Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Tinubu Swears In Amupitan As INEC Chairman
    • EFCC Says Ex-Delta Gov, Okowa’s ₦1.3trn Probe Ongoing Despite Defection To APC
    • 38 AK-47s, Others Recovered As Other Troops Neutralise Terrorists
    • Kwankwaso Predicts Fierce 2027 Polls, Opens Door To Alliance With Tinubu
    • Police Arrest Sowore In Court
    • Nnamdi Kanu Defends Self In Court As Lawyers Withdraw From Trial
    • Insecurity: ‘Enough Is Enough, Defend Yourselves’, Governor Bago Tells Niger Residents
    • ICPC Made Record N1.86bn From Forfeited Assets Auction In 2024
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    UBA 720X90
    • HOME
    • NEWS

      Tinubu Swears In Amupitan As INEC Chairman

      October 23, 2025

      EFCC Says Ex-Delta Gov, Okowa’s ₦1.3trn Probe Ongoing Despite Defection To APC

      October 23, 2025

      38 AK-47s, Others Recovered As Other Troops Neutralise Terrorists

      October 23, 2025

      Kwankwaso Predicts Fierce 2027 Polls, Opens Door To Alliance With Tinubu

      October 23, 2025

      Police Arrest Sowore In Court

      October 23, 2025
    • COLUMN

      Dictatorship By Benevolence? – By Zainab Suleiman Okino

      October 22, 2025

      Of Nigeria, False Friends And True Dangers: A Call For Vigilance – By Dr Hassan Gimba

      October 20, 2025

      Justice As A Commodity – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

      October 20, 2025

      Tinubu’s Pardon And The Fight Against Crime – By Kazeem Akintunde

      October 20, 2025

      ‘Why Nigeria Needs More Universities, After All’ – By Martins Oloja

      October 20, 2025
    • EDUCATION

      FG Names Prof. Adamu Acting Vice-Chancellor To Steer UniAbuja For Three Months

      August 9, 2025

      13 Countries Offering Free Or Low-Cost PhD Programmes For Non-Citizens

      January 25, 2025

      NECO: Abia, Imo Top Performing States In Two Years, Katsina, Zamfara Come Last

      October 3, 2024

      NBTE Accredits 17 Programmes At Federal Polytechnic Kabo

      August 20, 2024

      15 Most Expensive Universities In Nigeria

      May 19, 2024
    • INTERNATIONAL

      Israel Deports 32 Foreign Activists Helping Palestinian Farmers Amid Attacks

      October 23, 2025

      Pakistan Navy Seizes Drugs Worth Nearly $1bn In Arabian Sea

      October 23, 2025

      Israel, Hamas Return More Bodies Of Captives Under Gaza Ceasefire Deal

      October 22, 2025

      North Korea Fires Multiple Ballistic Missiles Towards East Sea

      October 22, 2025

      Israel Continues Deadly Gaza Truce Breaches As US Seeks To Strengthen Deal

      October 21, 2025
    • JUDICIARY

      FULL LIST: Judicial Council Recommends Appointment Of 11 Supreme Court Justices

      December 6, 2023

      Supreme Court: Judicial Council Screens 22 Nominees, Candidates Face DSS, Others

      November 29, 2023

      FULL LIST: Judicial Commission Nominates 22 Justices For Elevation To Supreme Court

      November 16, 2023

      Seven Key Issues Resolved By Seven Supreme Court Judges

      October 26, 2023

      FULL LIST: CJN To Swear In Falana’s Wife, 57 Others As SANs November 27

      October 12, 2023
    • POLITICS

      What Peter Obi May Lose If He Joins Coalition As VP Candidate

      May 25, 2025

      Atiku Moves To Unseat Wike’s Damagum As PDP Chairman, Backs Suswam As Replacement

