Ex-CJN, Katsina-Alu dies in Abuja
A former
Chief Justice of Nigeria, CJN, Justice Aloysius Katsina-Alu, is dead.
Katsina-Alu
who headed the Nigerian judiciary between 2009 and 2011, reportedly died at an
Orthopaedic Hospital in Abuja in the early hours of Wednesday.
The former
CJN who hailed from Ushongo local government area of Benue state, died at the
age of 76. He would have clocked 77 years on August 28. Katsina-Alu succeeded
Justice Idris Legbo Kutigi as CJN in December 2009.
He took over
the mantle of leadership of the judiciary within the period that late President
Umaru Yar’Adua who was critically ill, failed to hand over to the then Vice
President, Goodluck Jonathan, a situation that made the then CJN, Kutigi, to
perform the swearing-in ceremony on behalf of the absent President. Katsina-Alu
served as CJN till August 2011 when he was succeeded by the late Justice Dahiru
Musdapher. While confirming his death, media aide to the incumbent CJN, Mr.
Awassam Bassey, said the news was relayed to the Chief Registrar of the Supreme
Court by Katsina-Alu’s aide.
Bassey said his principal, Justice Walter
Onnoghen, who is currently attending a conference in Canada, had yet to hear
about the ex-CJN’s demise. “I can confirm that the Chief Registrar of the
Supreme Court, Mrs. Hadizatu Mustapha, sent me a WhatsApp message to that
effect about an hour ago confirming the death of the former CJN.
“I have just
called the Chief Registrar to confirm that this is indeed the situation. That
the Personal Assistant of the former CJN called her at 3.00pm Nigerian time to
inform her of the demise. “However, it’s 3:30am here in Montreal, Canada, where
His Lordship the Honourable Chief Justice of Nigeria, Hon.
Mr. Justice Walter
Samuel Nkanu Onnoghen, GCON, and other Justices of the Supreme Court and Chief
Judges of some states, are attending a conference organized by the
International Society for the Reform of Criminal Law, and I haven’t yet
contacted the Hon. CJN for his reaction.
“I hope to do that as soon as he wakes
up and get his reaction”, read a short statement he sent to Vanguard.
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