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NJC Tenders Code Of Conduct For Judicial Officers At Dismissed Judge’s Trial

The National Judicial Council (NJC) yesterday tendered a copy of the Revised Code of Conduct for Judicial Officers of Nigeria at the resumed trial of former Justice Mohammed Yunusa, a dismissed Judge of the Federal High Court. NJC
Our correspondent reports that the document was tendered before an Ikeja Special Offences Court by a subpoenaed witness, Ms Fatima Gamawa, a Senior Legal Officer of the NJC.
Yunusa is standing trial alongside one Esther Agbo, a staff of the law chambers of Mr Rickey Tarfa (SAN).
Yunusa is facing charges of attempted perversion of the course of justice and corruption by a public official, while Agbo is facing a charge of offering gratification to a public official.
Led in evidence by Mr Wahab Shittu, lead counsel for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Gamawa read aloud some excerpts from the document.
Reading aloud Rule 2.2 of the Code of Conduct for Judicial Officers, she said: “Although social contact between members of the judiciary and members of the legal profession is a long standing tradition and is proper, a judge should act on the basis of common sense and exercise caution in this aspect of social contact with members of the profession.
“A judge would therefore be wise to avoid recurrent contacts with a lawyer appearing before him in the course of a particular case if this could lead to a reasonable perception that the judge and the lawyer have a close personal relationship.”
Gamawa also read aloud Rule 2.5 which pertains to acceptance of gifts by judges from lawyers. “A judge shall not accept gifts from a lawyer who might appear in a case before him if the gift is not one given to judges generally at festive seasons such as Christmas or Sallah gift,” she said.
While being cross-examined by Mr Robert Clarke (SAN), counsel to Yunusa, Gamawa testified that she had been in NJC’s employment for a year and that the Revised Code of Conduct of Judicial Officers was the only one she had come across.
While being cross-examined by Mr John Odubela (SAN), Agbo’s counsel, Gamawa revealed that the Revised Code of Conduct for Judicial Officers took effect from Feb. 24, 2016.
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