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Sunday, October 9, 2016

Human rights lawyer Slams Nigeria Bar Association, Says It Is Embarrassing To Shield Corrupt Judges

Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), on Sunday, criticised the Nigerian Bar Association for shielding corrupt judges despite having information about their activities.
He described the failure of NBA to deal with corrupt officials in the judiciary as an embarrassment to the “incorruptible members of the bar,” adding that it was responsible for the current state of the country’s judiciary.
He said this while reacting to the raid on the homes of some judges and the arrest of four of them by the Department of State Services between Friday and Saturday.
The operatives of the DSS had raided the official quarters of judges at Abuja, Gombe, Kano and Port Harcourt and ended up arresting at least four judicial officers.
The arrested judicial officers comprised two Justices of the Supreme Court – Justices Sylvester Ngwuta and John Okoro – as well as Justice Adeniyi Ademola of the Federal High Court and another judge of the Gombe State High Court, Justice Mu’azu Pindiga.
In a statement issued at the end of the raid, the DSS alleged that the suspects had engaged in judicial misconduct and corrupt practices, adding that a huge amount of money was recovered from three of the judges.
In response to the raid, the NBA had declared a state of emergency and demanded the immediate and unconditional release of the judges.
Falana, however, criticised the NBA, saying, “In particular, the Nigerian Bar Association which has information on all corrupt judges and lawyers in the country has continued to shield them to the embarrassment of incorruptible members of the bar and the bench.
“The few lawyers who have plucked up the courage to expose corrupt judges and lawyers have been stigmatised and treated like lepers by their colleagues.
“It is on record that when both the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Offences Commission and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission sent invitation letters to judges suspected of corruption they had rushed to the Federal High Court to obtain interlocutory injunctions to prevent their arrest, investigation, and prosecution.”
He said members of the legal profession had themselves to blame for the harassment of judges by security forces as they had failed to take advantage of the relevant statutory disciplinary bodies to purge the bar and the bench of corrupt elements.
“It is on account of negligence on the part of the legal profession that the SSS which screens candidates before they are recommended by the National Judicial Council for appointment as judges has now engaged in the arrest of judges for alleged corruption and abuse of office,” he said.
Falana, however, said because the detained judges “are presumed innocent until the contrary is proved by the State, they should be admitted to bail in self-recognizance.”
He urged the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, to ensure that the judges were immediately arraigned without delay.
He lamented the state of the legal profession, saying, “It is a matter of grave concern that the legal profession has allowed the denigration of the hallowed temple of justice because of the misconduct of a few corrupt judges.
“For several years, judges who committed grave criminal offences were not prosecuted but merely retired by the authorities on the recommendation of the National Judicial Council.

“Although the National Judicial Council recently recommended the dismissal and prosecution of a judge for extorting the sum of N197m from a litigant the authorities had paid lip service to the menace of judicial corruption in the country.”

President Buhari Speaks On Arrest Of Judges; Says Corruption, Not Judiciary Under Attack

President Muhammadu Buhari has made his first official reaction to the arrest of seven senior judges between Friday night and Saturday morning.
Mr. Buhari said the raids on the judges' residence by the State Security Service, SSS, was an assault on corruption and not on the judiciary.
Seven judges, including two of the Supreme Court, were arrested in the raids, condemned by lawyers and rights groups, and are expected to be charged to court from tomorrow.
The president in a statement by his media adviser, Garba Shehu, described the raids as ‘surgical’ saying due process was followed in the arrests.
“The Presidency has received assurances from the DSS that all due processes of the law, including the possession of search and arrest warrants, were obtained before the searches,” he said.
Read Mr. Shehu’s full statement below:
The Presidency assures that the President reserves his highest respect for the institution of the judiciary as the third arm of government.
To this end, the President will not do anything to undermine its independence.
President Buhari remains a committed democrat, in words and in his actions, and will not take any action in violation of the constitution.
The recent surgical operation against some judicial officers is specifically targeted at corruption and not at the judiciary as an institution.
In a robust democracy such as ours, there is bound to be a plurality of opinions on any given issue, but there is a convergence of views that the country has a corruption problem that needs to be corrected.
But reports by a section of the media are giving us cause for concern.
In undertaking the task of reporting, the media should be careful about the fault lines they open. It is wrong to present this incident as a confrontation between the executive and judicial arms of government.
The Presidency has received assurances from the DSS that all due processes of the law, including the possession of search and arrest warrants, were obtained before the searches.

