• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Legal
  • Technology and Science
  • Opinion
  • Columns
  • Exposé
  • World
  • Lifestyle
Nigeria to Hear All Terrorism Trials in Secret, Judge Rules, Anambra

When Courts Of Law Become Political Sex Workers

3 years ago
South Africa's Economy Stalls With 0.1% Growth As Structural Challenges Persist

South Africa Records 0.8% Growth In Q2 2025

5 hours ago
Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

6 hours ago
UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

10 hours ago
MWC Kigali
Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

10 hours ago
Court Jails 7 Chinese Nationals Over Abduction, Forced Labour In South Africa

Court Jails 7 Chinese Nationals Over Abduction, Forced Labour In South Africa

12 hours ago
Thursday, September 11, 2025
  • About
  • HT Management
  • Privacy Policy
Heritage Times
No Result
View All Result
Translate |
  • Login
  • Politics
    France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

    France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

    At Washington Meeting, Trump Confronts Ramaphosa With Video Evidence Of “Genocide” Against Whites

    Trump Not Attending G20 Summit Taking Place First Time In Africa — White House

    Ivory Coast: Former First Lady Cleared To Contest Presidential Election

    Ivory Coast: Former First Lady Cleared To Contest Presidential Election

    US Deports Sierra Leone Coup Figure Charles Mbayo Over Human Rights Crimes

    US Deports Sierra Leone Coup Figure Charles Mbayo Over Human Rights Crimes

    Uganda: “Missing” Student Jailed Over TikTok Video Criticizing President Yoweri

    Uganda: Opposition Figure Arrested In Court During Colleagues Bail Hearing

    Burundi’s Nibigira Emerges President Of Central Africa’s Regional Bloc

    Burundi’s Nibigira Emerges President Of Central Africa’s Regional Bloc

    Senegal: Government Reshuffles Cabinet Amid Economic Tension

    Senegal: Government Reshuffles Cabinet Amid Economic Tension

    Japan: Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba Resigns After Party’s Electoral Woe

    Japan: Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba Resigns After Party’s Electoral Woe

    UK: Deputy PM Blames “Inaccurate” Advice For Tax Error

    UK Deputy Prime Minister Quits Over Tax Error

  • Economy
    South Africa: Ramaphosa Sends Officials On Trade Negotiation Trip To US

    South Africa: Ramaphosa Sends Officials On Trade Negotiation Trip To US

    Ethiopia Unveils Africa’s Largest Dam Amid Egypt Tensions

    Ethiopia Unveils Africa’s Largest Dam Amid Egypt Tensions

    African Leaders Demand Climate Justice At Ethiopia Summit 

    African Leaders Demand Climate Justice At Ethiopia Summit 

    Auto Draft

    Kenya: 66,000 Jobs At Risk As AGOA Deal Ends

    Africa’s Super Banker Resumes As AfDB President, Promises To Harness Africa’s Youthful Energy, Chart Bold Compass For Transformation

    AfDB President Unveils Four Urgent Priorities For First 100 Days In Office

    AfCFTA Key To Shielding Africa From Global Trade Shocks – Mene

    AfCFTA Key To Shielding Africa From Global Trade Shocks – Mene

    Registration Opens For MWC25 Kigali, Africa’s Biggest Connectivity Event

    Registration Opens For MWC25 Kigali, Africa’s Biggest Connectivity Event

    Zimbabwe Pays First Compensation To White Farmers Affected By Land Reforms

    Zimbabwe To Commence Export Of Blueberry To China

    Goldman

    Nigeria: Naira Records Third Consecutive Appreciation Against US Dollar

  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Metro
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Legal
  • Tech & Science
  • Opinion
  • Exposé
  • Exclusive Videos
  • Niger Delta
  • World
  • Politics
    France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

    France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

    At Washington Meeting, Trump Confronts Ramaphosa With Video Evidence Of “Genocide” Against Whites

    Trump Not Attending G20 Summit Taking Place First Time In Africa — White House

    Ivory Coast: Former First Lady Cleared To Contest Presidential Election

    Ivory Coast: Former First Lady Cleared To Contest Presidential Election

    US Deports Sierra Leone Coup Figure Charles Mbayo Over Human Rights Crimes

    US Deports Sierra Leone Coup Figure Charles Mbayo Over Human Rights Crimes

    Uganda: “Missing” Student Jailed Over TikTok Video Criticizing President Yoweri

    Uganda: Opposition Figure Arrested In Court During Colleagues Bail Hearing

    Burundi’s Nibigira Emerges President Of Central Africa’s Regional Bloc

    Burundi’s Nibigira Emerges President Of Central Africa’s Regional Bloc

    Senegal: Government Reshuffles Cabinet Amid Economic Tension

    Senegal: Government Reshuffles Cabinet Amid Economic Tension

    Japan: Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba Resigns After Party’s Electoral Woe

