News
CJN declares war on delayed Justice, orders Judges to embrace active case management
- /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 27
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/images-1.webp&description=CJN declares war on delayed Justice, orders Judges to embrace active case management', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
- Share
- Tweet /home/naijuinz/public_html/wp-content/plugins/mvp-social-buttons/mvp-social-buttons.php on line 72
https://naijablitznews.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/images-1.webp&description=CJN declares war on delayed Justice, orders Judges to embrace active case management', 'pinterestShare', 'width=750,height=350'); return false;" title="Pin This Post">
By Francesca Hangeior, Abuja
The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Hon. Justice Kudirat Motonmori Olatokunbo Kekere-Ekun, has called on judges across the country to adopt proactive case management strategies to tackle delays in the administration of justice and strengthen public confidence in the judiciary.
Speaking at the opening of the National Workshop on Case Management for Judges of the Superior Courts of Record, organised by the National Judicial Institute in Abuja on Monday, the CJN said the effectiveness of the judiciary is measured not only by the quality of its judgments but also by the speed and efficiency with which cases are concluded.
She stressed that prolonged litigation, repeated adjournments, procedural abuse and poor scheduling practices continue to undermine access to justice, increase the cost of litigation and weaken public trust in the courts.
“To the ordinary litigant, justice delayed often translates into justice denied,” she said, adding that delays also create uncertainty for businesses and investors while eroding confidence in the rule of law.
Justice Kekere-Ekun noted that effective case management has become a defining indicator of judicial performance worldwide, urging judges to exercise greater control over proceedings, enforce timelines and make effective use of pre-trial procedures to reduce case backlogs.
The Chief Justice also encouraged judicial officers to embrace technology, including electronic filing, virtual hearings, digital case-tracking systems and automated scheduling tools, describing them as essential instruments for improving efficiency while maintaining fairness and due process.
Drawing lessons from jurisdictions such as the United Kingdom, Singapore and South Africa, she said active judicial leadership and structured case management have significantly improved court efficiency and reduced delays.
She acknowledged that increasing commercial activities, constitutional litigation and rising public expectations have placed greater demands on Nigeria’s judicial system, making continuous reforms and procedural discipline imperative.
The workshop, she explained, is designed to equip judges with practical strategies on docket control, electronic case management, scheduling practices, judgment delivery timelines and other measures aimed at enhancing justice delivery.
Justice Kekere-Ekun urged participants to reflect on existing practices, identify procedural bottlenecks and embrace reforms that promote efficiency without compromising fairness.
She expressed confidence that the workshop would provide practical solutions for reducing delays, improving judicial productivity and building a judiciary that is efficient, technologically responsive and worthy of public trust.
The Chief Justice thereafter declared the workshop open and wished participants fruitful deliberations.
Earlier, The National Judicial Institute (NJI) Justice Babatunde Adejumu in his welcome address called on judges of the Superior Courts of Record to adopt proactive case management practices as a key strategy for improving judicial efficiency and ensuring timely justice delivery across Nigeria.
According to Justice Adejumo, effective case management is essential to reducing case backlogs, eliminating administrative bottlenecks, and preventing unnecessary delays in court proceedings.
The NJI administrator explained that modern case management requires judges to move beyond their traditional adjudicative role by actively supervising cases from filing to conclusion.
He explained that this approach enhances access to justice, promotes fairness, and strengthens public confidence in the judicial system.
While emphasising that judicial education and leadership training remains a critical tools for equipping judges with contemporary case management skills, he added that the workshop provides an important platform for participants to exchange ideas, share best practices, and develop practical solutions to challenges affecting court administration.
The NJI Administrator encouraged participants to engage actively in the sessions and contribute meaningfully to discussions that would improve the administration of justice in their respective courts.
Justice Adejumo also commended the Chief Justice of Nigeria and Chairman of the NJI Board of Governors, Hon. Justice Kudirat M. O. Kekere-Ekun, GCON, FNJI, for her steadfast commitment to judicial capacity building.
He further acknowledged the contributions of the Chairman of the NJI Education Committee, Hon. Justice John Inyang Okoro, CFR, JSC, Heads of Courts, facilitators, and session managers for their continued support in advancing judicial excellence.
The workshop is expected to strengthen the capacity of judges to manage cases more efficiently, ultimately contributing to a faster, more responsive, and more effective justice system in Nigeria.
News
FG to evacuate 271 from South Africa today
By Francesca Hangeior
The Federal Government will evacuate 271 Nigerians stranded in South Africa, today, The Nation learnt.
