***Cautions NASS against Law School proliferation
***Warns new wigs against strife, campaign of calumny
The Chairman of the Body of Benchers (BoB), Chief Wole Olanipekun (SAN), on Tuesday, called 4,711 law graduates to the Nigerian Bar at the BoB Complex in Abuja.
The ceremony was presided by Olanipekun while President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Yakubu Maikyau (SAN), was absent.
In his speech at the event, Olanipekun said it is necessary to clear some “misconception” about the BoB, which according to him, is a creation of the statute responsible for the formal call-to-bar of persons seeking to become legal practitioners.
He added that the BoB, as a corporate body with robust succession, has its own seal and is also imbued with the power and jurisdiction to make regulations for itself and the legal profession.
He said, “The term of office of the Chairman is only one year, from March of the preceding year to March of the following year, and the chairmanship of the body is rotated between the Bar and Bench, that is if a member of the bar is the chairman, the vice-chairmanship automatically devolves on the Bench.
Observing that it is a tradition they met and has been sustained for years, Olanipekun said: “Our transition is always seamless, and has never been rancorous.
“The Body of Benchers is not an appendage of the federal government, or any government, institution or agency, howsoever.
“It is an independent and autonomous body, and its meetings, affairs and decisions are not influenced by any power or authority whatsoever.”
Olanipekun also explained that although the Legal Practitioners
Disciplinary Committee (LPDC), responsible for the discipline of lawyers, is a committee of the BoB, the LPDC is a juristic personality on its own, independent of the body, not controlled in any way or manner by either the body or chairman.
The Senior Advocate also seized the opportunity to caution that, “proceedings before the LPDC should not be politicized, sensationalized, publicized and advertised in advance or while the proceedings are ongoing by complainants for whatever reason howsoever, as by so doing, negates the principle of fair hearing, which all lawyers subscribe to.
As part of his admonition to the new wigs, Olanipekun urged them to act notably in and out of court.
He said: “Do not engage in strife, blackmail, mudslinging, campaign of calumny, treachery or any attempt to run or pull anyone down. Flee from envy like plague, for envy breeds hatred and unjustified contempt for others.
“Appreciate your colleagues and peers, as well as senior members of the profession who have received God’s benevolence, and pray that your own time will come.
Pleading with the National Assembly to stop making laws or amending the Legal Practitioners Act, to pave the way for the proliferation of Law School campuses, the chairman commended President Muhammadu Buhari and the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami (SAN) for their cooperation and implementation of the 2018 report on judicial officers’ welfare packages.
The Director General of the Nigerian Law School, Prof. Isa Chiroma (SAN), had earlier disclosed that the new lawyers successfully completed the vocational training at the Nigerian Law School as prescribed by the Legal Education Act of 1962.
According to Chiroma, the institution has contributed to training of the entire arm of government — the judiciary.
He said, “The school has also contributed to the training of legal man-power for our sister African countries like the Republic of the Gambia, the Republic of Sierra Leone and the Republic of Cameroun.
“The products of the school have commanding presence in other spheres of public and private sector such as the military, police, customs, immigration, the oil and gas sector, banking and finance etc.
The DG disclosed that the new wigs emerged successful at the August/September 2022 Bar final examination, adding that out of a total of 5,802 students, who participated in the exams, 4,691 emerged successful, representing 80.81%.
A breakdown of the results showed that 119 students graduated with 1st Class; 789 with 2nd Class Upper; 2,460, 2nd Class Lower; and 1,323 were awarded Pass.



















