others like him, could be employed at any institution with any iota of claim to diplomatic training as should be expected of embassy staff. It would be gross understatement to describe Nigerian-born officials at your Embassy in Lagos as rude. They appear specially hired to carry out the ignoble jobs their German employers demand but would rather not be caught doing.
Generally, however, your Embassy staff, German or Nigerian, are discourteous, arrogant and insensitive. They act with caprice and their ways are dour and are evidently subject to how the mood takes them. In a word, they need special training in human relations and diplomatic niceties.
However little the German Embassy may think of Nigeria and Nigerians, there are Nigerian universities that run programmes in these basic aspects of diplomacy and diplomatic engagements and they will be willing, I can assure Your Excellency, to train your embassy officials for fees less than these officials collect each day to process each visa application that comes their way.
There is no doubt that the reflexes and mentality of Western embassy officials have been conditioned to believe that every visa applicant is a potential migrant to the assumedly greener pastures of the West. Theirs is therefore a knee-jerk response to reject all visa applications at first sight, view visa applicants with suspicion or treat them with disrespect. Yet nothing could be farther from the truth.
While it is very true that there are Nigerians who still live under the illusion that life is only bearable when lived in the West, there are many more who think there are far better options to destitution, which is what any extended sojourn outside Nigeria means for increasingly many Nigerians.
Indeed, many Nigerians these days need not have gone beyond the forbidding barricades of gates of many foreign, especially, Western embassies to know what joy it is to live in an environment of love and care in which people still recognise them as human beings. Many life times in Europe and Europe-like climes cannot equate that.
If Nigerian academics must become economic migrants to Europe, it certainly won’t and shouldn’t be in these times when most countries in the Eurozone, from Greece to Spain, are groaning under German-driven austerity, the same bitter pill that has been administered on many countries of the Global South and from which they are yet to recover.
The irony of the present situation in which the West, particularly countries like Germany, closes its doors to migrants from the South shouldn’t be lost on us. This same West, it was, first began the process of looking far beyond its geographical borders for greener pastures.
It is trite history that the whole historiography of capitalism and its manifestation in European imperialism and colonialism rested on its gunpoint invasion and devastation of Africa and other regions of the South.

                   © Copyright IYADUDU-CENTRE ​FOR YORUBA ART AND CULTURE Limbachstr. 12a. 53343 Wachtberg, near Bonn, Germany

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