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By Wole Oyebade
Following the hue and cry over demolition of the popular Owonifari Electronic Market loop at Oshodi, the Lagos State government has said that the market had to go following its security threats to residents of the state.
State Commissioner for Information and Strategy, Steve Ayorinde, at an inter ministerial chat with reporters on Thursday, said that the demolition exercise on Tuesday and Wednesday actually confirmed some of their fears, “as we discovered concrete bunker and arms underneath the shops.”
The government said though the matter of relocation had been on for about 10 years, recent intelligence report and criminal activities around Oshodi during the festive season, informed the drastic action of the state government. Read full on Guardian


Read more: http://newsrescue.com/nigeria-bunker-arms-discovered-under-shops-after-demolishing/#ixzz3whA2yX5b

Conflicting decisions by appeal court divisions worries CJN

CJN unhappy over conflicting decisions by Appeal Court Divisions
•CJN Mahmud Mohammed
•PCA rules out new projects in 2016
The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mahmud Mohammed, is not happy at alleged inconsistent decisions of the nation’s courts especially on election petitions.
The CJN is said to have taken note of   public complaints about contradicting decisions, particularly by divisions of the Court of Appeal, and fears the situation is capable of eroding public confidence in the Judiciary.
The CJN suggested to the Appeal Court to create “an internal law report for Justices to access either electronically or in print in order to reduce the avenue for conflict in its jurisprudence.”
He also drew the attention of Justices of the Court of Appeal to the suggestion made in 2008 by a retired Supreme Court Justice,  Niki Tobi, to the effect that “immediately a decision is given in one division, it should be sent to the other divisions without delay.”
Justice Mohammed spoke in Abuja last week at 2015 edition of the Annual Conference of the Court of Appeal.
The CJN argued that judges, being guardians of the law, “must not only be just, but also convey certainty in our justness.”
His words: “It bears reminding that the overriding objective of every legal system in the world is to do justice. However, this cannot be achieved where there is confusion as to the state of the law as pronounced by the court.
“As your lordships will agree, where an aggrieved person perceives, whether rightly or wrongly, that they will not receive justice, such a situation can indeed bode ill for the community in which he lives and can lead to acrimony and anarchy.
“We must not ignore the negative perception that is occasioned by conflicting judgments delivered at various divisions of the Court of Appeal.
“Such judicial contradictions only result in untold hardships to litigants in their quest for justice. They further cast your lordships in an unfavourable light and leave the judiciary at the mercy of inuendos, crass publications and editorials.”
Justice Mohammed commended the court’s Justices for their positive contributions to the development of the nation’s justice delivery system.
He hailed the court’s head, Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa for the way she constituted election petitions tribunals in spite of budgetary constraints.
“I must similarly commend your lordships for being instrumental in propelling the judiciary towards an improved system of administration of justice in Nigeria.
“With one justice of appeal to 1.8 million Nigerians, I dare say that your efforts at dispensing justice, despite frightening caseload, can best be described as extraordinary.”
Justice Bulkachuwa said 2015 was quite challenging for the court, because it was an election year.
She ruled out the possibility of the court embarking on fresh project this year in view of the new policy of zero budgeting, but assured that the court would strive to complete all existing ones.
Bulkachuwa noted that the court’s annual justices conference, introduced by a former President of the court, Justice  Mustapha Akanbi, was intended to enable the court take stock of its activities for the year, identify challenges and seek solutions.

Bishop Onaiyekan tells Buhari to pardon corrupt officials who return looted funds


buhari explainsCatholic Archbishop of Abuja, John Cardinal Onaiyekan has called on the Federal Government to pardon those involved in money laundering once they agree to return the looted funds.
Onaiyekan made the appeal at the St. Peter and Paul Catholic Church, Nyanya as part of his New Year message for the nation in Abuja.
The cleric said that the ongoing developments were clear indications that corruption could be wiped over time, adding that the fight against fraudulent acts must be handled with care.
“It is okay to expose people and disgrace them, but that will not solve the problem.
“If we want our money back, we have to strategise so that the countries that are keeping our money can feel challenged to return them.
“The easiest way to get the money back is to convince them to go bring the money back, and then it will be easy.
“One way to convince people to bring stolen money back is to promise them that they will not be disgraced,’’ Onaiyekan said.
According to him, the amnesty is not like a plea bargain which only leads to the return of some stolen funds.
“This is different from plea bargain where you tell a person who stole hundred billion of naira to return fifty billion and be forgiven; that for me is not the right thing.
“If you have stolen hundred million and you are ready to bring back all, then we will leave you and not send you to jail, Nigeria can do that.”
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