The Judiciary, its own enemy (1)
VIDEO: Deji Adeyanju, Sowore lead ENDSARS protest in Abuja
Still on Atiku’s ‘ambition’
On Atiku’s ambition
Jonathan@ 60: Lest we forget
‘Teachers’ or cheaters?
Much ado about Buhari’s appointment
Babachir, ‘Cabal’ as anti-theory
‘Wailers vs ‘Hailers’
Gaddafi: Tribute to a revolutionary
Still on Kanu: A parody
Revisiting ‘CAN’s descent to the medieval’
Singers, Swingers
Kanu: A parody
All hues, All flavours
On Osinbajo’s Eid speech
The stuff that speeches are made
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SubscribeIs the majority always right?
The law is not necessarily always about what is right or about what is moral; it is rather about what is permissible from what is not
Gawa ta qi rami
And so if Buhari can be a co-conspirator in a tragi-comic political melodrama in which he is to die to pave the way for another, Buhari can as well oblige a request from any of the PDP goons to do them a favour and ‘DROP DEAD!’
Law and the politics of Buhari’s return
It is the moral right of any to criticise Buhari for staying ‘too long’ on medical treatment, it is not their ‘legal right’ to compel him to return or to resign unless they can show a law upon which their claim can be based
A re-make, not an amendment
Parliament lords it over the people; the executive arm is hardly any less victimizing; nor are the courts any more credible as the ‘last hope of the common man’. Yet, the fact alone that the so called ‘peoples representatives’ now even make laws in spite of ‘the people’ is proof enough that ‘the people’ are not their own sovereigns
On Buhari: ‘Sickness’ as constitutional offence
The question is asked, ‘when exactly can the President be said to be ‘incapable’ of discharging the functions of his office? Is it when a ‘sick’ –or maybe even healthy- President, for whatever reason, feels himself incapable of discharging the functions of his office; or is it when a cynical, or maybe even genuinely critical public, believes, rightly or wrongly, that the President is ‘incapable of discharging the functions of his office?
Still on Maitama
Although he was master of all, it cannot be denied that Maitama breathed ‘wisdom’ into every sphere of our national lives. He spoke truth to a nation driven by bigotry, prejudice, intolerance and hate
Revisiting “What to do with Saraki’s NASS
When so called ‘representatives of the people’ begin to feel no longer obligated to respect the will of those who elected them, a dictatorship of the legislature is afoot
Much ado about ‘true federalism’
The term ‘true federalism’ essentially is a misnomer, whether it is applied strictly in decrying a nation that ‘shares power and resources’ rather than grant ‘substantial autonomy’, or it is applied trivially in the condemnation of a ‘federation’ that still exhibit unitary attributes
Still on padding’s avenue
Proposing ‘projects’ and ‘estimates’ in a ‘money bill’ –including capping the overall budget sum- is entirely an executive duty. Just as approving ‘projects’ and ‘estimates’ to those projects –including only reducing the overall budget sum- is purely a legislative function
Judgment without justice
The law suffers a form of juristic injustice in the hands especially of conservative judges who impose on themselves ‘incapacity’ to navigate the delicate labyrinth of the legal system in order to arrive at justice
Beyond ‘street protests and sit at home orders’
The amalgamation that created the Nigerian union since expired; no where did they sign on to the military dictated Islamic constitution of Nigeria
Biafra: In peace or in pieces
The right of the Igbo or other ‘minorities’ to secede from a constitutionally governed Nigeria must be located in the complex hyacinth of these jurisprudential argument. And it is a right concurrent with –if not inferior to- the right of the democratic ‘majority’ to deny
Of June 12 and May 29
For a man whose martyrdom watered the tree of the democracy that we enjoy today, true recognition consist only in declaring him President-elect posthumously –which will only be reaffirming that which he was, baring the annulment- and then also reversing May 29 to June 12 –which again will not be gratuitous
How patriotic is the whistle blower?
Most Nigerians today are not ready to love their country more than they love their constituencies
IBB: The rich also wed
Like a gathering of giraffes, they tend always to attract too many tall egos, that end up neck-sizing as they compete for the skies. And no matter how long-necked or short-necked they come, in events like that, every giraffe is bound to meet its match, or even its better
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