The Illusion of Reform: NBA Conferences, Technological Stagnation, and the Fate of the Common Man – Adeyinka Igbinoba
Adeyinka Igbinoba
The Illusion of Reform: NBA Conferences, Technological Stagnation, and the Fate of the Common Man
We have all heard the phrase echoed by human rights activists and legal scholars alike: “The judiciary is the last hope of the common man.” But what happens when that last hope becomes a playground for delay, inefficiency, and unchecked corruption? What is the fate of the ordinary citizen when the very institution designed to shield them from oppression becomes a tool used to break them?
As a professional deeply invested in digital transformation and organizational strategy, I often look at structures through the lens of efficiency, accountability, and results. When you look at the Nigerian judiciary today, the gap between what is promised and what is delivered is widening at an alarming rate.
The Annual Pageantry vs. Real-World Impact
Right now, the campaigns for the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) presidency are in full force. Simultaneously, massive resources and preparations are being poured into the upcoming annual NBA Conference.
But as an observer and a citizen, I am forced to ask a fundamental question: What exactly is the purpose of this yearly NBA Conference if we cannot see a visible, measurable difference in the strength, integrity, and growth of our judiciary?
Year after year, brilliant papers are presented, communiqués are issued, and high-profile networking takes place. Yet, the average litigant steps into a courtroom only to encounter the same archaic system they faced a decade ago. If these massive gatherings of the finest legal minds do not translate into structural policy overhauls that protect the vulnerable, then they risk becoming nothing more than annual pageantry.
Where is the Technological Leverage?
We live in an era where global industries have been completely revolutionized by technology. Digital platforms can automate workflows, optimize data orchestration, and bring absolute transparency to complex systems.
So, how exactly has the judiciary leveraged technology to upscale its activities?
Why are our courts still overwhelmingly dependent on mostly manual filing, physical paperwork, and judges taking down testimonies longhand?
Why haven’t we institutionalized robust Electronic Case Management Systems (ECMS) that track cases in real-time, automatically flag unnatural delays, and assign hearing dates via unbiased algorithms?
Technology eliminates the human discretion that breeds corruption. The lack of a aggressive, nationwide digital transformation in our courts suggests a comfortable reluctance to let go of the shadows that manual systems provide.
The Cost of Undue Delays and Corruption
What is the judiciary putting in place to ensure that victims do not suffer undue delays because of institutional inefficiencies?
In Nigeria, a simple commercial or property dispute can linger in court for up to a decade. These delays are not always accidental; often, they are weaponized.
Adjournments are granted on the flimsiest excuses, files mysteriously go missing, and injunctions are traded like commodities. For the common man, justice delayed is not just justice denied, it is financial ruin, emotional trauma, and physical devastation.
A Personal Reckoning: My Story is Coming
This is not a theoretical critique for me.
My name is Adeyinka Igbinoba. I am not just a commentator on this issue; I am a direct victim of the corruption embedded within the judicial system of Lagos.
I have watched firsthand how the machinery of justice can be ground to a halt, and how loopholes in the law are deliberately manipulated. In due time, I will be sharing my harrowing personal experience backed by undeniable, documented proof, revealing exactly how the system is rigged, and how individuals occupying high offices actively aid and abet criminals by hiding behind procedural technicalities.
If the legal profession wants to redeem its image, it must stop hiding behind glamorous conferences and start fixing the broken foundation of our courts.
Until then, the “common man” remains entirely on their own and it is time we pull back the curtain on those who made it so.