THE VALLEY, Anguilla, CMC – Lawyers in the sub-regional Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Friday joined their counterparts in the Commonwealth Caribbean in criticizing statements made by at least two regional prime ministers during the recently concluded regional symposium on violence as a public health issue in Trinidad and Tobago.
In a statement, the OECS Bar said it “strongly” condemns the comments made by Barbados Prime Ministers Mia Motley and her St. Vincent and the Grenadines counterpart Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, “which clearly constitute an attack on the independence of the judiciary and regrettably reflects a disconnect from the realities of criminal behavior in society and the role of the Judiciary.”
Gonsalves, addressing the two-day regional symposium attended by several Caribbean Community (CARICOM) leaders, criticized members of the Judiciary who granted bail to the murder accused, asking whether they lived on Mars.
“I am not calling for any totalitarian measure. I am not calling for that. But there is in aspects of our Judiciary a creeping lack of awareness about some of the problems we face.
“How can you give somebody who is charged with murder bail? Let’s be serious. How can you do that,” Gonsalves asked, adding, “Where do those judges live, on Mars?
Gonsalves also noted that “too many judges and magistrates are too soft. Sometimes you get the impression that some magistrates, depending on who the lawyer is, their people seem to get better treatment. Everybody talks about this you, but they talk about it behind closed doors,” said Gonsalves, a lawyer.
Mottley, an attorney, told the regional symposium many years ago that “people did not get bail for murder.
“Now, when I look at the stats, not just out of the Bahamas, Barbados, and throughout the region, the people causing the most significant problems are charged with two, three, four murders. Something is fundamentally wrong.
“So I ask myself two fundamental questions. How will we deconstruct and reconstruct to meet the reality of this jurisprudential development undermining the rule of law in our countries? We will have to find ways of cooperating from the level of the police to the story of the courts, but in particular, forensics.
“If we can get people to court within nine to 12 months, you have a good chance of a person not being given bail. Beyond 12 months, any number can start to play,” Mottley said.
In its statement, the OECS Bar said that Instead of focusing on the real issues impacting crime, such as the lack of investment in youth, the family, education, the judicial system, the police, and the crown prosecution service, some leaders preferred playing the blame game “blaming everybody else but the politicians currently in office.
“The OECS Bar is genuinely disappointed at the missed opportunity at the symposium, in such an esteemed setting, in finding new and creative ways to tackle the scourge of crime, but instead leaving the headlines blazing and opportunistically focused on judges and magistrates who speak from their judgments and are in no position to defend themselves publicly against such attacks.
“It is alarming that the offending statements came from two very admired former legal practitioners, one of whom was a formidable defense lawyer,” the OECS Bar said, adding that “the attacks on judicial officers were wholly unfair, unfounded, uncalled for, and misplaced.
“Our Bar Associations in the region have been consistently calling, over the years, for an overdue injection of resources to boost our legal system long suffering from poor accommodation, woefully inadequate and ill-equipped supporting registries, a serious shortage of judges to meet the ever-growing demand of cases within the system and a lack of basic equipment and tools for transcription and other services ancillary to the work of judicial officers.”
The association said that it is well known that judicial officers are vastly overworked and operate under less-than-desirable conditions.
It said examples abound in the Eastern Caribbean of governments not paying their required financial contributions to the court, causing severe embarrassment to the Judiciary.
“Growing backlogs of cases in the High Court and Court of Appeal, seriously impacting the administration of justice, are not creations of the judiciary but stem largely from an under-resourced judicial system.”
The OECS Bar said that while it wanted to “make it clear that judicial officers are not above criticism,” Bar Associations must rise in defense of judicial officers against unfair and unwarranted criticism, especially by agents of other arms of the State seeking to absolve themselves of responsibility and heaping blame on them in circumstances where they cannot defend themselves.
“The OECS Bar wishes to remind our CARICOM leaders that our Constitutions mandate that every person charged with a criminal offense is entitled to the presumption of innocence and to a fair trial within a reasonable time.
“The presumption of innocence applies no less to persons charged with murder. In several jurisdictions across the region, bail has long been granted in murder matters,” it said, adding, “In any event, judges act judicially, not arbitrarily.
“Each bail application will be considered on its merit and a decision taken after considering well-established judicial guidelines. Bail is not automatic. Holding persons on remand for murder for long extended periods, in some countries for more than 10 and 15 years, without the possibility of bail, clearly infringes the guaranteed fundamental right to a fair trial.”
In the statement, the OECS Bar said that the decision of higher courts binds judges.
“If the Privy Council has declared that withholding bail for murder is unconstitutional, our judges must follow and apply the law accordingly. Moreover, under our separation of powers, the executive, legislative and judicial arms are co-equal and constitutionally mandated to perform specific roles.”.
The OECS Bar said it will continue to defend the independence of the Judiciary, uphold the rule of law, and promote a more efficient and effective administration of justice.
“We shall also continue to educate and empower the public on issues touching and concerning the law and on burning issues impacting the administration of justice,” it added,
Meanwhile, the Organization of Commonwealth Caribbean Bar Association (OCCBA) has also criticized the positions taken by the CARICOM leaders.
“OCCBA joins our colleagues and members of the legal profession throughout the Commonwealth Caribbean in condemning these reckless and dangerous comments.
“We feel compelled to remind the Prime Ministers that responsible leadership must not sacrifice the Rule of Law, constitutional principles, the presumption of innocence as well as the respect for regional justice systems and our judiciary on the altar of cheap sound bites and dangerous political rhetoric designed to score political points,” OCCBA added.
It said responsible leadership must recognize that the Commonwealth Caribbean legal systems and Constitutions are all designed to protect and preserve fundamental human rights and freedoms.
“We remind citizens of the Commonwealth Caribbean that the Judiciary is a separate and independent branch of government that should not be interfered with by the political directorate.
“The usual intellect, eloquence, and creative rhetoric of the Prime Ministers we are accustomed to is not lost on us. So, the attributed comments made by them in a public roundtable regional leadership conference attended by Caricom leaders with many media outlets in tow give us a moment for pause and concern.
“We urge careful introspection and hopeful immediate clarifications and retractions by the Prime Ministers as regards their unfortunate utterances,” it added.