To suggest that the government is acting outside the law in a dictatorial manner is to breach the interest of the state.

Ed Miliband says MPs must get a vote on 'hard Brexit'

Ed Miliband has held talks with MPs in the hope of persuading Theresa May to allow a Commons vote on any move to leave the single market.

The former Labour leader, along with Nick Clegg and a loose coalition of SNP, Green and Tory MPs, insists the electorate voted only to leave the EU and that Parliament should remain sovereign over the issue of the single market.

It follows concerns among some MPs that - despite the Prime Minister's statements to the contrary - the UK could be heading for a "hard Brexit" in which it pulls out of the single market to regain control over its borders.
Concern over uncontrolled immigration was one of the primary reasons Britons voted to leave the EU, but German chancellor Angela Merkel has insistedBritain must accept free movement of people if it wants to stay in the single market.
Nick Clegg delivers his first conference speech as the party's EU spokesman
Image Caption:Nick Clegg says it is unacceptable for Downing Street to determine the opening Brexit terms
Mr Miliband alleged Downing Street had no authority to withdraw from the single market without consulting MPs.
"Having claimed that the referendum was about returning sovereignty to Britain, it would be a complete outrage if May were to determine the terms of Brexit without a mandate from Parliament," he told The Observer.
"There is no mandate for hard Brexit, and I don't believe there is a majority in Parliament for it either. Given the importance of these decisions for the UK economy ... it has to be a matter for MPs."
Former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg concurred that the decision over Britain's role in the single market was too important to be taken by Downing Street alone.
"My great worry is that, while there will be a vote on repealing the 1972 European Communities Act, which is about the decision to leave the EU, it will be left to the executive alone to decide the terms of Brexit. That would not be remotely acceptable," he told the newspaper. 
Keir Starmer on the Andrew Marr show
Image Caption:Keir Starmer: 'Nobody voted for the government to take an axe to the economy'
Former education secretary Nicky Morgan told Sky's Murnaghan programme: "There are a lot of us that feel it would be extraordinary - given that the Brexit vote was about the sovereignty of Parliament, about making our own laws, taking back control - for Parliament not to have a big say in the Brexit negotiations." 
She said she had no been contacted by Mr Miliband but would "talk to everyone".
"This is such a momentous issue for the United Kingdom, I think we can all agree on that whatever side of the debate we are on. It is going to effect our future for decades to come."  
The Conservative MP added: "The Conservative manifesto we were elected on only 17 months ago has a very clear statement in it that we say 'yes' to the single market."
Sir Keir Starmer, who has returned to the Labour front bench as shadow Brexit secretary after storming out in protest at Jeremy Corbyn's leadership, insisted MPs must have a vote on the opening terms of Brexit negotiations.
"I accept that freedom of movement was a major issue in the referendum, but nobody voted Leave or Remain only for the government to take an axe to the economy," he told the Andrew Marr Show.
"The PM is saying 'Leave it to us without any scrutiny, or accountability, see you sometime in 2019 with a deal we won't vote on, even then'. That is totally unacceptable."
Mrs May has said she will open the two-year 'divorce' negotiations with Brussels by the end of next March, but has made it clear she does not want a Commons vote on the matter beforehand. 

