Lawyers must strive to uphold professional dignity
M.
Shamsul Haque
Last
couple of years as it was found that the dignity and gravity of the highest
institution of the Judiciary of our country was wave aside. Slum people
were deployed to be seated around the Supreme Court building, boot-shorts
on it's ventricle, chanting slogans within its four walls, walloping the
doors and windows, all these wretched events were administered in a place
where persons with high dignity are congregated every day. All these events
achieved nothing but created chasms between the lawyers, which culminated
to violence rocks in Dhaka Judge Court resulting 87 injured. What a misfortune!
People
witness this unpleasant situation. One of my acquainted shopkeepers having
a newspaper in his hand exclaimed that the illiterates are far better
than those lawyers. My helpless eyes were regulated to his face but I
could not say anything.
I
wonder! The hands of a lawyer where the pen has been placed how that can
be used to administer stones, bombs and scuffling. Presumably, the politics
of now a day inspired a few lawyers to be tuned to the nugatory political
culture. It is alarming to the whole lawyers society, even to the entire
nation.
I
may be excused to remind here that the lawyers are the part and parcel
of the judiciary; and the judiciary is the last resort of justice. A lawyer
being equipped with knowledge, dignity, integrity, honesty, and high ethical
standings with patience and respecting attitude to others cannot treat
politics unlike a blunt or layman. They must not be a party to a commotion
of violence because people trust them and their profession bears a tradition.
Unfortunately some of the lawyers of our country work as political activist
for getting undue favour. They see everything unilaterally for the purpose
of serving their party men outstripping their conscience and feelings
of right or wrong. It is harsh but true that some of this type of lawyers
have earned fame in the country. In my humble way I would like to say
that the eminent lawyers may enrich political parties but a political
party may not glorify the lawyers, though can make them politicians.
I
am afraid things are dark ahead. Time has not yet been elapsed; the lawyers
should extend their hands of unity to each other irrespective of political
affinities, at least for the sake of social peace and order. Of course,
I do not mean for leaving aside the politics by the lawyers but it should
be regulated within the scarf of mannerism.
Lastly
I beg to appeal to the senior most leading lawyers to have an effective
strive for panting the unity of the lawyers of the country and to stop
splashing so that the society as a whole may not fall into a catatonic
trance.
M.
Shamsul Haque is an Advocate of the Supreme Court.