NBA AND CHALLENGE OF LAW SOCIETY OF NIGERIA

LSN : IS NBA’S MONOPOLY UNDER THREAT?

By Abdulrasheed Ibrahim

This is another interesting period for the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) as recently a group of lawyers released a press statement saying they have founded a new lawyer association to be known as Law Society of Nigeria (LSN) and rolled out the names of their protem National Executive. In their own very words in a letter said to have been sent to the Chairman of the Body of Benchers: “The Law Society of Nigeria (LSN) was founded and registered as a national organization of Lawyers admitted to practice law in Nigeria. The LSN, with membership , spread all over Nigeria, exists to empower the legal profession with quality member service (high standards of learning , competence , and profession conduct) ; facilitates access to justice , maintain and advance the cause of justice ;and promote the rule of law…”

What came to mind immediately I saw the press release was the nature of politics in Nigeria which I once referred to as a “big comedy” .When I said that, not many people particularly the lawyers took me very serious. In stating what was in my mind after reading the LSN’s press release, I said “This reminds me of the nPDP when some PDP politicians fell out with GEJ, they ran to APC but today most of them are back in the PDP trying to send APC packing. In the wake of NBA Vs. El-Rufai’s disinvitation to the NBA conference, some lawyers threatened to form NNBA .Is their threat now coming to reality? The other day when Chief Akintola SAN talked about some lawyers that don’t know the geography of the court, I saw the handwriting on the wall that there is every likelihood of split in the NBA but I kept quite because I don’t want to be tagged “a prophet of doom”. Now, who says a writer is not a soothsayer!”

In all honesty, I may not belong to the same school of thought with Chief Niyi Akinola (SAN), but I always admire him for one thing. He is a very bold and fearless lawyer that does not hide his feelings. Not many lawyers today know that Chief Akintola has been a lawyer activist as far back as 70s when as a young lawyer, he was involved in what has become to be known as ‘AKINTOLA AFFAIRS” in the history of conflict between the Bar and the Bench, when he had a brush with a prominent member of the bench that later led to the NBA’s emergency NEC meeting of 6th November 1971 where the NBA protested the conviction of its member who was lawfully discharging his duty as counsel to his client. You can read the details in my article titled: HAS THE FRATERNITY BETWEEN THE BAR AND THE BENCH GONE ON FLIGHT? That was just to illustrate how bold and fearless Chief Akintola has been. Sometime in 2020, Chief Akintola expressed the view that Nigerian lawyers were free to break away from the NBA which generated a lot of controversies among lawyers the same way his recent view generated controversies when he referred to a former NBA President as a “boy”. Is LSN heeding the call of the Learned Silk?

Although the LSN is yet to be directly linked to Chief Niyi Akintola SAN, but LSN has said that: “As a Society of lawyers in Nigeria, called to the Nigerian Bar under auspices of the Body of Benchers, the Law Society and its members are subject to the authority of the Body of Benchers and other regulatory organs as established by the Legal Practitioners Act. We commit ourselves to work with the Body of Benchers to ensure quality legal service delivery.” What is yet to be cleared as at the time of writing this is my article was whether the Body of Benchers under the Chairmanship of Chief Wole Olanipekun, SAN, CFR, a former NBA President has endorsed or approved the emergence of LSN. Chief Akintola is a closed ally of Chief Olanipekun. Already a new twist or crack has appeared on the wall of LSN as shortly after the press release by the LSN said to be presently under the leadership of Mr. Kunle Ogunba, SAN as its protem President, another Learned Silk , Prince (Dr.) Richard Oma Ahonaruogho came up with a disclaimer that as the promoter of the LSN and founding Secretary, there was no executive appointed for the LSN. Apart from this, there is also the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC)’s angle to it that it has denied the registration of the LSN on the ground that its objectives are similar to that of the NBA.

From what looks like the mission statement of LSN, its formation is not intended to be like those other lawyer associations that go the path of regional affiliation like the Eastern Bar Forum, Arewa Lawyers Forum and the Egbe Amofin Odu’a whose impacts are always felt during the NBA national elections. LSN is also not intended to go the path of religious affiliation like National Association of Catholic Lawyers; Christian Lawyers Fellowship Association of Nigeria and Muslim Lawyers Association of Nigeria. LSN neither intends to go the path of feminist affiliation like FIDA Nigeria or AWLA Nigeria but rather wants to be on the same pedestal with the NBA. How LSN seeks to achieve this is going to be very interesting.