    Japan: Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba Resigns After Party’s Electoral Woe

    UK: Deputy PM Blames “Inaccurate” Advice For Tax Error

    UK Deputy Prime Minister Quits Over Tax Error

  • Economy
    South Africa: Ramaphosa Sends Officials On Trade Negotiation Trip To US

    South Africa: Ramaphosa Sends Officials On Trade Negotiation Trip To US

    Ethiopia Unveils Africa’s Largest Dam Amid Egypt Tensions

    Ethiopia Unveils Africa’s Largest Dam Amid Egypt Tensions

    African Leaders Demand Climate Justice At Ethiopia Summit 

    African Leaders Demand Climate Justice At Ethiopia Summit 

    Auto Draft

    Kenya: 66,000 Jobs At Risk As AGOA Deal Ends

    Africa’s Super Banker Resumes As AfDB President, Promises To Harness Africa’s Youthful Energy, Chart Bold Compass For Transformation

    AfDB President Unveils Four Urgent Priorities For First 100 Days In Office

    AfCFTA Key To Shielding Africa From Global Trade Shocks – Mene

    AfCFTA Key To Shielding Africa From Global Trade Shocks – Mene

    Registration Opens For MWC25 Kigali, Africa’s Biggest Connectivity Event

    Registration Opens For MWC25 Kigali, Africa’s Biggest Connectivity Event

    Zimbabwe Pays First Compensation To White Farmers Affected By Land Reforms

    Zimbabwe To Commence Export Of Blueberry To China

    Goldman

    Nigeria: Naira Records Third Consecutive Appreciation Against US Dollar

  • Security
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Metro
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Legal
  • Tech & Science
  • Opinion
  • Exposé
  • Exclusive Videos
  • Niger Delta
  • World
No Result
View All Result
First with the News

When Courts Of Law Become Political Sex Workers

“Nigerian courts are nothing if not consistent in this kind of magic.”

March 20, 2022
in Opinion, Top Stories
0
Nigeria to Hear All Terrorism Trials in Secret, Judge Rules, Anambra

Anambra

0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

By Chidi Odinkalu

Gladys Ukeje was the daughter of Lazarus Ogbonnaya Ukeje, who died in Lagos, the commercial capital of Nigeria, in December 1981. He left behind property but did not make a will. In June 1982, Lagos State granted his wife Lois and son, Enyinnaya, the right to administer and share the estate to the exclusion of Gladys. She sued them on 22 February 1982 before the High Court of Lagos. Nearly nine years later, on 10 January 1992, the High Court of Lagos delivered judgment in favour of Gladys. Lois and Enyinnaya appealed to the Court of Appeal and from there to the Supreme Court in Abuja where, in April 2014, the case was finally decided in favour of Gladys. It took her 31 years of litigation and nearly 33 years since the death of her dad to get Nigeria’s courts to affirm her right as a woman to inherit in equality with the rest of her family.

Relatedreading

South Africa Records 0.8% Growth In Q2 2025

Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

Caroline Mgbafor Mojekwu, another widow from south-east Nigeria, spent 38 years of litigation in different courts in the country from 1959 before she got the Court of Appeal in April 1997 to affirm her right to inherit the property left by her deceased husband, which a male in-law had sought to dis-inherit her of.

MWC Kigali MWC Kigali MWC Kigali
ADVERTISEMENT

The year after the Supreme Court decided the case of Gladys Ukeje, Nigeria conducted a presidential election, in which, for the first time in its history, an opposition candidate beat a ruling party through the ballot box. The new president, Muhammadu Buhari, a soldier, and former coup plotter, campaigned on the alluring promise of ending corruption. In the same cycle, Bukola Saraki, whose father, Olusola, was Majority Leader in the Senate overthrown by Major-General Buhari in 1983, emerged in somewhat controversial circumstances, as the President of the Senate but without the nod of the new president. An uncivil war ensued between Buhari and Saraki in which the former’s “fight” against corruption became a convenient instrument.

