Revival
of original Constitution is the way to move forward
Sheikh
Hafizur Rahman Karzon
After the independence of Bangladesh,
the spectacular achievement scored by the then incumbent authority was
the successful enunciation of a good Constitution. Within a span of around
thirty-two years after liberation, the Constitution has experienced thirteen
amendments. It has undergone changes not for developing constitutionalism,
not for paving the way for strong democracy, good governance and rule
of law, rather the amendments mutilated the positive features of the original
Constitution. Comparison of the present Constitution with that of 1972
would reveal how the successive governments manipulated the Constitution
for legalising their usurpation and political purpose. Here I try to present
very briefly the major changes made to the original Constitution.
The
first major change to the Constitution was made by the Second Amendment,
1973. By this Amendment original article 33 was substituted and under
the authority of this amended provision the Special Powers Act was enacted
in 1974. This law curtailed citizens' right to liberty giving unscrupulous
power to the executive without providing sufficient safeguards to the
citizens. All the governments have abused this law and thousands of people
became victim due to capricious application of this law.
The
Fourth Amendment, 1975 introduced one party system and presidential form
of government in the place of parliamentary form of government. Responsible
role of parliament and independence of judiciary was undermined by this
amendment. Later on the situation was improved, but the ideal status ensured
by the original Constitution was never revived. Parliamentary form of
government was reinstated in 1991, but independence of judiciary has yet
to be ensured.
During
the first martial law regime (1975-79) many changes were brought to the
Constitution by the Martial Law Proclamations which lacked constitutional
validity. When the question as to the supremacy of the Constitution and
Martial Law Proclamation came, unfortunately the judges held that the
Constitution was subservient to Martial Law Proclamation. (Halima Khatun
V Bangladesh, 30 (1978) DLR (SC) 207) Instead of holding supremacy of
the Constitution or at least that the Constitution and Martial Law Proclamation
were co-extensive, the judges maintained the supremacy of the Martial
Law Proclamation who were oath-bound to preserve, protect and defend the
Constitution. All the changes made to the Constitution by the Martial
Law Proclamations were validated by the Fifth Amendment, 1979.
The
Fifth Amendment first slaughtered the Preamble of the Constitution, where
basic philosophy of twenty-four years social and cultural struggle and
finally the liberation war of Bangalee nation was clearly imprinted. This
Amendment inserted "a historic war for national independence"
in the place of "a historic struggle for national liberation."
This is clear negation of all the social, cultural and political movements
of thousands of people including language movement of 1952, education
movement of 1962, mass uprising of 1969 and non-cooperation movement of
1971.
The
Fifth Amendment together with the Eighth Amendment, 1988 (made during
another military ruler) successfully mutilated the provision of secularism
and made the Constitution communal at the cost of the people of different
religious denominations other than Muslims. Their status, in their language,
has been relegated to that of second-class citizen. The above two amendments
made some changes along religious line which on the one hand undermined
the spirit of all secular movements, on the other negated the different
entities of Hindus, Buddhists, Christians and people of other religious
identities. The Fifth Amendment changed the Preamble along religious line
and the Eighth Amendment inserted Article 2A by which Islam was declared
state religion of Bangladesh. Moreover, the Fifth Amendment deleted the
proviso of Article 38, which banned the activities of some communal political
parties who exploited religion to pursue their political goal. That was
an onslaught on the magnificent sacrifice of the martyrs of liberation
war.
Successive
military rulers usurped state power and amended the Constitution through
Martial Law Proclamations and then legalised those amendments and their
unconstitutional regimes by manipulating the constitutional mechanism.
The Constitution has become hapless victim of the operation of military
rulers, which they did promiscuously to suit their needs. By manipulating
the provisions of the Fourth Schedule they validated all the Martial Law
Proclamations and all the activities of their regimes. Sections 3A, 18
and 19 of the Fourth Schedule declared that all the activities of two
Martial Law Regimes "are hereby ratified and confirmed and are declared
to have been validly made, done or taken and shall not be called in question
in or before any court, tribunal or authority on any ground whatsoever."
The Fourth Schedule is in fact a pre-constitutional mechanism to meet
up the exigency of war situation. But this pre-constitutional mechanism
was utilised to validate post constitutional situation. Both the Martial
Law Regimes extending from 1975 to 1990 (with three years interruption)
lacked constitutional validity and the processes through which those were
validated those were also unconstitutional. Unfortunately the present
Constitution has to bear all the vestiges of those unconstitutional activities.
Preamble
and Article 8 of the original Constitution very correctly inserted four
Fundamental Principles of the newly independent state and provided that
secularism, (Bangalee) nationalism, democracy and socialism would constitute
the Fundamental Principles of People's Republic of Bangladesh. Democracy
was demolished by the Fourth Amendment, later on partially revived during
the martial law regimes. Secularism, (Bangalee) nationalism, and socialism
were exiled by the Fifth and the Eighth Amendments. Due to the aberrated
course taken by the successive rulers, the original Constitution lost
its unique feature and complexion. The four fundamental principles on
the basis of which the people of this land directed all social, cultural
and political movements and finally liberated this country, all the principles
except democracy were eliminated from the Constitution.
The
only remaining fundamental principle, democracy, cannot step forward due
to the antagonistic politics between two major political parties. Absence
of independent judiciary, non-establishment of local government at all
levels, absence of anti-corruption commission, Ombudsman, strong Election
Commission and electronic media are the major causes operational behind
the stumbling of democracy. Independence of judiciary was entrenched by
the provisions of the original Constitution. Heavy onslaught on the independence
of judiciary was made by the Fourth Amendment. Later on Judiciary got
partial independence as judicial officers of the lower level are still
controlled by the executive. Articles 95, 115 and 116 of the present Constitution
should be amended to ensure complete separation of judiciary from the
executive. Without an independent judiciary we cannot expect democracy
will take institutional shape.
Article
59 of the Constitution enjoined the parliament to establish local government
in every administrative unit of the Republic. But successive governments
failed to do so. Similarly the establishment of the office of Ombudsman,
a mandate assigned to the parliament by Article 77, has not implemented
yet. Without fulfilling the pre-conditions required for a strong democracy
we should not expect democracy will function smoothly.
Concluding
Remarks
An ideal constitution has some fundamental principles on which the basic
structure of the constitution lies. Basic structure of the constitution
cannot be changed by amendments. It is beyond the constituent power of
parliament. If any amendment changes fundamental principles or basic structure
of the constitution, that amendment will be declared ultra vires on the
touchstone of basic structure principle, a principle which has long been
established since Marbury V Madison (1803) 1 Cr. 137. In Bangladesh all
the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh and Eighth Amendments have violated the basic
structure principle of constitution. The mischief of the Fourth Amendment
was undone by the later government, but vestiges of unconstitutional activities
made by the military rulers by the Fifth, Seventh and Eighth Amendments
still present on the body of the Constitution. The sooner we realise that
the resurrection of the original Constitution is the first step to move
forward, the better.
Sheikh
Hafizur Rahman Karzon is a Lecturer, Department of Law, University of
Dhaka.