Gov.
Nyesom Wike of Rivers has said the decision of the National Judicial
Council (NJC) directing judges under investigation to step aside
portends great danger to the nation’s democracy.
Mr. Wike made the
assertion when the executive members of the Nigerian Bar Association
(NBA) Port Harcourt branch paid him a courtesy visit on Friday.
The NJC announced the decision on Wednesday, following calls for the suspension of the judges who are accused of corruption.
According
to him, the u-turn by the NJC will encourage politicians to write
petitions against any judge whose judgment is likely to go against such
politician.
“This move to ask judges to step aside is in favour
of politicians because no judge will deliver judgment against government
or a ruling party.
“The implication is that politicians can now
write as many petitions alleging that they saw a judge taking brown
envelope – which will warrant the judge to be asked to step aside.
“For
us, politicians, we are happy with this development because if I notice
that I will lose a case, then I will tell my lawyer to write a petition
which will result to the judge stepping aside.
“So, in other not to
be alleged to have done anything wrong, judges will not give judgment
against government or the ruling party.
“This is because, if judge
deliver judgment against government or the ruling party, then agencies
of government will come after them,” he said.
Mr. Wike said the development portends grave danger to the judiciary arm of government and to the common man.
He
said the move was a clear manipulation and attempt to silence the
opposition, especially as the nation was heading toward 2019 general
elections.
The governor said that example to the manipulations
was INEC’s quick reaction to announce federal and state legislative
rerun elections shortly after the National Assembly ordered it to do so.
“Simply
because the Senate said it must conduct election within five weeks; the
next day, INEC came up with a time table for the election.
“This
is the same INEC that cited insecurity as reason why it could not
conduct elections in Rivers, and now within one day after Senate’s
position, the same INEC released a time table.
“The question is
when did INEC meet security agencies to now take a position that there
is no longer security problem in Rivers State, hence the decision to
conduct the rerun elections.
“All these boil down to manipulations which not only endanger our democracy but threatens us as a people,” he said. (NAN)
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