The Catholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Onaiyekan, has cautioned President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria to desist from any act capable of undermining the independence of the judiciary.
He said the executive should desist from controlling the judiciary in a democracy.
“As things stand presently in Nigeria, the judicial arm of government is totally under the control of the executive,” the Cardinal said.
In an interview with Good Shepherd, a Catholic Newspaper published by the Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja on the sidelines of the 2019 Cathedraticum Mass of the Bwari Deanary at St. James Dawaki, he said with the system being adopted by the Federal Government, judges were longer free to do their work in line with constitutional provisions.
According to him, there was strong need to allow judges the free hand to carry out their constitutional duties without unnecessary pressure from the government.
“And we have a situation where it appears that the judiciary is being totally controlled by the executive.
Even if it is for good reasons, at the end of the day, it means that we are exposed to a situation where justices, judges are no longer free to do their work according to their vocation. They will be feeling that they are under pressure to pass a judgement that would please certain people.
“Today, it is government, tomorrow it will be another person. That is why many people are worried about what has happened. And this is not about that gentleman called Onnoghen (suspended Chief Justice of Nigeria), he may have been a horrible man.
“Perhaps he was a corrupt judge. Well, someone must have recommended him to be at the head of our judiciary. If they are telling us that the entire judiciary is rotten, let them say it clearly. And they will have to tell us how they are going to replace it.”
He decried the increasing wave of kidnapping and killing, especially Catholic Priests and Seminarians. Onaiyekan said: “We are having a society where there is no safety.
“You cannot move freely. Everybody is liable to being kidnapped. Even the high up in government are afraid,” he said.
On the government’s fight against corruption, Onaiyekan lamented that although the war against corruption was something possible, rigging of election in whichever means was worse than stealing billions of money that belongs to the people.
His words: “It is not what I think (that the present government has fought corruption to a standstill); it is what everybody sees around us all the time. Everybody agrees now that right under the nose of Mr. President, stealing is still going on.
“The only thing is that, the press cannot say it as freely as they used to say it under (former President) Goodluck Jonathan. But the fact is there. But in my opinion, corruption is not only a matter of stealing money, there are other things that are worse than stealing money. If a government is not sincere in the things it says to the people, that is gross corruption.
“Rigging election by whatever means is even worse than stealing billions because in the rigging of elections, you steal my vote which has no money value; even the complaints that people are having about biased systems of appointment of key officers.
“If you have a situation in Nigeria where Mr. President doesn’t see anybody competent except those who are from his village or religion, then that is gross corruption.”
The cleric also noted that corruption was even being perpetrated by those closest to the President, adding that corruption goes beyond stealing of money.
On the controversy surrounding the trial and reported retirement of the CJN, Justice Walter Onnoghen, the Metropolitan see of Abuja Catholic Archdiocese said that things have not been going well at the top level of government.
He said: “One thing is certain. Things have not been going well at the top level of our government. It is not for nothing that we normally talk about the distinction of the three arms of government – the legislature, the executive and the judiciary.”
Onaiyekan also lamented the wanton kidnapping and killing of Nigerians in different parts of the country. The presidency, as at the time of filling in this report, remained silent without comments about the statement from the Catholic Cardinal.