Obasanjo’s inappropriate criticism of Justice Idris
Former president Olusegun Obasanjo recently launched a stinging
attack on the authority of the Federal High Court and the competence of
Justice Mohammed Baba Idris after the judge ruled that details on the
spending of recovered stolen public funds under Obasanjo’s government
between May 1999 and May 2007 should be widely published including on a
dedicated website.
Justice Idris’ judgment, which followed a Freedom of Information suit
brought by Nigeria’s leading anticorruption NGO Socio-Economic Rights
and Accountability Project (SERAP), also called for publication of
records of spending of recovered funds under the governments of former
president Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and former president Goodluck Jonathan.
Reacting to the judgment, Obasanjo reportedly said, “They said the
money recovered from Abacha, I should account for it. What stupidity!
The man who asked for it, the man who gave the judgement or who answered
them are all stupid, with due respect. I don’t keep account, all Abacha
loots were sent to Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, and every bit of it
was reported to Minister of Finance. My job was to write where we can
get help to recover the money. Every penny that comes out of it went to
CBN, so if they want to know what happened to the money, they should
call CBN governor or call the Minister of Finance. But again, it shows
ignorance, total ignorance, which is lacking and you wonder, are these
people educated? They can also approach the man who helped us in
recovering process to give the list of money recovered and where he took
it.”
This statement, coming from a former president of Nigeria, flies in
the face of leadership by example and can only help to frustrate the
objective of the Freedom of Information Act, and by extension, undermine
the authority of the country’s judiciary and erode the rule of law. Olusegun Obasanjo
Judges are not infallible but there’s nothing stupid in Justice Idris
insisting on transparency and accountability of leaders who once held a
position of trust and control over the public treasury. Judges don’t
act or give judgments according to their personal whims and fancies:
they apply the laws as they find them. Although judges may sometimes
fail to live up to the ideal-and the present is not a case of such
failure-the principle should be generally understood and respected that
judges would draw conclusions from the evidence before them in
accordance with legal precedent, ordinary norms of legal reasoing, and
established constitutional and legal principles.
If judges have to decide cases on the basis of what politicians or
someone else wanted the law or the result to be, the very principle of
independence of the judiciary would be forfeited. While it’s within
Obasanjo’s right to disagree with the judgment or even criticise it,
calling Justice Idris “stupid and ignorant” simply for doing his job
amounts to inappropriate political criticism as it threatens the judge’s
independence and integrity.
It’s unfair to see individual judges as ‘fair game’ because they
cannot publicly defend themselves against inappropriate criticism.
But Obasanjo’s attempt to browbeat Justice Idris simply for upholding
the Freedom of Information Act is hardly surprising especially given
that he ignored wise counsel to sign the Bill into law during his time
in government.
What is the point of “government of, by, and for the people” if
opinion leaders and former presidents like Obasanjo by words or deed
seem to want to dodge responsibility for their action or inaction while
in office by implicitly promoting policies of secrecy?
Imagine if the disclosures of corruption, compendiously known as
Dazukigate, which weakened the ability of the country’s military to
fight and defeat Boko Haram, and debased institutions of governance,
have remained a secret.
If anything is to be learned from the country’s current experience
with disclosures of corruption among high-ranking government officials,
politicians and the military, it’s that the government of president
Muhammadu Buhari must open public affairs, including regarding details
on spending of recovered funds under governments since the return of
democracy in 1999, to public scrutiny.
Non-disclosure of Dazukigate would have deprived the Nigerian people
of a much-needed opportunity to know what former president Goodluck
Jonathan was doing while in office, and to cleanse some level of
government.
Justice Idris’ judgment is without doubt a great victory for
transparency and accountability in the country. Thanks to Justice Idris
Nigerians will now be able to know exactly how recovered stolen funds
were spent including under Obasanjo’s government. They will be able to
find out if recovered funds were appropriately spent on real projects,
mismanaged or re-stolen.
The judgment recognizes that corruption is never flaunted in the open
and it’s invariably practiced through secrecy-secrecy found in every
level of government from local governments to Aso Rock Villa and
National Assembly.
It buttresses the point that openness promotes the appearance of
fairness and enhances public confidence in the integrity of government
action. Openness serves as a check against incompetence, venality, or
bias; and promotes the constitutional values of encouraging elected
officials to act in the public interest. This in turn can stimulate more
knowledgeable public consideration of transparency, accountability and
human rights issues and perhaps even encourage individual citizens to
come forward with constructive suggestions.
Thus, by ordering publication on a dedicated website of projects on
which recovered funds were spent by the governments of former presidents
Obasanjo, Yar’Adua and Jonathan for inspection by the citizenry,
Justice Idris has enhanced the status of the Freedom of Information Act
as a veritable legal framework of protection against governmental
deception and arbitrariness.
Without the disclosures ordered by Justice Idris, high-level official
corruption will continue to flourish with official action and with
almost absolute impunity. And Nigerians will continue to be denied
effective enjoyment of their human rights if they don’t know what their
leaders and government are doing and unable to hold them to account.
Nigerians do not demand infallibility from their leaders and
institutions, but it’s difficult to accept the proposition that a judge
granting Nigerians the right to know what their leaders and government
are doing is “stupid and ignorant.” Nigerians indeed have a right to
compel their public officials particularly the high-ranking among them
like Obasanjo to keep the avenues of information open so the public can
know and evaluate their work, accomplishments and derelictions
regardless of whether they are in or out of office.
How Buhari responds to Justice Idris’ judgment will without question
be a significant aspect of what defines his anticorruption agenda.
One immediate step for Buhari to take is to instruct the Attorney
General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Accountant
General of the Federation and the Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria to
put in place mechanisms for the full and effective enforcement and
implementation of the judgment by Justice Idris.
Olaniyan, author of ‘Corruption and Human Rights Law in Africa’, is
Legal Adviser, International Secretariat of Amnesty International,
London.
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