Residents of Mokwa in Niger State have lodged a formal petition with the National Judicial Council (NJC), accusing Chief Magistrate Murtala M. B. Ibrahim of Chief Magistrate Court 1 in Minna of judicial misconduct in the ongoing detention of student activist Isah Mokwa.

However, Lawyers have pointed out that the petition may be misdirected, as the Niger State Judicial Service Commission (NJSC), the administrative body responsible for appointing, disciplining, and removing state judicial officers like magistrates, holds primary jurisdiction over such matters, raising questions about the petitioners’ awareness of procedural channels and potential biases within the state commission.

The NJSC, established under Section 197(2) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) and Niger State’s enabling laws, oversees the state’s inferior courts, including magistrates’ courts, and has the authority to investigate complaints against officers like Ibrahim for issues such as abuse of discretion or incompetence. In contrast, the NJC primarily handles superior courts at the federal and state levels. Despite this, the petitioners opted for the NJC, possibly due to perceptions of compromise within the NJSC, where political influences and allegations of favoritism have long undermined public trust in impartial disciplinary processes.

The petition, addressed to the NJC Chairman at the Supreme Court Complex in Abuja, details a series of procedural irregularities in the handling of Mokwa’s case, branding them as “abuse of discretion, judicial misconduct, and incompetence.”

Isah Mokwa, a postgraduate student at Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University (IBBU) in Lapai, was arraigned on October 27, 2025, before Magistrate Ibrahim on charges of alleged cybercrime offenses. The charges stem from Mokwa’s public criticism of Niger State Governor Mohammed Umar Bago and local officials, including Mokwa Local Government Chairman Adamu Muregi, whom activists claim orchestrated his arrest as political retaliation.

According to the petition, the court initially rejected the prosecution’s request for a 14-day remand order, observing that the police lack the authority to detain a citizen indefinitely under the guise of investigation without due process. Yet, in a move the petitioners describe as contradictory, Magistrate Ibrahim ordered Mokwa’s immediate detention at the Old Minna Prison, arguing that no formal bail application had been filed at the time.

“These actions demonstrate contradictory reasoning, procedural irregularities, and a disregard for constitutional rights,” the petition states. It further argues that the magistrate’s conduct violates the Code of Conduct for Judicial Officers (2016), as well as Sections 35 (right to personal liberty) and 36 (right to fair hearing) of the 1999 Constitution.

When a bail application was subsequently filed on Mokwa’s behalf, it was denied on the grounds that the court lacked jurisdiction over the cybercrime charges, typically handled by specialized federal courts under the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, Etc.) Act, 2015. Paradoxically, the court neither dismissed the case nor transferred it to the appropriate forum, leaving Mokwa in limbo and effectively prolonging his detention without legal resolution.

The petitioners, a coalition of Mokwa residents, civil society activists, and concerned citizens, have urged the NJC to “investigate the conduct of Magistrate Murtala M. B. Ibrahim” and impose “appropriate disciplinary action to safeguard judicial integrity and public confidence in the justice system.”

This development comes amid heightened scrutiny of Ibrahim’s judicial record. SaharaReporters reported last week that the magistrate has been shortlisted by the NJC for promotion to the Niger State High Court, despite the brewing controversy. The NJC’s list includes “Murtala M. B. Ibrahim – High Court, Niger,” alongside other nominees, prompting accusations of rewarding questionable performance over accountability.

Human rights groups have echoed the petitioners’ concerns, condemning Mokwa’s continued detention as a chilling effect on free speech and student activism in Niger State. The incident has also spotlighted broader issues of judicial overreach in politically sensitive cases, with critics arguing that local power dynamics, including alleged ties between the judiciary and the state government, may explain why the NJSC has not intervened.

As of November 11, 2025, Mokwa remains in custody at Old Minna Prison, with no updates on the case’s transfer or resolution. Legal observers suggest that if the NJC deems the petition outside its purview, it could redirect it to the NJSC, though doing so might expose deeper systemic flaws in state-level judicial oversight.

The NJSC has recently demonstrated some resolve in combating misconduct, dismissing two judges and a registrar for gross misconduct in August 2025. However, persistent allegations of corruption and political interference continue to erode its credibility, fueling debates on the need for stronger federal safeguards in state judiciaries.

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