Alternative Dispute Resolution System Starts at Appeal Court
The Court of
Appeal on Monday officially kick-started The Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR) system of settling legal dispute has been officially started at the Court
of Appeal.
The
President of the Court of Appeal, Justice Monica Dongban-Mensem, President of
the Court of Appeal, who supervised the
official take-off of the system in Abuja, said the judiciary must rise up and
meet the challenges of adjudication in the 21st century.
Justice
Dongban-Mensem said it is necessary to do so in order to make the country more
attractive to international trade and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI).
Speaking at
the inaugural sitting of the Court of Appeal Mediation Center, the president
further stated that good performance on the part of the judiciary will improve
employment and domestic economic growth.
While
declaring the session open, Justice Dongban-Mensem recalled that it was
initiated in 2018 as a way of ensuring speedy and efficient dispensation of
justice as well as promoting amicable alternative to the adversarial justice
system.
She further
said that the ADR represented an innovation which, if fully utilised, will
introduce a multi-track justice delivery system to the appellate level and
further boost justice delivery.
According to
her, appellate mediation is now part of the global legal lexicon, straddling
the appellate courts of countries like the United States of America, United
Kingdom and Thailand.
The Appeal
Court President further stated that the overriding objectives of the Court of
Appeal mediation center is to promote mediation and other alternative dispute
resolution mechanism towards enhancing the administration of justice and speedy
resolution of disputes.
Among
others, Justice Dongban-Mensem also stated that the new system will assist
parties in reaching an expeditious resolution of their disputes in all good
faith in a fair and efficient manner.
She said:
“We must not only build a structure but a mindset that will drive the process
of alternative, less expensive and less onerous dispute resolution process such
as mediation. There is also need for us to build a culture where peaceful
resolution of disputes becomes more attractive than litigation.”
She then
appealed to the bench and bar to uphold the ideals of the centre for quick and
amicable resolution of disputes, adding that, this can be achieved if all sides
imbibe the highest code of ethics and global best practices in the operation of
the centre.
The Appeal
Court President commended Justices Williams Daudu, Sotonye Denton-West and
Philomena Ekpe for their commitment to the success of the centre and Dr.
Kehinde Aina for making the establishment of the centre a reality.
Among the
appellants at the session were a business tycoon, Chief Ned Nwoko, who described
the ADR as a right step in the right direction and appealed to Nigerians to
imbibe the new justice dispensation system.

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