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Why CCT adjourned Onnoghen’s trial indefinitely

The Code of Conduct Tribunal has adjourned the trial of suspended Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen pending the verdict of an appeal court.

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Justice Walter Onnoghen, Chief Justice of Nigeria
Justice Walter Onnoghen, Chief Justice of Nigeria
Suspended Justice Walter Onnoghen, Chief Justice of Nigeria

The Code of Conduct Tribunal has adjourned the trial of suspended Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen pending the verdict of an appeal court.

The case against Nigeria’s top judge which raised fears of interference in next month’s presidential election was adjourned indefinitely on Monday, days after President Muhammadu Buhari suspended the chief justice.

“This case has been adjourned sine die (indefinitely), pending the determination of the matter at the court of appeal,” Danladi Umar, chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) said.

The next court of appeal hearing is due to take place on Jan. 30.

Protestors gathered outside the courthouse in the capital, Abuja – some in support of Onnoghen and others who backed his suspension. A replacement judge, Tanko Mohammed, was sworn in on Friday to take his place.

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Chairman Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Justice Danladi Umar
Chairman Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Justice Danladi Umar

Lawyers’ body, the Nigerian Bar Association, said it would boycott the courts for two days from Jan. 29 to protest the suspension.

The Code of Conduct Tribunal said on Jan. 12 that Onnoghen would face six counts of alleged non-declaration of assets. The allegations were initially made by Dennis Aghanya, who served as Buhari’s media aide between 2009 and 2011.

Onnoghen’s lawyers said the tribunal did not have the authority to try him, and an appeal court ordered last week that the trial be halted while it ruled on that.

READ: FG directs security agencies to ensure violence-free election

On Monday, the senate brought a case against the government at the supreme court to rule whether the president had acted within the law in suspending the chief justice or whether he had usurped parliament’s powers.

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Buhari said on Friday his decision to suspend Onnoghen for the duration of the CCT trial was based on an order to do so from the tribunal dated Jan. 23 – the day before the court of appeal halted the proceedings.

The charges are yet to be disclosed.

The president, in a series of tweets, said security agencies had traced “suspicious transactions running into millions of dollars to the CJN’s (Chief Justice of Nigeria’s) personal accounts, all undeclared or improperly declared as required by law”.

It is not the first time such claims have been levelled at the judiciary since Buhari, a former military ruler who vowed to crack down on corruption, took office in 2015.

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The Department of State Services, Nigeria’s security agency, in 2016 said it seized $800,000 in cash during raids on judges from the supreme, appeal and high courts. Senior judges were arrested and released. None were convicted.

Nigeria’s judiciary has long been the subject of corruption allegations amid claims that judges routinely accept bribes in exchange for favourable rulings.

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