
The Chief Judge of the Federal High Court, Justice John Tsoho has said that the court did not freeze accounts of #EndSars protesters but those of corporate bodies under suspicion of money laundering.
Tsoho made the assertion on Tuesday in Abuja at a special court session to mark the beginning of the 2020 to 2021 legal year of the court.
The chief judge said that those who made such allegations of the court freezing the accounts of #EndSars protesters were being uncharitable to the court.
According to him, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) approached the court seeking an order to freeze certain accounts of corporate bodies and names of individuals were not attached to the applications.
“I assigned those cases and no individual’s name was mentioned.
“Three months before the protest,
the CBN kept bringing applications, almost in their hundreds, based on what they call deliberate resolve to ruin the economy through money laundering.
” So if it was the #EndSars people that were involved in the activity under cover, then it is unfortunate for people to begin to call and vilify the court, making damaging allegations against the court,” Tsoho said.
He maintained that if such steps had not been taken, the Nigerian economy would have collapsed.
He added that if any of the accounts belonged to any #EndSars protester, it was a mere coincidence.
The chief judge had earlier noted that the legal year now ending, had been very challenging due to the Corona Virus pandemic.
He noted that as far as the virus was concerned, the country was not yet out of the woods and urged everyone to continue to take necessary measures to stay safe.
He also said that in the 2019/2020 legal year, a total of 10,464 cases were filed, comprising of 2,851 civil cases, 2,599 criminal cases, 3,049 motions and 1,965 fundamental rights applications.
“The total number of cases disposed of during that year was 8,585 with a total of 123, 513 pending at the end of the legal year.”
For his part, the Attorney-General of the Federal and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami SAN, noted that the judiciary had risen above the challenge of Covid-19 by developing virtual court proceedings.
This, he said was to ensure that the wheel of justice was kept in motion.
Malami who was represented by Mr Dayo Apata, SAN, the Solicitor General of the Federation noted the need to maintain the use of ICT, particularly as the country seemed to be experiencing a second wave of the pandemic.
Also speaking, the President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr Olumide Apata, SAN, accused the federal high court of dwindling the hopes of the common man by freezing the accounts of individuals and organisations believed to be bankrolling the #EndSars process.
“While the matter remains “sub-judice”, it has put in the front burner the lingering distrust of the masses in the justice process.”