The Federal Judicial Service Commission (FJSC) has recommended Justice Mahmud Mohammed as replacement for the outgoing Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mariam Aloma Mukhtar.
Justice Mariam Mukhtar, who made history as the first female CJN will retire on November 20 when she would have attained the mandatory retirement age of 70. She was born on November 20th, 1944.
The FJSC met in Abuja last Thursday to recommend Justice Mohammed t the National Judicial Council (NJC) for further recommendation to President Goodluck Jonathan.
Justice Mohammed is said to be the next senior justice of the Supreme Court.
Based on FJSC’s recommendation, the NJC will meet tomorrow to take a decision on this and is expected to recommend Justice Mahmud to the president for appointment as the next CJN.
Presently, Justice Mahmud is the Deputy Chairman of the NJC. The CJN chairs both the FJSC and the NJC.
The council will also nominate Justice Walter Nkanu-Onnoghen alongside Mohammed to succeed the latter as the deputy chairman of the NJC. Nkanu-Onnoghen is next to Mohammed in seniority.
Justice Mohammed, who hails from Jalingo in Taraba State, was born on the 10th of November 1946.
He studied for his Bachelor’s degree in Law (LL.B) at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, graduating in 1970, after which he attended the Nigerian Law School in Lagos and was subsequently called to bar in 1971.
He began his career in the public service with the Ministry of Justice of the defunct Northeastern and Gongola States, as well as serving on the bench in Gongola.
In 1991, he was appointed the acting Chief judge of Taraba State, and later confirmed as the substantive Chief Judge of the state in the same year.
Prior to being appointed a Justice of the Supreme Court in 2005, he was a justice of the Court of Appeal and then its presiding justice.
In addition to his legal qualifications, he holds a certificate in Legislative Drafting from the Commonwealth Institute of Legislative Drafting; a certificate in Human Resource Planning and Management from the National Institute of Public Management, Washington USA; a certificate of Administration of Justice in a Presidential System of Government from the Institute of Judicial Administration, University of New York, USA; and a certificate from a Government Legal Advisers course from the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London, UK.
In his years in public service, he has served as a member of several committees and panels.
He holds the national honours of the Commander of Order of the Niger (CON) and Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (OFR), and is a member of the Bar Council, Council of Legal Education and the Body of Benchers.