In September 2015, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), arraigned Bukola Saraki before the Code of Conduct Tribunal on charges connected with asset declaration compliance. His objection to the proceedings failed and he appealed to the Court of Appeal, which equally dismissed his appeal on the penultimate day of October 2015. Five days later, Saraki took his case to the Supreme Court, whose final judgment in the case came down at the beginning of February 2016.

Gladys Ukeje, who spent 31 years in the same courts to get what rightfully belonged to her would have been impressed by alacrity with which Nigerian courts discovered the facility of speedy dispensation of the law in Saraki’s case. It had taken a mere five months to get from the first instance decision through the Court of Appeal up to the Supreme Court.

This speed may have been perplexing but then this was a criminal case, and the courts were supposedly doing a commendable job of complying with the constitutional standard of disposing of such cases “within a reasonable time.” Racing through the entire court system in five months was the judicial equivalent of justice on Speed (no pun).

Nigerian courts are nothing if not consistent in this kind of magic. Between August and December 2021, the case concerning the removal of the former Chairman of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, PDP, Uche Secondus, raced through the High Court of Rivers State and the Court of Appeal to a final decision before the Supreme Court in a mere four months.

While many senior public officers in Nigeria worried about the COVID-19 Pandemic for much of 2020, Dave Umahi, governor of Ebonyi State in south-east Nigeria was inexplicably preoccupied with his political future. At the onset of another wave of the pandemic, in November 2020, he dumped the PDP on whose platform her was resoundingly elected to a second term in 2019 and joined the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). One year later, the PDP decided to drag him to court, claiming that by decamping to a party different from the one on whose platform he was elected, Umahi had forfeited his office. Umahi filed his response objecting to the case in November 2021. On 8 March 2022, the Court delivered its judgment. It took all of four months to decide the case from filing to judgment.

Those who find this impressive have not yet experienced any courts within the precincts of Abia State. On 25 February, Muhammadu Buhari assented to the new Electoral Act, 2022, but took objection to Section 84(12) in the new Act, asking the National Assembly to re-consider it. Two weeks later, on 9 March, the National Assembly declined Buhari’s request. On 18 March, Justice Evelyn Anyadike of the Federal High Court in Umuahia, capital of Abia State, announced a judgment granting Buhari’s request and ordering the Attorney-General of the Federation “to forthwith delete the said Subsection 12 of Section 84 from the body of the Electoral Act, 2022.”

Even before the court order could have been served on him, Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) and supposed defendant in the suit exultantly announced that “[t]he judgment of the court will be recognised by the government printers in printing the Electoral Act. The Act will be gazetted factoring the effect of the judgment into consideration and deleting the constitutionally offensive provision accordingly.”

In the three weeks since the Act was signed into law, the claim had been filed, served, responded to, briefs had been exchanged and argued and judgment considered, written, and delivered and executed. It does her injustice to describe this Justice Evelyn Anyadike as a marvel of judicial miracle and wonder.

Gladys Ukeje and Cordelia Mgbafor Mojekwu were two women of less than relatively modest means. Anonymous as they were, Nigerian courts – the “lost hope of the common man” – showed no haste or seriousness in attending to them. Having granted them access, the courts strung them along interminably to the point of enabling their impoverishment.

By contrast Saraki, Secondus, and Umahi are among the movers and shakers of Nigeria. Their cases concerned the settlement of partisan disputes among powerful men. In their favour, Nigeria’s Chief Justice confessed at the end of 2021 that he had created a special category of “political cases” and, presumably, a high speed judicial track for them.

Lawyers who do public or constitutional law as well as political scientists will be familiar with the doctrine of “political questions” in judicial adjudication. It is a doctrine of avoidance by which courts are reluctant to embrace cases that offer “the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.” These are precisely the cases that the Nigerian courts now encourage the courts not merely to take but to prioritise.

These courts can only do that at the expense of ordinary citizens whose cases gather dust in the dockets of inattention. This Nigerian variant on political questions inverts the meaning of the doctrine, corrupting it to the point of making it a philosophy of judicial transaction. Not to put too fine a spin on it, the Nigerian doctrine of political questions guarantees unto political harlotry benediction from its judicial co-travelers. It has turned Nigeria’s courts into political sex workers.

The consequences are stark. Disputes involving ordinary citizens who pack no political or financial punch vegetate interminably in the courts. Politicians are unwilling to invest in reforming the judicial or legal process. They know they can always shunt the queue of its dysfunctions and, if everything fails, they can finagle their political way through judicial harlotry. In return, candidates importune the politicians for judicial appointment in the knowledge that they do so for explicit or implicit quid pro quo.

