That Judiciary's paltry N70bn budgetary allocation (2)
The
CJN was said to have told the legislators that only one per cent of the
nation’s budget was being allocated to the judiciary which he said
inadvertently put the judiciary and by extension, the nation in danger.
The CJN was quoted as saying, “Recently, at the opening ceremony of the
2015 All Nigeria Judges Conference, I alluded to the fact that the
judiciary was appropriated a total sum equivalent to less than one per
cent of the total national budget of the government of the country.
“In
many respects, the judiciary has recently been left with the
impression that it is being asked to carry the weight of justice with
one arm tied behind its back.”
“To
put the insufficiency of that sum into context, a frightening
statistics that we would like you to debate upon is with regards to the
presence of only 1,074 judges of superior courts in the entire
Nigerian judiciary, inclusive of the recent appointments made last
month. This means that at our superior courts, there is one judge or
justice of Appeal Court for every 158,287 (cases?) inclusive of Appeal
Courts and the Supreme Court, based on conservative estimates.”
Section
81 of the 1999 Constitution provides that, “any amount standing to the
credit of the judiciary in the Consolidated Revenue Fund of the
Federation shall be paid directly to the National Judicial Council for
disbursement to the heads of the courts established for the Federation
and the states under section 6 of the Constitution”.
With
respect to the judiciary in the 36 states of the federation, Section
121 of the same Constitution similarly stipulates that “any amount
standing to the credit of the judiciary in the Consolidated Revenue Fund
of the State shall be paid directly to the heads of the courts
concerned.”
It
was in order to enforce this provision of the constitution, that
Agbakoba in 2014 dragged the Attorney General of the Federation and
Minister of Justice, the National Judicial Council (NJC) and the
National Assembly to court to challenge the constitutionality of
allowing funds meant for the judiciary to pass through the executive
arm of government.
Prior
to this decision, Justice Adeniyi Ademola of Federal High Court had on
January 13, 2014 restrained the Federal Government alongside the 36
state governors from holding on to funds meant for the judiciary.
Ademola
had ordered that funds meant for the judiciary should be disbursed
directly to the heads of court and not to the executive arm of
government. His order which was premised on a suit filed by Judiciary
Staff Association of Nigeria (JUSUN), also declared that the workers
have the standing to ask both the Federal Government and the states to
comply with the provisions of the Constitution as they affected the
funding of the judiciary. He also maintained that the practice of the
executive disbursing funds to the judiciary was unconstitutional and
also threatened the independence of the judiciary.
Earlier
in September 2013, during a ceremony marking the commencement of a new
legal year of the Supreme Court, Justice Mohammed’s predecessor,
Justice Aloma Mukhtar (rtd.), had also expressed concern over the yearly
decline in the judiciary’s budget. She had posited then: “A situation
where budgetary allocation to the judiciary continues to drop while the
general government budget is on a steady increase every year is
clearly an impediment to the quick and effective dispensation of
justice in Nigeria and, on the whole, a setback to the current effort at
transforming the Judiciary. Over the years, funding of the courts has
remained a challenge, as evident in the conditions of many courts in
Nigeria today. Statistics has shown that funding from the Federal
Government has witnessed a steady decline since 2010, from N95bn in
that year to N85bn in 2011, then N75bn in 2012 and dropped again in the
2013 budget to N67bn.”
Courts,
institutions and other heads, whose proposed spending are captured in
the NJC’s budget are the Supreme Court, Legal Practitioners Privileges
Committee, Court of Appeal, Federal High Court and National Industrial
Court of Nigeria, High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT),
FCT’s Sharia Court of Appeal, FCT’s Customary Court of Appeal and the
NJC. Others are: Federal Judicial Service Commission, Judicial Service
Committee of the FCT, National Judicial Institute, Body of Benchers,
retirement benefits of former Chief Justices of Nigeria, IT Project for
Judiciary and state judicial offices.
Where
now does President Buhari’s speech at the 2015 All Nigeria Judges
Conference fit in? He had made the following pledged. “This
administration is committed to the financial independence of the
Nigerian judiciary in accordance with extant laws. We believe that the
judiciary must be treated fairly and must be treated in much the same
way as the executive and the legislature.”
In
the 2014/2015 Legal Year, the Supreme alone Court heard 1578 matters,
consisting of 1009 motions and 569 substantive appeals, delivering 262
Judgments in that period. Over 500 new appeals were filed in the last
Legal year alone at the rate of about ten new appeals per week, most of
which are interlocutory in nature. Nigeria’s Supreme Court is certainly
the most overworked in the world. Other courts are also groaning.
The
AUTHORITY, hereby, calls on the executive arm to match its words with
action by affording the judiciary perform its functions adequately,
especially now, by empowering it adequately, both financially and
administratively





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