Buhari express concern over criminal justice system.

President Muhammadu Buhari, who was represented by the Vice-President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, revisited the challenges of law and order as well as the importance of having a vibrant and speedy criminal justice system in the country.

 

“Our system of criminal justice from investigation to prosecution and adjudication by the courts need to be re-engineered.

 

“The long delay in the entire process has impaired the credibility of our capacity to hold offenders to account for their misdeeds.

 

“I have charged the judiciary often and I do so again for the task of developing a firm blueprint for a justice system that works, a system that will give us results”.

 

The Acting Director General of the Institute, Mr Jonathan Juma, expressed confident that recommendations and implementations strategies contained in the report will be considered by the government.

 

The National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies, Kuru in Jos, is the nation’s foremost policy and had its graduation for participants of senior executive course 38 after a ten month intensive research through lectures, seminars, discussions and study tours within and outside the country, with the theme, ‘Strengthening Institutional Mechanisms for Poverty Reduction and Inclusive Development in Nigeria.

 

The national institute was established in 1979 and has since produced a total of 1,847 top-level policy and strategy experts who have contributed positively on national development in various sectors of the country.

Jungle justice shows failure of Nigeria’s justice system – Atiku

Former Vice President of Nigeria, Atiku Abubakar, has reacted to the alleged lynching of a purported 7-year-old boy in an unidentified area in Lagos State.

 

Earlier in the week, the news of a 7-year-old boy, lynched and burnt to death for allegedly attempting to steal some garri in Lagos ‘greeted’ the social media.

 

The former VP condemned the act via his Twitter account, @atiku.

 

He wrote, “That jungle justice still exists is an indictment of our justice system. We must work harder to deepen confidence in our justice system.

 

“I’m saddened by the stories of lynching from different parts of Nigeria. Irrespective of age or alleged crime, we have to be more tolerant.”