Nigeria’s Central Bank governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, has joined
issues with a US based Nigerian Professor over claims that he
plagiarized latter’s works.
In a notice of preliminary objection
filed by Mr. Kola Awodein, a senior advocate of Nigeria on behalf of
Sanusi, the CBN Governor asked the court to dismiss the suit.
According
to him, plagiarism is not
within the subject matter jurisdiction of the
Federal High Court where the suit was filed. “Plagiarism is not amongst
the subject matters listed in Section 251 (10(a)-(f) of the
Constitution.” He posited
Sanusi also said that the suit was filed
at the wrong court as, according to him, assuming there was an
infringement of the professor’s copyright, the infringement, according
to the claims of the professor, took place in Edo State, precisely at
the Igbinedion University, Okada where the paper, the subject matter of
the litigation took place.
He therefore said that the court lacked
territorial jurisdiction to entertain the matter. In addition to the
foregoing, Sanusi also challenged the locus of the Professor to
institute the case.
However, counsel to the plaintiff, Mr. E.U.
Chinedum in his reply asked the court to discountenance the preliminary
objection for lack of substance.
Mr. Chinedum averred that the
Federal High Court was empowered to determine dispute on any federal
enactment relating to copyright by virtue of section 251(1)(f) of the
Constitution. He also stated that plagiarism fell within section 6(1)
(a) of the Copyright Act Cap C28 2004.
“My Lord, it is
respectfully submitted that plagiarism is an English word used to define
the act of copying another person’s work without proper reference or no
reference at all to the owner of the work, in the instant case, Sanusi
has breached the provision of Section 16(1) (a) (i) to (I)v and (vii) by
his act of copying (plagiarizing) the work of the plaintiff.”
The
lawyer also faulted Mr. Awodein on the issue of territorial
jurisdiction pointing out that Order 2 (1) and (8) of the Federal High
Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2009 which states that all suits and
actions relating to copyright, patents, designs, trademark, and
merchandise marks shall be commenced and determined in the judicial
division in which the defendant resides or where the alleged passing off
or infringement takes place.
He argued that since Sanusi lives in
Abuja, the proper place to sue him is the Federal High Court in Abuja
and not in Edo State as argued by Awodein.
The case will come up in October when the court resumes.
Prof.
Dike, an Adjunct Professor at the School of Engineering and Technology,
National University, Sacremento, US, in a statement of claims claimed
that Sanusi breached his copy rights on two different occasions on
November 26, 2010 and December 10, 2010 when he presented public
lectures.
The first occasion was at a lecture Sanusi delivered at
the 8th Convocation Ceremony of Igbinedion University in Okada, Edo
State, on the 26th November 2010, where he presented a paper titled
“Growth Prospects for the Nigerian Economy”.
The second occasion
was on December 10th, 2010 at the Convocation Square, Abubakar Tafawa
Balewa University, Bauchi, where Sanusi presented a paper titled “Global
Financial Meltdown and the Reforms in the Nigerian Banking Sector”.
The
prof who is also the Chief Executive Officer and Founder, Centre for
Social Justice and Human Development in California, US, said that Sanusi
copied verbatim from these two articles without referring to him as the
original author. He gave the name of the articles from which Sanusi
copied from as, “Review of the Challenges Facing the Nigerian Economy:
Is National Development Possible without Technological Capability?”,
“Global Economic Crisis and Power of Productivity” and the “Governance
and Nigeria’s Weak Institutions: Is the 2020 Project Achievable” .
He
averred that Sanusi copied from pages 98,99 and 100 of his work titled,
“Review of the Challenges Facing the Nigerian Economy: Is National
Development Possible Without Technological Capability?”
He further
claimed that the CBN boss copied verbatim articles originally written
and published by him without acknowledging him as the author of the
works from where he (Sanusi) sourced the materials that made up his
lectures.
He expressed displeasure over the continued retention of the plagiarized articles at the CBN website.
-Pm News
Share your thoughts...thanks!
I beliv malam Sanusi rlly is a plagiarist. Malam 4 islamic studies,,,mschew!
ReplyDeleteI think the whole case is a fake. They can simply use free tools like http://www.plagtracker.com/ to finally find out if he was plagiarizing or not. We are living in 2012 already, it's not such a hard thing I think.
ReplyDeleteI quite agree with you. This is one of the problems killing Nigeria softly, Prolonging simple cases just to look busy. I guess the link you provided looks quite ok to solve this matter if the right people will want(use it).
DeleteHowever, i think the Court should do their job. Thanks!