There is no doubt that for decades the NBA has been enjoying the great monopoly of the Nigerian Bar with all the goodies that go with it, whether the LSN will be able to pose a threat to the NBA’s existence is the question to be answered by the passage of time. There is this argument that has been raging for a very long time and that is whether by the constitutional right to Freedom of Association donated to all Nigerians including the lawyers; can a lawyer decide not to be a member of the NBA and to be bound by its rules and regulations? From the current position of law in Nigeria today, the NBA has been conferred with the title of MONOPOLY OF THE BAR by virtue of some reported cases. For instance the Court of Appeal has held in the case of NBA Vs. KEHINDE (2017) 11 NWLR 225 (Pt. 1576) that :

“The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) was established for the purpose of regulating the affairs and conduct of all legal practitioners in Nigeria and upon being called to the Nigerian Bar, there is automatic membership to the NBA on a lawyer…Hence, as long as one has elected to join and remain within the noble profession, he is a member and ought to comply with the directive of the Association”

Prior the above decision, the same Court of Appeal held in the case of CHINWO Vs. OWHONDA (2008) 3 NWLR (Pt. 1074) at 341 that :

“The Appellant was not compelled to take up the profession of law and its attendant compulsory membership of the Nigerian Bar Association. However, once he made the choice to study and practice law and thereby placing his name on the roll of honour of belonging to the profession, he stands bound by the internal rules and regulations of the Association. There would be therefore be no issue of a breach of the Constitution of the country if the rules demand of him, undivided loyalty”

One of the brick walls that will be met and contended with by the LSN is what the Court of Appeal called UNDIVIDED LOYALTY to the NBA. Honestly and I want to be proved wrong, if we WERE to be in a military set up , those Protem National Executive would by now be facing court martial or military tribunal for planning a “coup” against the “military regime” of the NBA .

For those who may want to argue basically on the provisions of the fundamental rights under the constitution, let me go a bit further on the position of the Court of Appeal in the case of CHINWO Vs. OWHONDA (supra) per DONGBAN-MENSEM, JCA (as then was) :

“I have only a few words of mine to add in declaring that this appeal is without merit. In the exercise of their constitutional rights (Sections 39 & 40) of freedom of thought, etc, and of freedom of assembly and association, individuals elect to and do subscribe to membership in associations which sometimes curtail their rights. The Appellant, while exercising his right, joined an honourable profession of formidable societal influence and relevance which of necessity has rules and regulations to guide his professional conduct and which along the line curtails some of his choices. The Appellant was not compelled to take up the profession of law and its attendant compulsory membership of the Nigerian Bar Association. However, once he made the choice to study and practice law and thereby placing his name on the roll of honour of belonging to the profession, he stands bound by the internal rules and regulations of the association. There would therefore be no issue of breach of the constitution of the country if the rules demand of him, undivided loyalty.”

Within my restricted knowledge of law, I am not aware of any decision of the Supreme Court that has tempered with this position of law. Therefore, I can say without fear of any contradiction that the new Law Society of Nigeria (LSN) cannot swim in the same swimming pool with the NBA. But I must rightly point it out here that what prompted this kind of revolt by the LSN are often cause by the arrogance of the NBA leadership. NBA leadership very often behave tyrannically, may be basically because of its belief that it has the law on its side as seen from the above decisions of the Court of Appeal that whatever it is contained in its bye law cannot be challenged in the court of law forgetting that there are limits to every act of transgression.

NBA is a replica of what is going on in Nigeria whose leaders rather than addressing the problems on the ground would prefer to complicate it and embark on misplacement of priority. Most Nigerian leaders, the moment they get into power would become tourists travelling to different countries in the world which tourism at the end of the day add no value to the development of the country; rather than first travelling around the countries meeting with the Nigerians, listening to their plights as well as their needs and to give the assurance that the Federal Government is with them and will try as much as possible to attend to their yearnings. If this kind of attitudes have been cultivated by the Nigerian leaders from the past to the present most Nigerian peoples from different parts of the country will be very happy that their existences are being recognised by those steering the affairs of the country. The only time Nigerian leaders reach out to the people is when they need their elections, thereafter the President will sit down in the Aso Rock Villa giving directives rather than going to the scene of happening to see things for the purpose of assessment and necessary action, but unfortunately most time they behave as if Aso Rock Villa and Abuja are the only places they are meant to govern.

