Corruption: SERAP, others hail ex-Gov. Orji Kalu’s prison sentence
The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project and some other
civil society groups on Thursday lauded the 12-year prison sentence
handed down to ex-Governor Orji Kalu of Abia, by a Federal High Court in
Lagos.
Kalu is currently a Senator.
The News Agency of Nigeria
reports that Justice Mohammed Idris convicted Kalu on 39 counts of N7.2
billion fraud and money laundering preferred against him by the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission.
The Executive Director of SERAP, Adetokunbo Mumuni, hailed the judiciary for justice delivery.
Mumuni said that the judiciary was playing its part in the anti-graft war.
“What we see now is that the judiciary is trying to live up to expectations; what must be done has to be done.
“The
facts of the case have been properly reviewed, evidence thoroughly
analysed; there is no basis for querying the judgment; however, let us
see the reaction of Orji Uzor Kalu’s counsel to the verdict.
“If his
counsel wants to appeal, they have the right to do so, but if the
allegations and evidence are anything to go by, I believe justice has
been properly served irrespective of whoever is involved,” he said.
Malachy
Ugwummadu, the National President of the Committee for the Defence of
Human Rights, noted the role the Administration of Criminal Justice Act
played in the speedy trial of the case.
Ugwummadu hailed the
provisions ACJA which prevented the trial from starting de novo (from
the beginning) when the trial judge was elevated to the Court of Appeal.
“The
speed with which this case was adjudicated has everything to do with
the ACJA that now allows that a trial judge, though elevated, can return
to conclude an ongoing criminal proceeding.
“The ACJA is explicit,
it is proactive, it is definitive, it allows a judge, who started a
trial and got elevated to a superior court, to return to
conclude proceedings.
“This is exactly what happened here. Orji Uzor
Kalu was arraigned before Justice Mohammed Idris, who within the period
of the trial was elevated to the Court of Appeal. Today, he delivered
that judgment.
“To that extent, it is remarkable because it touches
on the speedy dispensation of justice. What obtained before now, was the
matter starting de novo with the transfer or elevation of the judge,”
he said.
According to the CDHR president, the judgment proved that no individual is above the law.





