Retired
President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Ayo Salami, on Thursday said fellow
judges as well as the National Judicial Council betrayed him in the twilight of
his career, especially after his suspension by the NJC.
Salami
likened his travails to that of the Biblical Joseph, who was sold into slavery
by members of his family.
He
said, “The last three years of my career were dogged by travails which are not
dissimilar to the fate of Joseph in the book of Genesis in the Bible.
“As
his brothers conspired to destroy him by throwing him into a well and selling
him into slavery, my learned brothers and friends in the legal profession
planned and executed doing evil to me.”
He
spoke at a valedictory session organised to mark his retirement from the Court
of Appeal.
The
retired PCA was suspended after a clash with the then Chief Justice of Nigeria,
Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu.
He
was still serving the suspension until he left the service, having reached the
mandatory retirement age of 70 years.
Justice
Salami informed the gathering, which included top serving and retired judicial
officers that the NJC sold out to the Executive and failed in its duties and
functions.
He
said, “The National Judicial Council created by the Constitution to protect me,
nay any judicial officer was on the vanguard of my travails. The NJC failed in
its duties and thereby surrendered its functions to the Executive arm of
government thus, ingratiate itself to the Executive.
“For
instance, the NJC, having cleared me of any wrongdoing, following the
recommendations of Justice Aloma Mukhtar’s committee, ought to have recalled me
to office without asking the President to exercise the power that he does not
possess, on the flimsy excuse that it had earlier referred the matter to him.
“In
truth, as a matter of courtesy, all it needed to do was to write the President
that in view of its recent decision, this matter was now outside his purview.
“After
so informing him, NJC would be free to take the necessary step to implement its
decision.”
Continuing,
Justice Salami said, “The position in which NJC has found itself is similar to
that of the proverbial cock that betrayed itself to the fox that what was on
his head was not fire and encouraged the fox to touch it.
“The
fox, having satisfied itself that truly it was not fire, has since been hunting
cocks to make menu of them.
“Also,
when the report of the committee the NJC set up to make recommendation on Umaru
Abdullahi’s report was submitted to it for ratification, neither the CJN nor
the next most senior Justice of the Supreme Court was present at the meeting.
“Justice
Moses A. Bello, who was neither the CJN nor the most senior Justice of the
Supreme Court, took it upon himself to preside at the meeting contrary to the
express provisions of sub-paragraph (a) and (b) of paragraph 20 of the Third
Schedule of the Constitution.
“No
other members of the NJC, including statutory members, could be chairman.”
The
retired judge noted that Justice Bello was an impostor for claiming to be the
Acting Chairman of NJC in the two letters he (Justice Bello) wrote to him,
dated August 9 and 18, 2011.
This,
he said, was because Bello was “neither a Justice of the Supreme Court, next
most senior Justice of the court nor the CJN.”
He
also accused the Council of treating matters of national importance with
levity.
“This
is the levity with which the NJC treats matters of national importance.
Clearly, Justice Bello has not only behaved irresponsibly, but also
recklessly,” he said.
He
pointed out that the NJC took the decision to suspend him when his application
for an order restraining the Council from deliberating on his case was pending
before the Federal High Court.
Arguing
that the matter was sub judice, he said, “It is this illegal decision that the
NJC had been relying upon to keep me out of office from August 18, 2011.”
Salami
noted that the Council treated him in a most cruel manner, employing all manner
of tricks to sustain his suspension.
He
said, “The NJC, a body set up to protect judicial officers, has dealt so
cruelly with me.”
But
he insisted that he had no regrets for his actions.
“I
have no regret whatsoever over all that I did, having acted according to the dictate
of my conscience and in the fear of Almighty God.
“I
swore to uphold the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and to do
justice to all manner of people without fear or favour; God has helped me so to
do.”
Acting
President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa, praised Justice
Salami for his achievements in office.
The
President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Okey Wali, SAN, who was represented
by Sunday Ameh, SAN, urged the Bar and Bench to reject attempts to compromise
the independence of the Judiciary.
The
Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke, SAN, was absent at the
event and was not represented.
Adoke
had advised Jonathan not to approve the NJC’s decision to reinstate Justice
Salami on the grounds that the matter was sub judice.
The
CJN, Justice Aloma Mukhtar; a former CJN, Justice Mohammed Uwais; Justice
Mahmood Mohammed of the Supreme Court; and the President of the National
Industrial Court, Justice Babatunde Adejumo, were among the dignitaries at the
event.
Source: Punch
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