Tag: Nigeria judiciary

  • Massive Judicial Shakeup as Appeal Court Nominees List Emerges

    Massive Judicial Shakeup as Appeal Court Nominees List Emerges

    The Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC) has released a longlist of 48 judges nominated for elevation to the Court of Appeal bench. The names reportedly include Justice James Omotosho and Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, both associated with high-profile national interest cases.

    What’s next: Only 12 nominees are expected to be confirmed for the appellate bench after further screening. The National Judicial Council (NJC) is expected to conduct final vetting, with the process framed as part of efforts to decongest courts and address vacancies created by retirements.

    Why it matters: The nominations are drawing scrutiny because of the perceived sensitivity of some past cases handled by shortlisted judges. Stakeholders are urging a merit-based final selection to strengthen judicial independence.

    Echotitbits take: This reshuffle is pivotal for legal stability. Elevating judges with experience in high-stakes matters could improve appellate capacity, but it may also create short-term gaps at the trial level where major corruption and security cases are ongoing.

    Source: Premium Times – https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/851405-njc-forwards-14-candidates-names-to-tinubu-for-appointment-as-federal-high-court-judges.html (January 25, 2026)

    Premium Times 2026-01-25

    Photo Credit: Premium Times

  • Court Grants Bail to Ex-AGF Malami, Wife and Son in ₦8.7bn Money Laundering Case

    Court Grants Bail to Ex-AGF Malami, Wife and Son in ₦8.7bn Money Laundering Case

    A briefing from Premium Times reports a Federal High Court granted bail to former Attorney General Abubakar Malami, alongside his wife and son, in a case involving alleged ₦8.7 billion money laundering.

    The court reportedly set bail conditions at ₦500 million each, with sureties and passport surrender requirements as proceedings continue.

    The defence has disputed the allegations, while prosecutors insist the evidence is strong.

    **Echotitbits take:** Bail isn’t a verdict, but the conditions signal the court sees the allegations as serious. Watch for the next hearing dates and whether prosecutors bring key witnesses and financial trail evidence promptly.
    Source: X – https://x.com/TheNationNews/status/2008881048998822179 2026-01-08

    Photo Credit: X

  • Federal High Court Denies Bail to Bauchi Finance Commissioner in Terror Probe

    Federal High Court Denies Bail to Bauchi Finance Commissioner in Terror Probe

    According to The Guardian, Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court in Abuja has refused bail to Yakubu Adamu, the Bauchi State Commissioner for Finance, and three others facing charges of terrorism financing and money laundering. The court’s decision follows an arraignment on a 10-count charge brought by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). The EFCC has dismissed claims by Governor Bala Mohammed that the trial is a political witch-hunt. Wilson Uwujaren, the commission’s Director of Public Affairs, stated that the agency operates independently and is not acting on political instructions, despite the governor’s allegations that he is being targeted for refusing to defect to the ruling party. The case was also covered by Premium Times and Daily Post. Premium Times detailed that the ‘defendants were arraigned on Wednesday, December 31, 2025,’ while Daily Post reported that the court has ‘adjourned the case till January 6’ for further hearing on the substantive matter.

    Echotitbits take: This case is a high-stakes legal battle that tests the independence of the EFCC. If the prosecution proves terrorism financing, it could have massive political ramifications for the Bauchi state government. Watch for the evidence presented in the next hearing to see if the ‘political harassment’ narrative holds weight.

    Source: ThePunch  – https://punchng.com/terror-financing-court-denies-bauchi-commissioner-bail-cites-national-security/ January 6 2026

    Photo Credit: ThePunch