The emergence of LSN with its mission statement is a great indictment on the leadership of NBA, if the LSN is now talking about empowering “the legal profession with quality member service (high standards of learning, competence, and profession conduct); facilitates access to justice , maintain and advance the cause of justice ;and promote the rule of law…” , does that not mean that the NBA has failed in its primary responsibilities? Many lawyers are not happy with what is going on in NBA and that is why many of them are grumbling. Leadership self-centredness, unnecessary disqualification of candidates through some discriminatory provisions in the NBA constitution during elections and the winner take all syndromes are among the factors that are breeding discontent in the NBA.

The immediate past Akpata regime may have its lapses but at least he succeeded in bringing some far reaching reforms into the NBA. Forming a new bar association like Law Society of Nigeria (LSN) cannot be the solution to the problems on the ground, rather mutual engagement to a great extent will do the magic. Since NBA has already set up a Committee calling for memorandum from members on electoral reform and review of its constitution, I believe this is an opportunity for lawyers to make suggestions and recommendations on how the right things should be done. I have suggested somewhere else that the NBA should again look into the full democratization of the NEC membership through elections rather than through co-option. Certain percentage of NEC membership should be subject to elections to afford full participation of members of the NBA as this will create the high sense of being allowed to be part of the NBA system by many lawyers. When NBA Committees are being set up both members of the Inner and the Outer Bars must be considered to serve rather than pegging everything to the one side of the divides.

In the NBA elections, those that lose must be ready to accept defeat in the spirit of sportsmanship while those that win at the same time must be accommodating to those that lose rather than playing the game of arrogance and winner take all. Winning elections is not the only way members can contribute positively to the development of the NBA and the legal profession at large. We must continue to see ourselves as learned friends and colleagues rather than enemies. God bless the NBA and guide its leaders to be fair and just!

NOTE: Anyone is at liberty to disagree with my above submissions as I will surely appreciate a balanced, fair and objective rebuttal.

Ibrahim, a Notary Public, can be reached at abdulrasheedibrahim362@gmail.com

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HIJAB JUDGEMENT: ‘MALCOLM OMIRHOBO IS IMPUGNING SUPREME COURT,’ SAYS LAWYER

SUPREME COURT AND THE HIJAB JUDGMENT

By Abdulrasheed Ibrahim, Notary Public

At last the Supreme Court of Nigeria has laid to rest the controversy over whether a female Muslim Student in public primary or secondary school has the right to adorn her hijab over her school uniform. The Apex Court on 17th June 2022 affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeal stating that it is part of her constitutional right to the freedom of thought, conscience and religion to adorn it whether in private or in public without being harassed or discriminated against. This case was between a female Muslim minor and the Lagos State Government who through her father instituted the action at the High Court of Lagos State in 2014 seeking to know under the law whether she is entitled to that right or not. When the High Court answered the question in negative and she was aggrieved by that decision, she proceeded to the Court of Appeal to exercise her appellate right which right the appellate court gave her by setting aside the decision of the Lagos State High Court taking away that right. The Lagos State Government on equally being dissatisfied proceeded to the Supreme Court to challenge the decision of Court of Appeal recognizing that right. The Supreme Court in its majority decision affirmed the position of the Court of Appeal that the female Muslim student is entitled to that right.

The reaction to this latest the Supreme Court Judgment (Lagos State Government Vs. Abdulkareem) by some lawyers who ought to know better has been very astonishing. The camp being led by Chief Malcolm Omirhobo who claims to be a human rights lawyer has not only condemned the judgment and the Justices of the Supreme Court for performing their judicial duties, he has also displayed a kind of comedy within the Supreme Court premises in Abuja where he put on what he called his spiritual mode of dressing combined with the lawyer’s outfit. The lawyer in his earlier condemnation of the Supreme Court judgment stated as follows among others:

“….It is sad and disturbing that the Justices of the Supreme Court failed to see how our public schools will look if students from white garment Church family background like Celestial Church of Christ and Cherubim and Seraphim Church sew their uniform in sutana style covering all their bodies from the neck to toe with cap to march and go to school barefooted because it is a Christian injunction and an act of worship required of them?….I appreciate the fact that the judgment of the Supreme Court is final and must be complied with nevertheless I find solace in the fact that the Supreme Court do reverse her decisions when it finds it expedient to do so especially after it has erred in an early decision and this case is one of such occasion…. ”

