
Mallam Lamido Sanusi
A
Federal High Court in Lagos on Monday restrained the Financial
Reporting Council of Nigeria from conducting investigations into alleged
financial impropriety levelled against the suspended Governor of the
Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.
In his ruling in a suit instituted by
Sanusi to bar the FRCN from probing him, Justice John Tsoho held that
given the circumstances, the FRCN had not complied with the provisions
of the law.
“I do not accept the stance of the
defendants (FRCN and its Executive Secretary) that they acted within the
stance of the FRCN Act and complied with the principles of natural
justice. It is glaring that if they kept the letters of the Act they did
not respect its ennobling position,” Justice Tsoho said.
In granting Sanusi’s prayers, the judge
said that allowing the probe to go on could be likened to the case of
the proverbial cockroach, which found itself in the midst of fowls.
He said the cockroach under such
circumstance was presumed guilty, adding that “since prevention is
better than cure” the court should rule against the proposed
investigation.
“The defendants have acted in breach of
natural justice, denied the plaintiff fair hearing and acted in bad
faith,” the judge said.
He further held that considering the
facts and the prevailing circumstances, the probe was tantamount to a
breach of natural justice since the briefing note recommending Sanusi’s
removal as CBN governor was the pivot upon which FRCN action was hinged.
“It is presumed that jaundiced recommendations can go a long way in affecting the decision of the government,” the judge said.
Sanusi had filed the suit challenging the legality of the proposed probe by the FRCN.
He had urged the court to stop the
investigation into the CBN records during his tenures as governor on the
ground that FRCN had found him guilty before commencing the probe.
The judge said the commission had
already reached its conclusion as to the culpability of Sanusi, given
the commission’s briefing note attached to the letter suspending him as
the CBN governor on February 20, 2014, and newspaper advertisement
inviting him for the probe,.
Sanusi, through his counsel, Mr. Kola
Awodein (SAN), insisted that the suspended CBN boss had not been given
the benefit of fair hearing.
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