Mr.
President, please permit me to pay tribute to four of our delegates who died
during the pendency of the Conference. Barrister Hamma Misau who died on March
27; Dr. Mohammad Jumare who died on May 5; Professor Dora Akunyili, on June 7;
and Professor Mohammad Nur Alkali, on August 1, 2014. May their souls rest in
peace.
Those were the words of Idris Legbo Kutigi when he presented the
report of the 2018 national conference to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan on
August 21, 2014.
Kutigi |
Kutigi joined the deceased on Sunday morning and it is now the
turn of those on this side of the divide to say “rest in peace” to a man who
led the judiciary between 2007 and 2009.
The news of the demise of Kutigi came as a rude shock to many but
it only signals the world as a passage after all. Revered as one of the
brightest minds to have graced the bench, Kutigi did not only contribute
immensely to the Nigerian legal system, he etched his name on a platter of gold
in the country’s history.
For a man who walked the rocky trajectory of the law for more than
four decades, his knowledge was vast and his diligence unquestionable. Even
while he stirred controversies as the chief justice of the country, he
maintained a high integrity beyond the shores of the country as a judge who
would deliver his stern verdict even if heaven will fall.
INCORRUPTIBLE JUDGE
In
2011, SaharaReporter published a document it
said emanated from the US embassy. The document disclosed how an aide of former
President Olusegun Obasanjo and a businessman offered a bribe of N200 million
to Kutigi to compromise 2007 presidential poll by excluding Atiku Abubakar,
former vice president, from the race, but the judge asked them to leave his
office.
Kutigi is the third ex-CJN to die in 2018, after Dahiru Musdapher and Aloysius Katsina-Alu |
The report also unearthed how a foremost traditional ruler from
Kutigi’s home state of Niger offered him another bribe of N400 million which he
also rejected. As CJN, he was said to have publicly criticised the practice of
retired justices of appellate courts working as “consultants” to election
petitioners and their lawyers at election tribunals.
CONTROVERSY OVER YAR’ADUA’S HEALTH
In 2009, when the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua travelled
abroad for medical treatment, and did not hand over power to former President
Goodluck Jonathan, his deputy, this created a huge crisis, but what was to
follow was nothing compared to the agitation for Jonathan to take over power.
The Save Nigeria Gr
oup (SNG) under the leadership of Tunde Bakare,
a preacher, was in the forefront of the campaign for Jonathan to take charge.
The group, which was able to garner support from influential personalities in
public space, staged rallies and a series of protests; the kitchen cabinet too
will not not cave in easily: their message was simple, Yar’Adua could govern
the country from anywhere.
Kutigi presenting the confab report to Jonathan |
“The powers of the president are not exercised territorially.
Yar’Adua can exercise his powers anywhere in the world, on the plane, at the
meeting of the United Nations or even on his sick bed, as long as he is not
incapacitated by the sickness,” Michael Aondoakaa, attorney-general of the
federation, had said at a press conference.
While Aondoakaa was theorising, the tenure of Kutigi as CJN was
nearing its end, and Aloysius Katsina-Alu was ready to mount the saddle, but
the only problem was that the man who had the constitutional authority to
administer oath of office on Katsina-Alu was bedridden in faraway Saudi Arabia.
He was battling pericarditis, or so they made us believe, and a
constitutional crisis was brewing.
“As the Vice-President, based on our laws, I do not have any
powers to swear in the chief justice of Nigeria,” Jonathan had told those who
wanted him to tinker with the idea.
The man who eventually succeeded Yar’Adua did not stop there:
“Ceremonial responsibilities and ceremonial functions are sometimes more
serious than the real work we do. I do not have the powers to swear in the
chief justice of the federation… The tradition has been there for 51 years. It
is Mr President who swears in the chief justice.”
Jonathan was not just saying these things for the fun of it. He
was not just talking, he had a confession, and of course this was after the
issue had been resolved.
“I was worried that if we get to that Thursday and the chief
justice of Nigeria is not sworn in, that means one arm of government has no
leader and that would have been an invitation to chaos,” he had revealed.
“In fact, I even had to approach the former chief justice, that,
‘look, I have the powers to extend your period of stay in the office. Since I
cannot swear in a new chief justice, can I extend your stay in office so that
there will be no vacuum? But he said it was not possible because the constitution
says at the age of 70, he must go. But he promised he was going to re-examine
the laws. I got back to my office; I was terribly worried within that period.”
Then came the solution: “Few days to the time, expiration of the
tenure of the former CJN, the attorney-general came and showed me the act that
says either the president or the chief justice of the federation can swear in
the new chief justice of the federation. That law was there but nobody saw it.”
On December 30, 2009, Kutigi administered the oath on his
successor, and trust Nigerians, this created conundrum among lawyers.
Rotimi Akeredolu, incumbent governor of Ondo state, who was then
the president of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), had accused Kutigi of
foisting two CJNs on the nation. Akeredolu said he was worried that the
task which had been traditionally reserved for presidents was usurped by the
retiring CJN.
‘I’M NOT USED TO PARTIES’
In 2010, the children of the former jurist put together a private
ceremony to celebrate his successful tenure as the CJN. The ceremony in his
official residence, chaired by his predecessor Alfa Belgore, was kept secret
until the previous day as they knew their father would object it.
At the occasion, he stated that he was only informed late about it
because his children knew that he would not have given his consent for a dinner
as he is not used to partying.
FATHER OF 18 CHILDREN AND 40
GRANDCHILDREN
The late CJN was born on December 31, 1939 in Kutigi town, Niger
state. He had his elementary education in Kutigi and proceeded to Bida for
secondary school. Kutigi graduated from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria after
which he left the country for England, where he studied at the School of
Oriental and African Studies, University of London. He later returned to the
Nigerian Law School in Lagos. He left behind 18 children and over 40
grandchildren.
Kutigi served as the attorney general and commissioner for justice
in Niger state until 1976 when he was appointed a high court judge. Thereafter,
he moved to the court of appeal in 1980 and later appointed to the supreme
court in 1992. He served in the supreme court for 15 years and was appointed
CJN by Obasanjo based on the recommendation of the National Judicial Council.
He succeeded Salihu Alfa Belgore, who retired on January 17, 2007.
CHAIRMAN OF NATIONAL CONFAB
In 2014, the former CJN was appointed by former President Goodluck
Jonathan as the chairman of the national conference to steer discussions on
national issues and present a viable solution on the way forward. With 494
delegates across the country, Kutigi presided over the confab for four months,
even when he lost his wife in the process.
In his report presentation, he said, “Mr. President, when you
inaugurated the 2014 National Conference on 17 March, 2014, we knew that we
were taking on a tough assignment.”
So tough an assignment that he didn’t find time to mourn his wife.
one of his dying wishes would have been for the report of the confab to be
implemented but sadly the government of President Muhammadu Buhari did not
believe in the conference. Anyway, Kutigi did his own beat while he was here.
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