      April 15, 2024

      Edo’s Senator Matthew Uroghide, Others Defect To APC

      April 13, 2024

      Finally, Wike Opens Up On Rift With Peter Odili

      April 2, 2024

      El-Rufa’i’s Debt Burden: APC Suspends Women Leader For Criticising Kaduna Gov

      March 31, 2024
    • SPORTS

      FULL LIST: Osimhen Battles Salah, Hakimi For CAF Player Of The Year Award

      October 23, 2025

      U17 World Cup: France’s Late Winner Condemns Nigeria’s Flamingos To Second Straight Loss

      October 23, 2025

      Boxing Legend, Bash Ali Set For Explosive Comeback After 21 Years

      October 22, 2025

      How Gyokeres Makes Arsenal A Much Better Team – Arteta

      October 22, 2025

      NFF Cancels Super Eagles’ Venezuela, Colombia Friendlies Over World Cup Play-offs

      October 21, 2025
    • MORE
      • AFRICA
      • ANALYSIS
      • BUSINESS
      • ENTERTAINMENT
      • FEATURED
      • LENS SPEAK
      • INFO – TECH
      • INTERVIEW
      • NIGERIA DECIDES
      • OPINION
      • Personality Profile
      • Picture of the month
      • Science
      • Special Project
      • Videos
      • Weekend Sports
    NEWS POINT NIGERIANEWS POINT NIGERIA
    UBA 720X90
    Home - Justice As A Commodity – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

    Justice As A Commodity – By Dr Dakuku Peterside

    By Dakuku PetersideOctober 20, 2025
    Dakuku Column 2

    THERE are moments in a nation’s life when its people hear their own voices with unusual clarity. This is one such moment. In the last week of August this year, a significant event occurred, one that neither the nation’s leadership nor its citizens paused to consider fully. During that period, three voices known for their measured judgment, former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan, and the Sultan of Sokoto, spoke openly about what many Nigerians quietly acknowledge: justice in Nigeria is too often something bought, rather than earned.

    His Royal Highness

    When justice becomes a commodity, when money, influence, and power can sway its course, courts cease to be bastions of order and transform into markets of outcomes. The repercussions are immediate and manifold. Entrepreneurs are forced to factor in a new cost in their budgets, termed ‘friction’: the expense of adjournments, the premium for ‘speed,’ the fee for desired outcomes.

    Politicians shift their focus from the votes of the people to the votes of judicial officers. A nation that questions honesty with suspicion will inevitably under-invest in its future. Jonathan’s caution that capital and investments will flee when justice is up for sale is not just a political statement; it’s a mathematical truth. When contract enforcement is unpredictable and court orders are discretionary, the cost of capital rises, project timelines extend, and innovation retreats to areas where promises hold weight.

    UBA

    But the economic loss is only half the bill. When lawyers and the people come to believe that knowing the judge is more valuable than knowing the law, the social contract begins to tear. Citizens withdraw their trust, then their cases, then their consent. Impunity, once an exception, hardens into a weather pattern.

    Communities often revert to “alternative” settlements that satisfy immediate needs but erode the legitimacy of established institutions. The Sultan’s language delivered at the NBA conference at Enugu “justice is purchasable” sounds harsh until you watch a widow spend years on a land dispute while a developer’s injunction arrives overnight. The poor pay in time and humiliation what the rich pay in fees; both are corrosive, but only one buys results.

    Independence Day

    Former Vice President, a senior advocate and a law professor, Yemi Osinbajo, in 2017 cast the legal profession as an ethical bellwether, an elite with the burden of articulating what the nation must never accept. He also diagnosed the rot within corruption, ethical violations, and declining standards. A reflective moment like this demands that we hold both truths together. The law’s nobility is not a title; it is a series of costly choices. The robe does not confer integrity; it requires it.

    Justice today in our country feels like something to buy or trade, not a fair or quick process. Cases get delayed as if time itself has value; postponements become tools for negotiation. Important decisions often happen in secrecy when they should be open. People switch courts like a game to find an advantage. Getting bail seems like a favour, not a right.