According to an update by the spokesperson Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kimiebi Imomotimi Ebienfa, Air Peace aircraft will depart Nigeria today, Monday, 29th June 2026, at 3:00 pm for the evacuation.
Ebienfa said the plane will depart South Africa at midnight to arrive on Tuesday morning.
The anti-immigration vigilante groups have set a June 30, 2026 deadline demanding undocumented foreign nationals, especially blacks, to leave South Africa.
The threat has sparked widespread fear of xenophobic unrest, leading several African nations to evacuate thousands of their citizens. Though South African authorities have heavily condemned the vigilante threats and deployed the police and military to tighten security nationwide.
Ebienfa in a terse statement said: “Nigeria will resume the evacuation of our Nationals from South Africa today.
“Air Peace aircraft will depart Nigeria today, Monday, 29th June 2026, at 3:00 pm, and is expected to arrive in South Africa at approximately 9:00 pm local time.
“The return flight is scheduled to depart South Africa at 12:00 midnight and is expected to arrive Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos on Tuesday morning. The expected number is 271.”
News
UK rejects 1.34m Nigerian visa applications in 21 years
… As Nigeria records 33% refusal rate, accounts for 44% of Africa’s denials
By Francesca Hangeior
The United Kingdom has rejected more than 1.34 million visa applications from Nigerians over the past 21 years, according to official figures from the UK Home Office.
The data, drawn from the UK’s Entry Clearance Visa Outcomes database, show that 1,344,595 applications by Nigerians were refused between 2005 and the first quarter of 2026, placing Nigeria second only to India among countries with the highest number of UK visa denials.
Despite the high rejection rate, Nigeria remained one of the UK’s biggest sources of successful applicants. During the period, 2,723,558 visas were issued to Nigerians, making the country the third-largest recipient of UK visas after China and India.
Overall, Nigerians submitted more than 4.09 million visa applications, with decisions taken on about 4.07 million. The figures translate to an average refusal rate of 33.1 per cent—more than double the global average of 14.8 per cent. Nigeria also accounted for 44.4 per cent of all visa refusals involving African applicants.
Visitor visas accounted for the bulk of refusals, with 1,127,088 refusals—almost 84 per cent of the total. Study visas recorded 130,712 refusals, while 41,410 work visa and 12,217 family visa applications were also denied.
The highest rejection rates were recorded in the mid-2000s.
In 2006, UK authorities refused 117,968 Nigerian applications, a refusal rate of 49.6 per cent, while 111,058 applications were rejected in 2005.
Approval rates improved steadily over the years, peaking in 2023, when the UK granted a record 281,658 visas to Nigerians and the refusal rate fell to 21 per cent, the lowest in the review period.
However, the trend reversed after Britain tightened immigration rules in 2024 by raising salary thresholds for Skilled Worker visas and restricting dependents of international students and care workers.
Following the changes, Nigerian work visa applications fell sharply, while refusal rates climbed to 33.5 per cent in 2024, eased marginally to 33.1 per cent in 2025, and rose again to 35.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2026.
Among African countries, Ghana recorded the second-highest number of UK visa refusals, at 374,108, followed by Algeria, Egypt, Zimbabwe, Morocco, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, and Sudan.
The UK Home Office also noted that Nigerian nationals remain among the largest groups seeking asylum after entering Britain on valid visas, a development it said has contributed to increased scrutiny of applications from Nigeria.
Former Nigerian Ambassador to Singapore, Ogbole Amedu-Ode, attributed the sustained surge in applications to Nigeria’s economic challenges and the “Japa” migration wave.
He said expanding economic opportunities at home would reduce the pressure on Nigerians seeking to relocate abroad, adding that the large number of visa approvals also reflected the UK’s continued attractiveness as a destination for Nigerians.
News
FCCPC threatens sanction against petrol price profiteers
By Francesca Hangeior
The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) is set to wield the big stick against oil marketers.
It follows their reluctance to reduce petrol pump prices in line with the falling global crude oil price.
The planned action, the commission said, became necessary after it observed that despite downward reviews of petrol ex-depot prices by domestic refiners, marketers, depot owners and retail outlet operators had only made negligible reductions at the pumps, which were not commensurate with the sharp fall in global crude oil prices.
Following a ceasefire agreement between the United States (U.S.) and Iran two weeks ago and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, crude oil prices have declined steadily, with Brent crude trading at $71.99 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at $69.23 per barrel yesterday.
The decline represents a sharp drop from the peak recorded during the conflict, returning prices to pre-war levels.
The earlier spike in global crude prices prompted local refiners and marketers to raise pump prices across the country, with petrol rising from about N800 per litre to between N1,350 and N1,500, while diesel sold for as much as N2,000 per litre as hostilities intensified in the Gulf.
