Introduction
The Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria provides for the office of Attorney General and bestowed
him with the powers of public prosecution which shall be exercised in the best
interest of the State.1 The powers were granted on the legal assumption that
the independence, strength of character, professionalism and integrity of the
Attorney General would not allow him to misuse the powers for any whimsical
purpose whatsoever. That lofty expectation of the law notwithstanding,
democratic experiences in Nigeria, has shown that the officer usually styled as
the Minister/Commissioner of justice of the federation or the states as the
case may be and invariably appointed on the basis of political consideration;
has typically proved to be more of a political Minister/Commissioner than an
officer of law committed to upholding the demand of justice for which his
powers were in the first place granted.2 From the first, second, third to the
present fourth Republic, Nigeria‟s Democratic history is replete with instances
where the powers of Attorney General where used for whimsical purpose such as
the prosecution of political opponents upon trumped up charges and the
discontinuance of prosecution instituted by the police and other law
enforcement agencies against government‟s party activists solely on political
ground. In fact, it was this abuse of powers by the Federal and Regional
Attorneys General of the First Republic which led to the rejected
recommendation of the 1979 Constitution Drafting Committee that the powers of
the Attorney General to take over or discontinue criminal proceeding be
exercised only with the consent of the authority that instituted the proceeding
in the first place.3
Added to the above problem is the
seeming lopsidedness in recent times in the prosecution of criminal offences as
it affects the privileged and less privileged members of the society. On a day
to day basis in Nigeria, Magistrates and other inferior courts are inundated
with minor cases of stealing, cheating, criminal breach of trust and traffic
offences committed by Nigerians who in most cases belong to the less privileged
class of the society. In fact, some months back, a Magistrate Court sitting in
Lagos attracted attention when she sentenced hundreds of Nigerians, some of whom
under aged, to different terms of imprisonment without option of fine for minor
traffic and environmental offences. On the contrary, the prosecution of most
blue or white collar offences hardly attracted the same level of success or
determined prosecution. The prosecutions of several persons alleged to have
committed serious crimes of official corruption have dragged on for years
without success.4
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Two factors seem responsible for the
above situation – the overriding powers of the president and state governors in
the appointment and removal of Attorney General and the refusal of the
judiciary in Nigeria to invoke the power of judicial review on the exercise of
powers by the Attorney General on the ground that the powers are absolute and
subject to no judicial review what so ever.5.
TOPIC: CRITIQUE OF THE POWERS OF ATTORNEY GENERAL IN THE ADMINISTRATION OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN NIGERIA
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 78
Price: 3000 NGN
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