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We’ve given priority to all arms of govt in Rivers -Wike

Rivers State Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike has explained that no arm of government and sector in the state has been treated poorly in terms of allocation of funds and distribution of infrastructure.

The governor made the explanation at the flag-off of construction work on the Magistrates Court Complex that was performed by the Chairman, Nigeria Governors’ Forum and Governor of Ekiti State, Dr Kayode Fayemi, yesterday, in Port Harcourt.

Responding to an allusion made by one of the speakers at the event who cited a question that a friend asked him about so much attention paid to the Judiciary, Wike said, that such person must be a mischief maker.

Wike said so much money has been spent in the health sector, which cannot be compared to what has been spent in the Judiciary.

He said this is the last project his administration would be executing for the Judiciary before his tenure ends, and assured that it would be completed within the next eight months.

Other projects that are already ongoing, he said, include the state Judicial Institute, the Federal Judicial Service Commission for the South-South, allocated to Rivers State.

The governor, however, took a swipe at the state Judiciary about the lack of space and courtrooms in the High Court premises that make magistrates and judges share courtrooms.

Wike queried what they have been doing with their capital budget released to them in the last six and half years.

According to him, they cannot receive such money and still wait for the Executive to provide offices for them, effect repairs on existing offices, and also make the air conditional in the courtrooms functional.

“Let me say something I find very disturbing because it is self-indictment. You said that people sit in the morning; people sit in the afternoon because of no space.

“The question now becomes what has the Judiciary been doing with their capital budget? Because I’m surprised, all these (projects) that are being done are done by the Executive. We release your capital budget as at when due.

“Again, why do you recommend for the appointment of new magistrates when you know there is no court for them. Why? As I speak today, we are not owing the Judiciary any dime.”

Wike stated that when the new magistrate court complex would be completed, it would be fitted with all modern facilities and would help decongest the State High Court.

Performing the flag-off, Governor Kayode Fayemi commended Wike for the transformational work, not just in the Judiciary alone, but in every sector in the state.

Fayemi observed that what was happening to the magistracy in Rivers State and the on-going construction of campus of Nigerian Law School in Port Harcourt were also worthy of commendation.

According to him, even if he was not a lawyer, he was educated enough to know the importance of this arm of government, and particularly the importance of the magistracy to the administration of justice in the country, adding that what Wike has done was going to make a fundamental difference.

“From the statistics I’ve seen, 70percent of matters relating to criminal justice administration are handled at the magistracy. And that contributes immensely to addressing our long-standing problem of awaiting trial detainees in our prisons.

“So, if we provide a conducive environment for our magistrates to function, it goes without saying that they would deliver their responsibilities a lot more swiftly, and also cover a lot more grounds in order to address that challenge.”

Fayemi said issues raised about the Judiciary by Wike were serious, and said it was the aspiration of the federating states in the country to have a truly independent Judiciary.

“What we look forward to as states, is that time that we would also have state courts that are not just autonomous but that are wholly driven from the state, not ones driven from the National Judicial Council (NJC), that is the vision of state and that is what we look forward to.”

On his part, the Chief Judge of Rivers State, Justice Simeon Amadi said the construction of the magistrate courts complex has come at an auspicious time most desired.

According to him, it would decongest the State High Court Complex where Magistrate Court was currently being housed.

In his address, the Rivers State Commissioner for Justice and Attorney General, Prof. Zacchaeus Adangor said the stability, peace and order of any society depends largely on the administration of justice.

The magistrates courts, he noted, were the component of the court system that discharges crucial responsibility in upholding the sanctity of the law, particularly the criminal law and the magistrate courts handles over 70percent of criminal cases which make the project also important.

Speaking for the Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Okey Wali, SAN, stated that Wike has the hindsight of understanding the peculiar problems of the Judiciary, and was deliberately addressing them in order to also strengthen democracy.

Special Adviser to the Governor on Special Projects, George Kelly-Dax Alabo explained that the complex sits on a 10.150 squares metres of land and contain 24 courts in two-storey of four buildings that would have six courts each.

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