Despite the subsequent decline in crude prices, petrol still sells for an average of N1,200 per litre, although some local refiners have reduced ex-depot prices to between N1,025 and N1,075 per litre.
Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the FCCPC, Mr. Tunji Bello, explained that although the commission does not regulate or approve petroleum prices in a deregulated downstream market, it has a statutory responsibility under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act 2018 to promote competitive markets, prevent anti-competitive conduct and protect consumers from unfair, deceptive and exploitative business practices.
According to a statement by the FCCPC Director of Corporate Affairs, Ondaje Ijagwu, Bello said: “We are concerned that while dealers often respond swiftly by hiking pump prices whenever crude prices rise, it is curious that it is taking so long for consumers to benefit significantly when crude prices fall. Competitive markets must work fairly in both directions.
“Though recognising that domestic prices are influenced by a range of commercial and market factors, including refining costs, foreign exchange movements, logistics, financing and distribution expenses, the commission expects competitive market dynamics to facilitate the timely transmission of resulting cost efficiencies to consumers.
“Market liberalisation does not diminish businesses’ obligations to compete fairly or consumers’ right to fair treatment.
“Where credible evidence indicates conduct that undermines competition, exploits consumers or otherwise contravenes the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, the commission will investigate and take appropriate enforcement action.”
However, the National President of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Abubakar Maigandi, said marketers were already complying with the reductions, explaining that pump prices had been lowered in line with refiners’ ex-depot price cuts.
“You have to know that these price reductions come in batches. As they reduce their prices, we also reduce ours.
“When Dangote Refinery reduced its ex-depot price by N50 per litre, we reflected the same N50 reduction at our filling stations.
“Any amount reduced from the ex-depot price is the same amount we reduce from our pump price,” he said.he
Maigandi challenged the FCCPC to conduct a survey of IPMAN filling stations to verify the level of compliance among its members.
“Compliance is compulsory because if you don’t comply, nobody will patronise you.
“No one will buy a product at a higher price when the same product is available cheaper elsewhere.
“Our marketers are complying. In fact, we welcome the reductions because lower prices translate into higher sales volumes,” he added.
Some operators in the downstream oil sector, however, faulted the FCCPC’s planned action, describing it as a case of double standards.
Asked to comment on the commission’s position, they argued that it was unfair to threaten marketers with sanctions in a deregulated market where pricing decisions are driven by commercial considerations.
Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Dr. Muda Yusuf, supported the FCCPC’s intervention, provided there was evidence of anti-competitive conduct.
“If there are obvious cases of exploitation or where players with significant market power abuse their position, the FCCPC can intervene because the commission has broad powers to address anti-competitive practices and abuse of market dominance.
“But it must first establish that such conduct exists before taking action. The downstream sector has many players, and there is already a framework that allows competition,” he said.
Yusuf, however, noted that despite its statutory powers, the FCCPC would find it difficult to compel marketers to reduce prices because pricing remains a commercial decision.
“If you bought stock at a particular price, your selling price is determined largely by the replacement cost. Even if you bought the product cheaper, you have to consider how much it will cost to replenish your stock. That is normal business practice, and it would be difficult to compel businesses to act otherwise,” he said.
He added that businesses generally respond faster to rising costs than falling costs because of replacement cost considerations.
“The argument by many marketers is that they still have old stock purchased at higher prices.”
“Until they exhaust that stock, they cannot significantly reduce pump prices. Once they begin buying new stock at lower prices, consumers should see further reductions,” Yusuf explained.
Bello encouraged consumers to continue reporting suspected anti-competitive conduct, misleading pricing practices and other forms of unfair market behaviour through the commission’s established complaint channels.
-
News20 hours agoSAD! Bandits’ bomb hits vehicle, kills one, injures many in Sokoto
-
News20 hours agoSaudi Arabia ‘s Aramco Helicopter Crashes, Kills 14
-
News2 hours agoPhotos: DAY 14 of Projects Commissioning in the FCT: See Karu road during construction by Nigerian contractor
-
Entertainment9 hours agoNew Video Of Hanks Anuku Sparks Fresh Concern Over Actor’s Well-Being
-
Sports10 hours ago‘It’s a disaster World Cup’ — Iran captain Taremi slams FIFA over visa, travel chaos
-
Entertainment9 hours ago‘I didn’t sell my husband properties alone’ – Mr Ibu’s wife
-
News3 hours agoDAY 14 of Projects Commissioning in the FCT
-
Foreign9 hours agoPregnant Woman Dies By Suicide After Husband Allegedly Demanded DNA Test For Unborn Child
