Muhammed Adamu on Thursday

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Now that Abati is on the menu

Yes, now that Reuben Abati, Jonathan’s erstwhile Media Adviser, is on the menu, again, maybe we should do some reminiscing on a familiar recipe -the Abati attention-seeking industry. Shortly after his Principal left office,

The texture of justice

The Right Honourable Lord Denning devotes a substantial portion of his book What Next In The Law, to discuss how the English justice system faired in the hands of some of the great judicial reformers of British antiquity.

Musdapher: The voice not heeded (2)

WHEN Justice Musdapher announced publicly that Nigerian judges had no reason whatsoever to hear criminal matters beyond a period of six months, it was the much that any Chief Justice –without the luxury of a judicial fiat- could do to advance the course of speedy dispensation of justice.

Musdapher: The voice not heeded (1)

IN his suave, genteel, self-effacing stride, and maybe even in his judicial worldview, he seemed like a judge who preferred that ‘settled judicial waters’ be left undisturbed. And why, by the way, should ‘settled judicial waters’ not be left undisturbed?

Tinubu’s ‘Right of first refusal’

IT was French neoclassical architect, Jean Laurent Legeay who said “In politics, as in business, you must always ask for thirty pieces of silver even though you have more than enough”. Now whether this statement more aptly defines ‘greed’ than it does politics, is an entirely different matter. Anti-Tinubus have always asked, -often self-righteously- ‘What does Tinubu want?’

Vanguard Detty December

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