Religious leaders urge PM to let migrant children in 'Jungle' into UK

Religious leaders have called on Theresa May to allow nearly 400 children living in the 'Jungle' migrant camp in Calais to enter the UK.
In an open letter to the Prime Minister organised by the charity Citizens UK, senior figures from Christian, Muslim and Jewish faiths label the camp a "stain" on the consciences of Britain and France.
Two migrants childs from Irak look through the window in the southern part of a camp for migrants called the "jungle", in Calais, northern France, February 25, 2016. The administrative tribunal in regional capital Lille was to decide whether closing part of the site would violate human rights after several local charities and migrants requested a temporary injunction to halt the planned evacuation. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol ATTENTION EDITORS - FRENCH LAW FORBIDS THE PUBLICATION OF FACES OF MINORS
Image Caption:Iraqi children peer through the window of a caravan in the 'Jungle' camp
The letter says the child migrants, the youngest of whom is eight, have "fled conflict and persecution, are now stuck in Northern France, deeply traumatised and at great risk as well documented by the anti-slavery commissioner you yourself appointed while Home Secretary".
It comes after French president Francois Hollande announced the camp would be bulldozed before Christmas, with its 9,000 inhabitants dispersed around the country, a move welcomed by residents of Calais but which has caused disquiet elsewhere. 
Demonstrators took to the streets in several towns across France at the weekend to protest against Hollande's plan.
A young migrant pulls a trolley in a muddy field at a camp of makeshift shelters for migrants and asylum-seekers from Iraq, Kurdistan, Iran and Syria, called the Grande Synthe jungle, near Calais, France, February 3, 2016. European Union countries on Wednesday approved a 3 billion euro ($3.32 billion) fund for Turkey to improve living conditions for refugees there in exchange for Ankara ensuring fewer of them migrate on to Europe. REUTERS/Yves Herman
Image Caption:A young migrant pulls a trolley at a camp known as the Grande Synthe Jungle, near Dunkirk
About 250 people marched in Forges-les-Bains, 30km (18 miles) southwest of Paris, against a migrant reception centre which opened on Monday.
In Pierrefeu-du-Var, southern France, the Front National party staged an anti-migrant protest that drew about 650 supporters.
It was revealed last month that no children have yet been helped to leave the camp despite changes to Britain's Immigration Act four months ago which were meant to assist them.
Labour peer Lord Dubs made the revelation during a tour of the camp during which he told Sky News: "There are 800 unaccompanied children in this camp and 387 now have the right to go to Britain, but not one has.
"I'm appalled and I'm terribly disappointed. I'll be meeting with the new immigration minister soon and I will be bringing this up. We can't keep doing nothing."
Iraqi migrants Ibrahim, his wife Ashty, their children Mandy (L) and Muhammad (R) pose outside their caravan in the "New Jungle" make-shift camp as unseasonably cool temperatures arrive in Calais, northern France, October 15, 2015. More than 3,500 people, migrants and refugees are camped in Calais, fleeing war and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia and now living in the jungle. Most of them are hoping to make the crossing to England. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
Image Caption:Iraqi migrants Ibrahim, his wife Ashty and their children Mandy (L) and Muhammad (R) pose outside their caravan in the camp
Britain's anti-slavery commissioner, Kevin Hyland, recently warned that children in the camp were risking their lives dealing with smuggling gangs after failing to enter Britain through the tradition route of claiming asylum.
A Home Office spokeswoman said: "The clearance of the camp in Calais is a matter for the French authorities, who also have primary responsibility for unaccompanied children in France. 
"The UK government has no jurisdiction to operate on French territory and can only contribute in ways agreed with the French authorities and in compliance with French and EU law."

Gatwick Airport to plan new runway even if Heathrow wins

Gatwick Airport will continue preparations to expand, even if Heathrow gets the go-ahead for a third runway, according to a spokesman.
The Davies Commission has already recommended Heathrow as the most suitable site for a new runway, though Theresa May has delayed announcing the Government's final decision until 2017.
MPs are expected to vote on the chosen scheme within a fortnight of the announcement, to strengthen the chosen project's case.
But a Gatwick spokesman said he believed that even if Heathrow got the green light the project would never get off the ground because of environmental obstacles, legal challenges and concerns over the cost of upgrading the airport's transport links.
"Gatwick would be standing ready to deliver the new (second) runway as, should Heathrow get the green light, it is likely to fail as it has several times before," the unnamed spokesman told the Press Association.
"A decision on next steps will be taken after the Government announcement on new runway capacity. While Gatwick does not rule out launching legal action, other groups have already said they would if Heathrow expansion is green-lighted."
A Gatwick spokesman told Sky News: "We are not going to stop making our case to government, whatever they decide."
The Airport Operators Association (AOA) also weighed-in to the long-running saga, insisting an early decision would affirm Britain remains committed to trading with the rest of the world following voters' decision to leave the European Union.
"Ministers insist that in spite of the UK's impending departure from the EU, the country remains outward-looking and open for business," AOA chief executive Darren Caplan told Business Travel News.
He added: "Nothing could better demonstrate they mean that than a decision that would ensure the UK gets the additional capacity it so vitally needs if the country is to maintain and enhance its position as one of the world's leading and best-connected economies." 
Some 67% of MPs support a third runway, according to a poll published by Heathrow on 13 September.
But environmental campaigners remain fiercely opposed to the plans, warning a new runway cannot go ahead without breaking legal limits on pollution and carbon emissions.
Zac Goldsmith, Conservative MP for Richmond Park and North Kingston, has said he will stand down if Heathrow is expanded.

