Editorial

As The Courts Re-Open

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With the suspension of the eight
months old strike by workers of
the Rivers State judiciary Monday, a lot of people actually hoped to see the resolution of all the contentious issues in the sector for the return to normal services in the State.
Incidentally, on the day the striking workers were to resume duties, the courts in Port Harcourt, Degema and Isiokpo were bombed and the premises cordoned-off by the police for security reasons.
As the judiciary workers in Rivers State continue to struggle with the very same issues that compelled them to embark on strike on July 9, 2014, the question on every lip is who wants the Rivers courts shut? Until this is uncovered and addressed, no one can imagine what next to expect.
Even as we want to commend the Judiciary Staff Union of Nigeria (JUSUN) for suspending the strike, we think that the security agencies have quite a lot to do in ensuring safety of court records and property as well as that of the workers.
The Tide is bothered that the inability of the judiciary, which is one of the arms of government, to function, leaves the governance of the State incomplete. Even more worrisome is the impossible conditions litigants have had to put up with, some of them innocent.
Apart from those who could not be granted their freedom on the account of the strike, the impetus the situation gave to some people to resort to self-help has taken both the rule of law and civilized ways of doing things in the land many years backward
Never has the judiciary in any part of Nigeria been so embroiled in crisis as experienced in Rivers State. Never has it crossed the mind of any well-thinking person that the mere appointment of a Chief Judge of a State can result in this kind of shame.
Within the period, the parties, including the Rivers State Government, the National Judicial Council (NJC), the courts among others, got involved and failed to bring a matter so simple to rest. There seems to be more than meets the eye on this matter, especially with the introduction of explosives on court premises.
The reason for the strike, in the first place, was the demand for the safety of the lives of the judicial workers and the resolution of the tussle for the leadership of the judiciary in Rivers State. This is not too much to ask, nor too difficult to attain, but the reverse is the case.
As the workers take the first step aimed at normalising the situation, our expectation is for the crossfire at all levels to cease and not bombs to follow. Knowing how knowledgeable the stakeholding groups are, it is indeed a surprise to many people that this matter would linger without anyone deeming it fit to make sacrifice in the interest of the people.
The Tide expects that as the courts re-open, the leadership question would be addressed with a deeper sense of responsibility where the law has failed to help. We expect that the police would do all it takes to secure the courts and its workers in ways that would allow for cases to be heard and justice dispensed.
This has become imperative because, to a large extent, democracy hinges on the services of the judiciary. To the extent persons are not able to lawfully pursue their rights or do some other notary services, things can fall apart and like a popular novelist would say, mere anarchy would be let loose.
Our hearts actually go out to lawyers, who literarily had no work to do; litigants awaiting trial that had to remain in prison longer than necessary and the persons who had no opportunity of accessing justice in the past eight months. The time to put all that behind is now.
While we expect the judiciary workers to return to work no matter the threat, we call on all the stakeholding parties in the Rivers State judiciary matter to have a re-think in the interest of the state and its people. If there is any point to be made, we dare say it has been made.

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