I’ve never asked Buhari to suspend rule of law – Falana speaks out

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Femi Falana, senior advocate of Nigeria (SAN), has disclosed that he never asked President Muhammadu Buhari to suspend the rule of law in fighting corruption.

Falana made this disclosure while reacting to a 2016 interview now making the rounds where Niyi Akintola, another senior lawyer, said Falana and himself rose in defence of Buhari at an event in Washington, US.

Akintola was responding to a question about the raid on the residences of judges when he said all the president needed to do was to ask lawmakers to suspend the rule of law because fighting corruption requires drastic measures.

He said: “We were in Washington DC, United States of America and for six days, the issue of corruption in Nigeria came to the fore. It was not limited to Nigeria.

“Femi Falana and I stood up for our president and his modus operandi in faraway Washington. It is not that we love some of his tactics but we thought that a drastic problem requires a drastic solution.”

“He added that “all our president needs to do is to go to the National Assembly, call the state Houses of Assembly, more so now that governors are telling him to declare the state of emergency on the economy.

“He can bring in the issue of corruption and ask that we suspend the rule of law for one year because a drastic problem requires a drastic solution and Femi Falana supported me.” 

Speaking about the interview, Falana said he was surprised because he never attended any meeting with Akintola in Washington.

According to him, “I was flabbergasted when my attention was drawn to this publication last year. I was compelled to dissociate myself from the views ascribed to me in the interview on the grounds that Chief Niyi Akintola SAN and I have never attended any meeting together in Washington before.

“Having consistently campaigned for the defence of democracy, rule of law and human rights in Africa for over 3 decades I have never joined Chief Akintola SAN to advise the Buhari regime to put human rights in abeyance under the pretext of fighting corruption.”

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