    Happy Birthday

    Lawsuits about elections happen every season, like a business with set prices. Big business disputes freeze key parts of our economy with court orders. Human rights cases drag on until the people involved lose hope. None of this happens by chance. The system is set up—whether on purpose or by ignoring the problem—to reward dragging things out instead of solving them quickly. In the end, everyone looks for a deal instead of the truth.

    Consider a simple vignette. A small factory in Aba supplies components to a larger manufacturer in Lagos. A contract dispute arises over a late payment. The smaller firm sues to enforce the contract, expecting a judgment within months. Instead, it meets a labyrinth: filings, a service that fails on technicalities; preliminary objections meant to stop the case before it starts; adjournments for reasons both grand and trivial; and finally, a transfer on “administrative grounds” that restarts the calendar.

    Nigerian TAX Reform - Federal Goverment

    Creditors circle, workers are laid off, and equipment goes idle. By the time a partial ruling arrives, the company that needed justice has already learned a harder lesson: survival requires relationships more than rights. Multiply this story by tens of thousands, and you have a macroeconomy.

    How did we arrive here? Political interference is neither a myth nor a mood; it is evident in appointments, postings, and the handling of sensitive matters, such as high-profile corruption cases or those involving powerful individuals, by particular judicial officers. Little wonder oversight is slow and opaque; sanctions are rare, inconsistent, and too quiet to be effective deterrents.

    Underfunding and poor welfare make virtue lonely. The procedure groans under the complexity that invites creative obstruction. Data is a stranger in our courts; we do not reliably measure the age of cases, adjournments per matter, clearance rates, or enforcement of orders. Without measurement, we perform reform by hope. Meanwhile, professional incentives, from billable hours to prestige cases, reward the art of prolonging.

    National Orientation Agency Page UP
    National Orientation Agency - Down

    Election disputes are the most glaring stage for our worst habits: compressed timelines on paper, elastic timelines in practice, and outcomes that feel more strategic than judicial. In commercial law, the ease with which enforcement can be stalled tells investors everything they need to know. In public interest litigation, compliance with court orders by public bodies often depends on whether obedience is politically convenient. The message to citizens is consistent and devastating: the law is negotiable.

    Yet diagnosis is not destiny. If Enugu is to be remembered as an inflexion point, it cannot end with applause. It needs commitments with dates attached and levers that bite. The first lever is transparency. Publish daily cause lists with reasons for adjournment, not as ritual but as accountability. Set time standards by case type and display them in every courtroom; let litigants know when delays become deviations.

    Where ex parte orders are unavoidable, impose short return dates and mandatory peer review. Require early case scheduling conferences; cap adjournments with real consequences for counsel who weaponise delay. Digitise the basics e-filing, e-service, virtual hearings where appropriate and maintain a central, searchable judgments database. None of this is revolutionary; it is a matter of administrative will.

    Rano Capital

    Discipline must be visible to deter fast-track complaints at both the Bench and Bar. Publish outcomes. Make it career-limiting to misuse the process or to ignore orders. Compromise in any form must have real consequences and not be cosmetic. Expand commercial and small-claims courts with 90–180-day disposition targets and protect those targets from procedural sabotage. Rebuild ethics from routine to rigorous: require annual credits tied to case management outcomes and client feedback, not mere attendance. Make it costly financially and reputationally to trade in delay.

    Beneath these quick wins lie structural reforms that decide whether improvement endures. De-politicise appointments and promotions through transparent, merit-based criteria and broad-based panels; move decisions from shadows to systems. Review judicial welfare comprehensively remuneration, security, continuous training—because accountability without dignity breeds cynicism. Fight against executive capture of the Judiciary, as it is common today. It is alleged that the FCT minister allocated plots of land in prime areas of Abuja to some Supreme Court justices. This level of indirect abuse of the system must be condemned.

    Simplify pleadings and narrow interlocutory appeals that reward fragmentation over resolution. Guarantee baseline funding insulated from executive whim, and pair it with procurement audits, user feedback, and performance reports. Protect witnesses and judges in sensitive cases; maintain open channels for whistleblowing that function effectively.

