Amid the prevailing public criticisms against the judiciary, the Chief Justice Nigeria (CJN), Justice Olukayode Ariwoola, has said the judicial institution will not succumb to overriding public sentiments in the discharge of its constitutional duties.
The CJN said this while speaking at the opening of the special session of the 2023/2024 Legal Year and swearing-in of 58 newly conferred Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs)
“I expect every judicial officer to work very hard and also be very honest and courteous to the litigants, witnesses and members of the bar, and discharge all your judicial functions with all the humility at your command.
“Even while doing this, it is still necessary to have at the back of your minds that public opinions, sentiments or emotions can never take the place of the law in deciding the cases that come before you.
“The law remains the law, no matter whose interest is involved. In all we do, as interpreters of the law, we should endeavour to severe the strings of emotion from logic and assumption from fact.
“We should never be overwhelmed by the actions or loud voices of the mob or crowd and now begin to confuse law with sentiment or something else in deciding our cases.
“Nevertheless, unnecessary and unwarranted utterances are bound to embarrass not only others, but the Judge himself; thus what should be asked, should be asked, and what should not be asked, should be avoided”, he charged.
The CJN pledged of his commitment to safeguarding the rule of law, the holistic independence of the judiciary and the trust and confidence of the public.
He further assured that soon, the apex court would enjoy its full complement of 21 justices to break the jinx of its inability to meet constitutional requirements.
Justice Ariwoola disclosed that the efforts of the Corruption and Financial Crime Cases Trial Monitoring Committee (COTRIMCO), which was inaugurated in 2018 by the former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice W.S.A Onnoghen, to fast-track the trial of corruption and financial related crimes in the country, had seen the 10 convictions by the ICPC and 1,094 by the EFCC in the 2022/2023 period.
He said the Supreme Court received 1,271 cases comprising motions and appeals between September 12, 2022 and July 11, 2023.
Out of these, the apex court heard 388 political appeals, 215 criminal appeals and 464 civil appeals, while it also considered a total of 49 criminal motions, 153 civil motions, and 2 political motions, the CJN said.
He said within the same period, the apex court delivered a total of 251 judgments, out of which 125 were political appeals, 81 civil appeals and 45 criminal appeals and 91 rulings.