Metro News

Reps Move To Upgrade CCT To Superior Court

Members of the House of Representatives, on Thursday, expressed overwhelming support for the Bill which seeks to grant Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) operational autonomy from the whims and caprices of the executive arm of government.

The bill which seeks to amend the 1999 Constitution (as amended) further provides that CCT will be placed under the judiciary as a Superior Court of Record.

The private member bill sponsored by Hon Solomon Bob (PDP-Rivers) seeks to amend principally sections 6, 84, 240, 243, 254, 294, 295, 316 of the 1999 Constitution, among others.

In his lead debate, Hon. Bob noted that it is trite that in a presidential democracy such as Nigeria, the three arms of government, the Legislature, Executive and Judiciary are distinct and separate in functions, powers and composition.

This distinct separation of powers, Bob said is intended to secure the independence of each arm and for each to act as a check on the exercise of power by the other, which ultimately enhances the effective discharge of their respective constitutional responsibilities.

He said that the failure to situate the Tribunal under the judicial arm of government thus runs contrary to the principle and practice of separation of powers in a Presidential democracy such as the country is professedly practising.

While stressing that the amendment will make members of the Tribunal judicial officers with the attendant protection and privileges which that will afford, besides securing the funding of the Tribunal as its funding will be charged on the consolidated revenue of the federation and released directly to the head as statutory transfers, he added that it will, in turn, immune them substantially from the manipulation or control of the Executive.

He maintained that the Code of Conduct Tribunal the focal point of this Bill is undoubtedly a judicial body created by paragraph 15 of the 5th schedule to the constitution and section 20 of the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act. It is a statutory body saddled with the responsibility of trying offences under the Code of Conduct Bureau Act.

“However, it is absurd and indeed confounding that a judicial tribunal clothed with enormous powers to sanction public officers found guilty of violating the Code of Conduct Act, including the power to order forfeiture and bar offenders from holding public office, is placed under the Executive rather than the Judiciary, an arm where it rightly belongs.

“For ease of reference, Mr Speaker, Honourable colleagues, paragraph 18(2) of the 5th schedule which deals with the powers of the Tribunal provides in extenso: 18(2): “The punishment which the Code of Conduct Tribunal may impose shall include any of the following: Vacation of office or seat in any legislative house, as the case may be; disqualification from membership of a legislative house and from the holding of any public office for a period not exceeding ten years; and seizure and forfeiture to the state of any property acquired in abuse or corruption of office.

“The above provisions clearly clothe the Tribunal as a judicial body with the powers of a competent court of record.”

He further stressed that: “under a presidential democracy, one single arm of government ought not to exercise Executive and Judicial powers such as is the case presently. The horrifying consequences or dangers of placing the Tribunal under the Executive as it is today are clear for us all to see.

“Its independence is non-existent and its instrumentalisation by the executive as a weapon against the Legislature and the Judiciary is evident and undeniable.

“This is a clear negation of the noble objectives for setting up the tribunal and, more importantly, a violation of the hallowed doctrine of separation of powers.”

 

Culled from Tribune

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