From Chief Omirhobo’s above assertion, he claims not only to be more knowledgeable than the learned Jurists of the Supreme Court but that he possesses the unseen knowledge of what the judgment could lead to in the public schools? Every lawyer that has serious knowledge of law will agree that it is part of our jurisprudence that it is not the duty or business of the court to go outside the facts and issues place before it to resolve. This self- styled human right activist needs to be asked whether (to borrow from his words) any member of “white garment Church family background like Celestial Church of Christ and Cherubim and Seraphim Church” has approached any court in the land to complain of being denied or disallowed to wear “their uniform in sutana style covering all their bodies from the neck to toe with cap to march and go to school barefooted because it is a Christian injunction and an act of worship required of them ” ? It is not the business of any court of competent jurisdiction including the Supreme Court to deal with issues that are not placed before it. If there was no such complaint before the Supreme Court, why did the Chief Omirhobo expect the Apex Court to deal with the issue not before it? I dare say that Chief Omirhobo’s assertion is nothing but an argument that does not hold water. To further demonstrate his sentiment and hypocrisy, he resorted to playing to the gallery by walking into the Supreme Court premises few days later barefooted and in lawyer outfit combined with juju worshipper’s attire and went to sit alone in the courtroom seeking for media attention.

If the scenario he displayed was truly to make the Supreme Court to reverse its decision that was not the best way to achieve that. He should have done that when he actually has a case listed on the cause list of the Supreme Court or any other court in the country to announce his appearance with such attire and see whether he will be granted audience by the court. In the alternative, he should have arranged some of his children or grand children or some of his clients’ children to put on traditionalists’ attires and proceed to school to see if the school authorities will allow them into the school premises or be allowed into the classrooms. If they are disallowed, he can easily file action in court ( as done the young Muslim lady whose right to wear hijab has been affirmed by the Apex Court), then Chief Omirhobo and his clients can travel along the same route so as to prove a strong point that their children equally have the constitutional right to wear such attires to the school since he has asserted that the Supreme Court must reverse itself. Chief Omirhobo needs to make a move to develop our law on the rights of the traditionalists to where their attires with their school uniform. If the late Alhaji AbdulganiyAdetola Kazeem (SAN) of blessed memory could set the ball rolling to achieve this on behalf of female Muslim students, I see no reason why Chief Malcolm Omirhobo cannot initiate similar move on behalf of the traditionalists willing to exercise their fundamental rights under the law.

When Chief Omirhobo was enacting his drama at the Supreme Court and was being praised, clapped for by some lawyers while at the same time getting the attention of the media including that of the social media, while the same media had earlier downplayed and remained mute on the hijab’s Supreme Court judgment, my reaction to the drama was as follows:

“I am of the view that the lawyer got it wrong in the sense I once expressed somewhere that a Muslim woman that adopts hijab as part of her dressing does not make it strictly ceremonial or worship attire as she adorns it anywhere she goes. She uses it to pray, to the school, market, office or work place. I believe the lawyer will be making a very good point if he makes it an habit henceforth to adorn this his religious dressing anywhere he goes as Muslim lady that adorns it does and that he should not restrict it to the court as he does here.”

As if the TVC News caster at 10 got my position right, similar question was put to Chief Omirhobo in an interview that same night on the television where he has done away with his earlier juju attire, but his response was more of incoherence than being rational. The question I have been those that are opposed to the hijab was to show me how did the women during the biblical time dressed, but am yet to get any response to that. We now live in a country where the religious tolerance has gone on flight and unfortunately those human rights activists in the legal profession that ought to promote mutual understanding and respect are the ones beating the drum of conflict and confusion. Why must some people develop unnecessary headache and high blood pressure merely because a citizen is granted the right to adorn her simple head cover as part of her fundamental rights? How does allowing a female Muslim student the right to use her hijab by virtue of Section 38 extend to the spurious argument being canvassed by the self-styled human rights activists that the Supreme Court has gone against Section 10 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by adopting Islam as a state religion? The incessant and loud attack on Hijab or anything Islamic is one of the great proofs of the authenticity of Islam as clearly states in its scripture that certain groups of people will never be pleased with Muslims until they abandon their faith and follow the way of those other people. The scriptural position in Islam is that many attempts will be made to put off the light of Islam, but the Almighty Allah that sent His Messenger (Muhammad) to deliver that message will not allow that to happen.

