General
Demand judicial transparency and reform in Nigeria.
Invitation/Mobilization to Join the Citizens’ Coalition for Judicial Transparency and Reform Public Trust in Nigeria’s Judiciary Is Collapsing This is a crisis of democracy, accountability, and electoral integrity. A compromised judiciary threatens fair justice, constitutional rights, and credible elections.
Campaign statement
Why this petition matters
Public Trust in Nigeria’s Judiciary at All-Time Low, Coalition Launches Urgent Reform Drive.
Public confidence in Nigeria’s judiciary is collapsing amid persistent corruption concerns, inconsistent rulings, and institutional failures.
The 2024 Third National Corruption Survey by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has exposed deep weaknesses across public institutions, almost two year after the report was published, with no major publicly documented, evidence-based debunking of its findings. The report reveals notably high average cash bribes linked to judges and magistrates, despite lower direct citizen contact with them.
This is compounded by a sharp decline in public faith in government anti-corruption efforts. Fewer than one in three Nigerians now view these efforts as effective — a dramatic drop from over 50% in 2019. Rising conflicting judgments across courts and widespread allegations of magistrate manipulations have further eroded trust.
“These revelations represent a profound crisis of legitimacy,” said Comrade Jude Omale, Coordinator of the Citizens’ Coalition for Judicial Transparency. “When citizens lose faith in the courts, the entire foundation of democracy, accountability, and electoral integrity is threatened.”
The coalition warns that a compromised judiciary undermines fair justice, constitutional rights, and credible electoral processes. Delays, perceived conflicts of interest, and opacity in judicial operations are driving public disillusionment.
In response, the *Citizens’ Coalition for Judicial Transparency* is mobilizing a broad, non-partisan alliance. The group is not attacking individual judges but demanding constructive reforms to strengthen the institution.
Key demands include stronger ethics codes and asset disclosures, improved public access to proceedings and judgments, efficient case management to reduce delays and conflicting rulings, and independent oversight mechanisms that protect judicial independence.
The coalition is calling on civil society organizations, bar associations, lawyers, student groups, activists, labor unions, and media platforms to join the effort through public forums, town halls, peaceful protests, mass petitions, media campaigns, and stakeholder coalitions.
“This is a public interest movement to defend our democracy, not a partisan agenda,” the spokesperson added. “We seek a judiciary that Nigerians can truly trust.”
The coalition has issued an open invitation for organizations and individuals to join, sign petitions, or participate in upcoming actions.
As Nigeria confronts ongoing governance challenges, this mobilization highlights growing citizen demands for real accountability and reform in the judiciary.
Public confidence in Nigeria’s judiciary is collapsing amid persistent corruption concerns, inconsistent rulings, and institutional failures.
The 2024 Third National Corruption Survey by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) has exposed deep weaknesses across public institutions, almost two year after the report was published, with no major publicly documented, evidence-based debunking of its findings. The report reveals notably high average cash bribes linked to judges and magistrates, despite lower direct citizen contact with them.
This is compounded by a sharp decline in public faith in government anti-corruption efforts. Fewer than one in three Nigerians now view these efforts as effective — a dramatic drop from over 50% in 2019. Rising conflicting judgments across courts and widespread allegations of magistrate manipulations have further eroded trust.
“These revelations represent a profound crisis of legitimacy,” said Comrade Jude Omale, Coordinator of the Citizens’ Coalition for Judicial Transparency. “When citizens lose faith in the courts, the entire foundation of democracy, accountability, and electoral integrity is threatened.”
The coalition warns that a compromised judiciary undermines fair justice, constitutional rights, and credible electoral processes. Delays, perceived conflicts of interest, and opacity in judicial operations are driving public disillusionment.
In response, the *Citizens’ Coalition for Judicial Transparency* is mobilizing a broad, non-partisan alliance. The group is not attacking individual judges but demanding constructive reforms to strengthen the institution.
Key demands include stronger ethics codes and asset disclosures, improved public access to proceedings and judgments, efficient case management to reduce delays and conflicting rulings, and independent oversight mechanisms that protect judicial independence.
The coalition is calling on civil society organizations, bar associations, lawyers, student groups, activists, labor unions, and media platforms to join the effort through public forums, town halls, peaceful protests, mass petitions, media campaigns, and stakeholder coalitions.
“This is a public interest movement to defend our democracy, not a partisan agenda,” the spokesperson added. “We seek a judiciary that Nigerians can truly trust.”
The coalition has issued an open invitation for organizations and individuals to join, sign petitions, or participate in upcoming actions.
As Nigeria confronts ongoing governance challenges, this mobilization highlights growing citizen demands for real accountability and reform in the judiciary.
Recent supporters
People joining this campaign
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Sade, kano
Signed Jun 16, 2026
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Akhigbe, Federal Capital Territory
Signed Jun 16, 2026
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Akhigbe, Federal Capital Territory
Signed Jun 16, 2026
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Akhigbe, Federal Capital Territory
Signed Jun 16, 2026
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Akhigbe, Federal Capital Territory
Signed Jun 16, 2026