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CJN orders disciplinary action against Abuja judge who issued criminal summons against Soludo

The Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Tanko Muhammad, has ordered a disciplinary action against a judge of the Upper Area Court in Abuja who recently issued a direct criminal summons against, Charles Soludo, according to Premium Times on Sunday.
Mr Soludo, who is the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the forthcoming election in Anambra State, is a former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).
Gambo Garba of the Upper Area Court, Zuba, Abuja, had in July, issued a direct criminal summons against Mr Soludo over his alleged failure to declare his assets while serving as the CBN governor between 29 May , 2004 and 29 May , 2009.
The complainant, Oliver Bitrus, had alleged that Mr Soludo held the CBN governor’s office as a public officer flagrantly violating the Code of Conduct for public officers by buying property not attributable to his legitimate earnings.
The direct criminal summons issued by the Upper Area Court was an approval to Mr Bitrus to prosecute Mr Soludo at the court.
Many have condemned the Upper Area Court, a court at magisterial level established to handle Sharia law-related matters, for acting outside its jurisdiction by issuing the direct criminal summons against Mr Soludo.
Top judiciary sources, who are privy to the interest Mr Muhammad has shown in the matter but are not permitted to talk to the press about it, told PREMIUM TIMES pleading anonymity that the CJN was embarrassed by the judge’s conduct.
The CJN was said to have noted that the issues of “perjury, corruption and false assets declaration” raised in the complaints in respect of which the Upper Area Court judge issued the direct criminal summons against Mr Soludo were “completely outside the jurisdiction of the Upper Area Court.”
The CJN directed the Acting Chief Judge of the FCT High Court who heads the FCT Judiciary Service Commission to take a disciplinary action against the judge and “submit his findings to the CJN within 21 days,” sources reliably informed our reporter.
Mr Muhammed had met with the Chief Judges of the FCT, Rivers, Kebbi, Cross Rivers, Jigawa, Anambra and Imo States on Monday, 6 September , 2021, over similar acts of impunity of issuance of conflicting ex parte orders in some political cases.

Incidentally, some of the controversial orders had to do with Mr Soludo and the choice of governorship candidate of his party, APGA, ahead of the forthcoming elections in Anambra State.

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