The
Acting Chief Judge of Cross River State, Justice Michael Edem, says he has
introduced secret agents to monitor activities of judges, magistrates, and
judicial officers in order to tackle corrupt practices in the bench.
Edem
who made this known in Calabar during his inaugural remarks to mark the commencement
of the 2017/18 legal year, said there were 11,516 civil cases, 828 criminal
cases and 2,457 motions which will be tackled in the 2017/legal year, adding
that efforts should be made not to soil the image of the judiciary in
dispensing justice.
He
said, “The prying eyes of the public are on us all because if one finger of any
hand of the judiciary is soiled by oil, the oil shall spread and pollute the
entire body.
“The
judiciary would not be a collective victim of an individual malfeasance and I
will let go the axe ruthlessly on anyone who does that.
“To
this end, I have set up a secret monitoring agency to spy and report to me all
acts of corruption, no matter how slight.”
He
however warned the judges to be dutiful by ensuring that courts sit regularly
in order to ensure speedy dispensation of justice.
“If
for any reason a judge or a magistrate would not sit for two days, he must seek
and have my permission. Beyond that, a cogent cause would become a deliberate
cause which cannot be tolerated,”.
The
Acting Chief Judge said customary courts in the state have not sat since 2015
following the expiration of the tenure of the presidents and members, owing to
the absence of the Judicial Service Commission.
He
added that with the recent constitution of the commission, it is expected that
customary courts would be reconstituted shortly.
The
State Governor, Ben Ayade, in his remarks, commended the warm relationship
between the judiciary and the executive in the state, while he donated the sum
of N10m and a bus to the church that offered prayers for peace and development
of the state during the event.

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