Arnold Schwarzenegger joins Republican critics of Donald Trump

More than 150 senior Republicans have withdrawn their backing for Donald Trump after his degrading remarks about women from 2005 were made public.
Here is what the critics are saying following the controversy:
:: Arnold Schwarzenegger, former governor of California: "For the first time since I became a citizen in 1983, I will not vote for the Republican candidate for president."
:: Senator John McCain: "Donald Trump's behaviour this week, concluding with the disclosure of his demeaning comments about women and his boasts about sexual assaults, make it impossible to continue to offer even conditional support for his candidacy."
:: Condoleezza Rice: "Enough! Donald Trump should not be president. He should withdraw."
:: US congressman for Utah Jason Chaffetz: "I'm out. I can no longer in good conscience endorse this person for president. It is some of the most abhorrent and offensive comments that you can possibly imagine."
:: Ohio Governor John Kasich: "I will not vote for a nominee who has behaved in a manner that reflects so poorly on our country. Our country deserves better."

:: Idaho Senator Mike Crapo said: "I have reached a decision that I can no longer endorse Donald Trump. His pattern of behavior leaves me no choice. I urge Donald Trump to stand aside."
:: Carly Fiorina, former Republican presidential candidate and Hewlett-Packard chief: "Donald Trump does not understand me or my party. I ask Donald Trump to step aside and for RNC to replace him with Governor Mike Pence."
:: Senator John Thune of South Dakota: "Donald Trump should withdraw and Mike Pence should be our nominee effective immediately."
:: Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski: "I cannot and will not support Donald Trump for president. He has forfeited the right to be our party's nominee."
:: Senator Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia: "As a woman, a mother, and a grandmother to three young girls, I am deeply offended by Mr Trump's remarks, and there is no excuse for the disgusting and demeaning language. Women have worked hard to gain the dignity and respect we deserve. The appropriate next step may be for him to re-examine his candidacy."
Many others have not gone as far as to withdraw their support, but have condemned his behaviour.
:: Mike Pence, Mr Trump's presidential running mate: "As a husband and father, I was offended by the words and actions described by Donald Trump'"
:: Sarah Palin, former governor of Alaska: "Disgusting, shameful, totally disrespectful 'locker room' garbage, privately shared between two Hollywood playboys over a decade ago."
:: Former Florida governor Jeb Bush: "No apology can excuse away Donald Trump's reprehensible comments degrading women," 
:: Former presidential nominee Mitt Romney: "Hitting on married women? Condoning assault? Such vile degradations demean our wives and daughters and corrupt America's face to the world."
:: Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who has endorsed his former Republican presidential rival: "Donald's comments were vulgar, egregious and impossible to justify. No one should ever talk about any woman in those terms, even in private."
:: Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who only recently backed Mr Trump: "These comments are disturbing and inappropriate, there is simply no excuse for them."
Republican Party chairman Reince Priebus: "No woman should ever be described in these terms or talked about in this manner. Ever." 
House Speaker Paul Ryan: "I am sickened by what I heard today. Women are to be championed and revered, not objectified."

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Donald Trump: 'I'll never withdraw' from race for the White House

Donald Trump has said he will "never withdraw" from the race for the White House after calls from his own party to step aside.
He was forced to tell the Wall Street Journal there was "zero chance I'll quit" after dozens of Republican national politicians said they were no longer able to endorse the presidential candidate.
Statements from numerous Congressmen and Senators pulling their support came after a tape emerged in which Mr Trump bragged about being able to grope women because his fame.
House speaker Paul Ryan has said he was "sickened" by Mr Trump's comments and withdrew an invitation to the candidate to attend a campaign event.