    Mainstream ADR through court-annexed mediation and enforceable settlement protocols to relieve dockets and give businesses credible timelines. Technology is not salvation, but it is a powerful lever. A functioning e-filing system cuts queue time. Time-stamped digital services reduce the mystery of notifications. Case-flow analytics can spot bottlenecks and outliers courts with adjournment rates that suggest either pressure or neglect.

    We also need to discuss money openly. Underfunding is an invitation to compromise, but more money without rules is simply a bigger pool to waste. A protected funding architecture multi-year budgets with ring-fenced allocations for technology, training, and security should be coupled with independent audits and user councils that sign off on priorities.

    No single institution can carry this alone. The Judiciary must own appointments, data, practice directions and discipline. Self-correcting is advocated. The NBA must police its own, raise the cost of professional misconduct, and educate the public on lawful remedies. The Executive and Legislature must provide legal scaffolding and financial guarantees without seeking leverage in return. Civil society and media must replace outrage with observation—court-watching that is careful, fair, relentless.

    Measurement is the spine of credibility. If we cannot say how long it takes to dispose of a land case in Kano versus Port Harcourt, or how many adjournments the average commercial dispute accrues before trial, or how often public agencies comply with orders, then talk of reform is theatre. Publish the numbers. Compare them quarter by quarter. Let citizens see curves bend and ask why when they do not. Borrow external mirrors rule-of-law assessments, enterprise surveys, arbitration seat choices not as medals or humiliations but as prompts. What gets measured begins to matter.

    There will be pushback. Politics dislikes losing leverage. Parts of the profession are addicted to the rents of delay and compromise. Capacity gaps will tempt shortcuts. Reform fatigue will whisper that nothing changes. Anticipate this. Build cross-party and private-sector coalitions that raise the political cost of sabotage.

    Ultimately, the case for reform is not merely legal; it is also moral and economic. A nation that prizes justice will eventually find everything else too expensive credit, jobs, peace. Conversely, a country that treats justice as a public good reaps dividends in investment, innovation, and social calm. We have, improbably, a rare consensus from two former presidents, a revered Sultan, and a profession gathered in one city that the old normal is unacceptable. The question is whether we will translate that consensus into norms we enforce, timelines we meet, and a culture we can be proud to hand over to future generations.

    • Peterside, PhD, is a public sector turnaround expert, public policy analyst and leadership coach, and is the author of the forthcoming book, “Leading in a Storm”, a book on crisis leadership. His syndicated column appears on News Point Nigeria newspaper on Monday.

    Dakuku Peterside Column Justice Tinubu
    Share. Facebook Twitter WhatsApp LinkedIn Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    Tinubu Swears In Amupitan As INEC Chairman

    October 23, 2025

    Kwankwaso Predicts Fierce 2027 Polls, Opens Door To Alliance With Tinubu

    October 23, 2025

    ‘Tinubu Will Never Muzzle The Press’, Shettima Assures Journalists

    October 22, 2025

    Dictatorship By Benevolence? – By Zainab Suleiman Okino

    October 22, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Latest Posts

    Tinubu Swears In Amupitan As INEC Chairman

    October 23, 2025

    EFCC Says Ex-Delta Gov, Okowa’s ₦1.3trn Probe Ongoing Despite Defection To APC

    October 23, 2025

    38 AK-47s, Others Recovered As Other Troops Neutralise Terrorists

    October 23, 2025

    Kwankwaso Predicts Fierce 2027 Polls, Opens Door To Alliance With Tinubu

    October 23, 2025

    Police Arrest Sowore In Court

    October 23, 2025
    Advertisement
    WIDGET ADS
    News Point NG
    © 2025 NEWS POINT NIGERIA Developed by ENGRMKS & CO.
    • Home
    • About us
    • Disclaimer
    • Our Advert Rates
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Join Us On WhatsApp