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Human rights lawyer tackles Buhari over rule of law

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Hman rights lawyer, Mike Ozekhome has expressed his dissatisfaction with the position of President Muhammadu Buhari that national interest should be elevated above the rule of law.

Recall that President Muhammadu Buhari had on Monday in his opening remarks at the 2018 NBA annual general conference in Abuja, vowed that his administration would not sacrifice national security for the rule of law.

In a statement made available to National Daily, Ozekhome said the statement by the President reminded him of the locust days of Decrees 2 and 4 which decimated citizens’ rights and ousted the courts’ jurisdiction to inquire into breach of such rights.

“I was shocked when I beheld lawyers, who ought to have protested loudly at this legal profanity, clapping, laughing and applauding him. It was, to me, a desecration of the dignity of man.”

“Are we cursed, or are we under a spell or state of mental stupor and intellectual inebriety? Mr. President was literally suspending the Nigerian Constitution, by his statement. And lawyers were cheering!”

The lawyer argued that under no circumstance should the rule of law be relegated, saying it is the foundation of the society.

“Rule of law is the very anvil and foundation on which any society is anchored. It precedes society itself and predominates over national interest,” he said.

“Without rule of law, there can be no nation state. Without nation state, there can be no national interest. Rule of law is father of national interest. No society can exist without the Rule of law. It is immutable, ineradicable, and unchangeable.”

He said those deceiving Mr. President and writing warped “legal opinions” and speeches for him on sensitive national matters that could snowball into serious cataclysmic miasma capable of consuming the nation, just to keep their cheap jobs and serve the insatiable bacchanalian appetites of their gods at the ephemeral corridors of power, must remember the immortal words of the Supreme Court in Military Governor of Lagos State v Odumegwu Ojukwu (2001) FWLR (part 50) 1779, 1802, coran erudite Obaseki, JSC: ‘The Nigerian Constitution is founded on the rule of law, the primary meaning of which is that everything must be done according to law.

“Nigeria, being one of the countries in the world which professes loudly to follow the rule of law, gives no room for the rule of self-help by force to operate,” he said.

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