Section 10 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) which provides that: “The Government of the Federation or of a State shall not adopt any religion as State Religion” remains one of the Constitutional provisions that has been grossly misinterpreted even by lawyers as related to the true meaning of the word “Secular or Secularism” as often canvass by some people as if the country should have nothing to do with religions where many of them exist. If that position is valid, why do we have religious organizations of various sects springing up here and there even taking over premises and properties of collapsed industries and companies? If Nigeria is truly a secular state, why are the Nigerian governments at various levels spending heavily on religious activities including building of Mosques and Churches or Chapels in various governments houses and equally sponsor both Christians and Muslims to the pilgrimage in Israel and Saudi Arabia? Why do the governments declare public holidays for the celebration of the religious ceremonies and official government ceremonies are commenced with religious opening prayers? Does government allowing all these mean that it is given priority to some religions than other religions in a country which is multi-religious in nature? The Constitution does not say religions should not exist but that the Federation or a State should not adopt a particular religion as State religion. Those self-styled human rights activists need to tell us where the Supreme Court in the judgment under review declared Islam as the State religion simply because the Apex Court has affirmed the rights of an individual under the Section 38 of the Constitution.

Despite their alarming insistence of Nigeria being a secular state, it is the same set of the self-styled human rights activists that would maintain that the political parties must balance the equation of Muslim/Christian ticket in their search for the political power and that any attempt to bring about a Muslim/Muslim ticket will amount to another form of “Jihad” to use their own words. Since the return to democracy in 1999, the equation has been Muslim/Christian or Christian/Muslim, but where has that taken the country to? Has that solved the nation’s economic and security problems? To what extent have those leaders protect the lives of the Christians and Muslims talk less of the traditionalists against the menace of Boko Haram, Bandits, Kidnappers and other criminals? Patriotic Nigerians regardless of their tribal and religious affiliation should be clamouring and praying for good leaders that are upright, competent and have the foresight to turn round what this nation is blessed with to the advantage of Nigerians rather buying into the spurious propaganda of the religious chauvinists.

Multi-tribal and multi-religious nature of a nation should always be to the advantage of such nation but unfortunate in this part of the world such is used to her disadvantage. For instance the countries like the United States of America (USA) and the United Kingdom (UK) from where we borrowed some of the political and constitution system have to some extent gone beyond most of the things our so-called human rights activists here are using to create confusion among the populace. If those countries have changed their attitude to the use of hijab and have recognized it as the fundamental rights of those that desire it, why must our self-styled human rights activists here behave as if Nigeria is still in the Stone Age? The opposition on their part to hijab did not start today but it reached the peak during the Call to the Bar ceremony of a female Muslim lawyer, Amasa Firdaos who insisted on adorning her hijab for the ceremony and in that struggle she lost that year of call until the wisdom prevailed and she eventually had her way.

Similar scenario repeated itself in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital where in violation of court order that the female Muslim students have the rights to wear hijab on their school uniform, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) that was a party in the suit mobilized it members against the order of the court by disallowing the students entry into the public school rather than trying to pursue their appeal against the Court of Appeal decision at the Supreme Court. In a civilized nation, party that is aggrieved by a judgment of the court will appeal against it rather than taking law into their hands. In the latest judgment under review, the Supreme Court is the final court in the land. It should be the duty of every serious lawyer to advise people to respect that verdict rather than what the likes of Chief Malcolm Omirhobo are doing by going about disparaging the Justices of the Apex Court after discharging their judicial duties which to me amount nothing but gross indiscipline and disrespect to the Supreme Court as an institution. I hereby challenge Chief Omirhobo to again appear in such attire before any court of competent jurisdiction in the country one of these days. Since another lawyer has boastfully said he would appear in his Juju attire before a court, I will be very glad to see him doing that as our law needs to be developed. The challenge still stands and let them bell the cat!

NOTE: Anyone is at liberty to disagree with my above submissions as I will surely appreciate a balanced, fair and objective rebuttal.

27th June 2022

  • Abdulrasheed Ibrahim is a Notary Public

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