
Republican President, Rupiah Banda, has described the death of the late Ndola High Court in-charge, Japhet Banda as a robbery of a legal mind not only from the judiciary but the nation as a whole.
Mr Banda said this in a speech road on his behalf by the Chief Justice, Enerst Sakala, during the funeral service at Bethel City Church in Ndola.
Mr. Banda said the late Judge was characterised by hard work which prompted him to engage him on a three year contract after reaching a retirement age of 65 this year.
He said Judge Banda was a protector of human rights as was evidenced by his appointment to lead the commission of a probe into human rights abuses of the 1997 coup suspects which report was held in high esteem.
And law Association of Zambia President, Elijah Banda, said the death of Judge Banda was a loss to the association as the late Judge was a source of great wisdom and parental guidance.
He said he had on several occasions sought the counsel of the late judge on many issues of professional nature.
He said the association would do well to draw inspiration from the wealth of precedent which the late judge has left behind.
He said he admired the courage in the judge who responded to daunting tasks and handled them well because he set high standards of proof and sanctions which were serious and at times grave.
He said the late judge exercised impatriality even though cases involved a multiplicity of accused persons each requiring separate legal representation like the 1997 coup suspects case.
Mr. Banda said the late judge was a supporter of functions of the association on the Copperbelt as he helped in bringing together lawyers when there was need for association meetings to brainstorm on issues of common interest.
zanis