Mahmood
Mohammed, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, CJN, has confronted President Muhammadu
Buhari in a face-to-face meeting in the Presidential Villa following the
weekend crackdown on federal judges and two Supreme Court justices by the
country’s secret police, The Trent can exclusively report.
The
meeting, which held in the morning of Monday, October 10, 2016, was at the
instance of the Honourable Justice Mohammed, multiple sources reveal.
Present
at the meeting were Lawal Daura, the director-general of the Department of
State Security Services, DSS, which serves as the country’s secret police and
the president of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria, Babatunde Adejumo.
Our
findings are that the meeting was very tense and the chief justice did not
mince words when addressing the president on the matter. The visibly infuriated
CJN tongue-lashed the president for violating the democratic principles of
separation of powers and assuming the unconstitutional status of “supervisor”
of the judiciary, an independent arm of government.
Justice
Mohammed accused President Buhari of victimizing the judges targeted in the
midnight crackdown by the DSS for refusing to be intimidated by the secret
police over the matters of the election petitions of Rivers and Akwa Ibom States.
According
to one of our top inside sources, the CJN exposed a series of scare and
intimidation tactics carried out by the DSS director general, a kinsman to
President Buhari, to make the bench bow to its wishes and overturn the
judgement against the current governors of two oil-rich states.
Mohammed
expressly accused the DSS DG of using the name of President Buhari in carrying
out what he called an “unprecedented attempt to influence the bench and pervert
justice” in the country. The president was visibly upset by the revelations and
repeatedly denied knowledge of such harassment of of judges by the DSS.
Mr.
Daura attempted to deny knowledge of such subterranean moves and claimed that
the judges that were arrested, in what the secret police wrongly termed as
“sting operation”, were corrupt. A claim
which saw the CJN shout him down telling him to shut up and sit down.
After
lambasting the secret police boss, Justice Mohammed proceeded to unreel
instances in which Daura contacted judges handling the election petition cases
claiming that ruling in favour of the All Progressives Congress, APC,
candidates was “what President Buhari wanted”. Again, the president denies
issuing such instructions.
The
CJN also revealed that the minister of transportation, Rotimi Amaechi offered
the judges millions of dollars to overturn their ruling on the two election
petitions. He said the honourable justices rebuffed Amaechi because they were
hellbent on delivering a sound judgment on the cases which had been unduly
sensationalised by politicians.
Justice
Mohammed revealed that Amaechi also said that he was acting on the orders of
the president and that in actual fact, the judges arrested over the weekend
were those who refused to be corrupted by the DSS and Amaechi and insisted on
preserving the independence and integrity of the bench.
On
this revelation, Buhari presented a disturbed contenance, our sources say. The
president requested that the CJN puts down his position which we are reliably
informed has been done.
Insiders
revealed to The Trent that the climate in Aso Rock is unusually tense following
the posture and damning revelations by the CJN.
There
are whispers in the corridors that based on the gravity of the allegations
against the DSS director and Amaechi, Buhari may let go of the duo to “clear
his name from the embarrassing episode’, a top security source told our
reporter.
President
Buhari appointed Lawal Daura, his kinsman from his hometown in Katsina on July
2, as head of the DSS after firing Ita Ekpeyong. Daura was recalled from
retirement as he had retired from the service of the DSS when he reached the
mandatory age of 60 according to the Civil Service rules of Nigeria. He is also
a member of Buhari’s political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) and
served on the security committee for Buhari’s presidential campaign.
While
the election petitions were being heard at the courts, the INEC resident electoral commissioners
(RECs) for Akwa Ibom, Austin Okojie, was detained and tortured for 13 days and
his Rivers State counterpart, Gesila Khan , was also detained for two weeks by
Nigeria’s secret police. The harassment, detention, and torture of electoral officials
of the two oil rich states was reportedly connected with the interest of
President Buhari in reclaiming electoral victory from main opposition party,
the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in those states.
None
of the INEC officials detained by the DSS have been charged with any crime and
the election petitions were eventually ruled in favour of the PDP by the
Supreme Court.
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