The High Court on Wednesday came down heavily on the
government for delaying the passage of two ordinances to make the
judiciary independent of the executive.
The High Court bench of
Justice ABM Khairul Haque and Justice Abdul Hye, in a rule issued suo
moto, also asked the government to explain by March 19 the legality of
the judicial functions done by the judicial magistrates and
metropolitan magistrates after February 24 when the two ordinances
ceased to be in force.
The court also asked the law secretary and
the Supreme Court registrar to explain the authority of the judicial
magistrates to conduct judicial activities after February 24.
The
lower judiciary was made independent of the executive on November 1,
2008 with the establishment of judicial magistracy by the Code of
Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Ordinance 2007 and the Code of Criminal
Procedure (Second Amendment) Ordinance 2007, promulgated by the
immediate-past interim government.
The ordinances, promulgated in
accordance with the Supreme Court directives detailed in the Masder
Hossain case, widely known as the separation of the judiciary case,
brought about changes in the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The ordinances were placed in the parliament at its first sitting on January 25, but they were yet to be passed into laws.
As
the ordinances were not passed by February 24, when a period of 30 days
from their placement in the parliament expired, they ceased to be in
force, according to constitutional provisions, the court said.
Before
issuing the rule, the court solicited opinions of legal experts
Mahmudul Islam, also a former attorney general, and M Zahir during the
hearing in a writ petition on the appointment of staff to assist the
judicial and metropolitan magistracies.
The lawyers were on the committee which reviewed the ordinances made by the interim government.
They told the court the expert panel had recommended passage of the ordinances into laws.
The
rule was issued at a time when the parliamentary standing committee on
the law ministry was reportedly facing difficulties in the preparation
of its report on the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Bill 2009
due to pressure from the executive officials of the government to
retain their judicial powers.
The government on March 2 placed in
the parliament the Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Bill 2009
proposing same amendments, the ordinances brought about, to the code,
repealing the ordinances.
‘Once the bill is passed by the
parliament, the judicial activities of the judicial magistrates after
February 24 will be legitimised,’ the law minister, Shafique Ahmed,
told reporters after the meeting of the committee held Monday night.
‘The bill has a “saving clause” to legitimise the judicial activities so far done by the judicial magistrates,’ he said.
Section
104(2) of the bill says the activities done under the ordinances, which
have ceased to be in force, will be deemed to have been done under the
bill.
The parliamentary standing committee on Monday also heard
arguments of the Bangladesh Judicial Service Association,
Administrative Service Association and the Police Association, who are
now at loggerheads over the separation of the judiciary.
The
Administrative Service Association, at the meeting, demanded retaining
judicial powers for the executive officials, who had exercised judicial
powers before November 1, 2007.
The association argued the
judicial procedures in a criminal case should be conducted by executive
magistrates before the case was ready for trial, said sources attending
the meeting.
‘The parliament will decide whether the ordinance
will be further amended to provide judicial powers for executive
officers,’ Shafique said.
Most of the members on the committee,
however, said the bill should be passed immediately and then, if
necessary, the law might be amended further later, the sources said.
‘We
have heard the leaders of the three associations and the parliament
will finally decide the issue,’ Awami League lawmaker Abdul Matin
Khasru, also a member on the committee and former law minister, told
New Age.
Experts on law and the judiciary, however, said the
re-empowerment of executive officials with judicial powers would be a
violation of the directives of the Appellate Division of the Supreme
Court and also constitutional provisions.
The constitution stipulates, ‘The state shall ensure the separation of the judiciary from the executive organs of the state.’
In
accordance with the constitutional scheme and guideline, the judiciary
has been made independent of the executive and that too in line with
the directives of the highest court, the experts said.
Supreme
Court lawyers M Amirul Islam, also the chief counsel for the
petitioners in the Masder Hossain case, Khan Saifur Rahman, Sigma Huda,
also a rights activist, Shahdeen Malik, Tanzib-ul Alam and Fawzia Karim
expressed the similar views.
Abdul Matin Khasru also said the
government could not go beyond the Appellate Division’s directives and
the constitutional guideline.
The Appellate Division on December
2, 1999, in its judgement in the Masder Hossain case, detailed the
12-popint directive on the government to make the lower judiciary
independent of the executive in six months.
The then incumbent
and all the successive governments have had repeated extension to the
timeframe for the implementation of the directives. The BNP-led
alliance government, at the fag end of its tenure, made four sets of
rules on judicial services and a bill for the amendment to the Code of
Criminal Procedure.
The Appellate Division, however, on January
10, 2007 declared the rules and the draft bill for the amendment to the
code contrary to its directives and ordered the government to make
fresh rules and ordinance on the amendment to the code.
The interim government accordingly framed fresh rules on January 16 and promulgated the Code
of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Ordinance on February 13. The
ordinance came into effect on November 1, 2007 making the lower
judiciary independent of the executive.
Source: New Age