Nigeria’s courts are, therefore, brimming with party political cases that have no place in court except because of the license granted by Nigeria’s unique inversion of the political questions doctrine.  The ruling APC alone has over 208 court cases pending in connection with its lack of internal democracy. At this rate, the courts can ill afford to do much else.

The courts are now the place where the politicians go to launder their dirty business, with full guarantee of judicial absolution. It hardly occurs to those who run them that if they required the politicians to join the queue of judicial delay which they visit habitually on citizens, they could more easily reduce the overload of cases, govern their dockets, compel the politicians to take the legal system seriously and restore the credibility of Nigeria’s judges and courts.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at [email protected]

Tags: All Progressives Congress (APC)breakingChidi OdinkaluHeritageheritage timesheritagetimesmedialatestnewsNigerian Bar Association (NBA)Nigerian Ministry of justicePeoples Democratic Party (PDP)the heritage timesthtthtafricatop stories
ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Pope Francis Visits Ukrainian Children At Vatican Hospital

Next Post

Ukraine Invasion: Footballer Igbonu Sylvester Becomes First Nigerian To Terminate Contract With Russian Club

Related Posts

South Africa's Economy Stalls With 0.1% Growth As Structural Challenges Persist

South Africa Records 0.8% Growth In Q2 2025

September 11, 2025
Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

September 10, 2025

UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

Court Jails 7 Chinese Nationals Over Abduction, Forced Labour In South Africa

France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

Next Post
Ukraine Invasion: Footballer Igbonu Sylvester Becomes First Nigerian To Terminate Contract With Russian Club

Ukraine Invasion: Footballer Igbonu Sylvester Becomes First Nigerian To Terminate Contract With Russian Club

Please login to join discussion
MWC Kigali MWC Kigali MWC Kigali
AfriHeritage Magazine Issue 2 AfriHeritage Magazine Issue 2 AfriHeritage Magazine Issue 2

Updates

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
South Africa's Economy Stalls With 0.1% Growth As Structural Challenges Persist

South Africa Records 0.8% Growth In Q2 2025

September 11, 2025
Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

September 10, 2025
UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

September 10, 2025
Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

September 10, 2025
JESIN GAMES - AfriTrivia JESIN GAMES - AfriTrivia JESIN GAMES - AfriTrivia
ADVERTISEMENT

Most Recent

South Africa Records 0.8% Growth In Q2 2025

September 11, 2025

Trump’s Ally, Kirk Dies From Gunshot Injury At Utah Rally

September 10, 2025

UK Urged To Arrest Israeli President Over Alleged Genocide In Gaza 

September 10, 2025

Junk Food: One In 10 Kids Obese Worldwide – UN Report 

September 10, 2025

Court Jails 7 Chinese Nationals Over Abduction, Forced Labour In South Africa

September 10, 2025

France Gets New Prime Minister After Bayrou’s Resignation

September 10, 2025

Illegal Migration: Children Among Dead As Migrant Crossings Soar Past 30,000 In UK

September 10, 2025

Trump Not Attending G20 Summit Taking Place First Time In Africa — White House

September 9, 2025

About

Heritage Times HT stands as a beacon of pan-African journalism, dedicated to amplyfing the rich tapestry of voices and narratives across the continent. With unwavering commitment, we illuminate the evocative essence of Africa, offering a fresh perspective that captivates our global audience.

Featured

One Year of Transformative Stewardship: Walson-Jack’s Innovative Impact on Nigeria’s Civil Service

Africa’s Largest Tech Event, MWC25 Kigali, Returns With Focus On Innovation, Policy

Nadine Djuiko: Meet The Cameroonian Woman Behind Maryland’s Million-Dollar Braiding Empire

Connect

Connect with us on social media and receive timely updates on the go.

Get Updates

  • About
  • HT Management
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Heritage Times (HT) Media.

No Result
View All Result
  • Welcome
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Security
  • Exposé
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Legal
  • Technology and Science
  • Columns
    • Opinion
  • World
  • __________________
  • Make a Donation
  • Photo Speaks
  • Videos
  • You-Report
  • Whistleblower
  • Advertise
  • HT Events
  • HT Management
  • About HT
  • Contact us

© 2025 Heritage Times (HT) Media.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In