Breaking
the chains of impunity
Barrister
M. Moksadul Islam
Human
rights are meant to be equal for all human beings and there in no excuse
for making different law for different groups of people. And most important
of all fundamental rights, a citizen enjoys, is the right to life. Life
is so precious to everyone that all other fundamental rights are meaningless
without it. Sadly this right is under threat always. No one should be
allowed to take someone's life without due course of law. Extra judicial
killing, without being accountable for, is simply inexcusable and can
never be allowed under any circumstances whatsoever.
Right
to get justice is next important fundamental right. In order to ensure
justice our democratic institutions should be upgraded to people's institution
which would work for the betterment of the people. No democratic institution
should suppress the people and take away their fundamental rights. Violator
of human rights, whatever his position is, should be brought to book.
No one is above law and makers of the law should not consider themselves
beyond law.
When machineries
of the justice keepers become violators; leaving the victims and their
families with agony and grief in vain; humanity cries with them. Indian
Supreme Court observed in a case reported in AIR 1997 SC 610 that "If
the functionaries of the Government become law breakers, it is bound
to breed contempt for law and would encourage lawlessness and every
man would have the tendency to become law unto himself thereby leading
to anarchism. No civilised nation can permit that to happen. Does a
citizen shed off his fundamental right to life, the moment a policeman
arrests him? Can the right to life of a citizen be put in abeyance on
his arrest? These questions touch the spinal cord of human rights jurisprudence.
The answer, indeed, has to be an emphatic 'No'".
Those who are violating
our fundamental rights are, apparently, far beyond the reach of their
victims. Is there any difference between members of a disciplined force
and terrorists when both torture and kill others ignoring law? All these
acts can only be described as atrocities. Former one is patronised or
protected by the State and the later one is patronised by some godfather.
If the former group can be indemnified; one day time will come when
godfathers will press for the indemnification of the later group.
Our democracy still
is in its primary stage and yet to take an institutional shape. We failed
to give our citizens proper education they need to understand democracy.
The main feature of democracy is the voting right. Sadly this voting
right can be purchased like any other commodities in the market. As
a result it is very easy, for our leaders, to interpret the provisions
of our Constitution, to legislate (e.g. Article 46 to legislate Indemnity
Ordinance) or not to legislate (i.e. Article 98for not appointing additional
Supreme Court Judges) as they please because they need not worry about
the next general election. In the next general election they simply
will purchase other's democratic right. And most frighteningly these
Articles are being wrongly interpreted not by any layman but by senior
Advocates and Barristers of the country toeing the line of their political
parties.
Actually we shelter
under our Constitution and interpret it according to our need. Most
of the people of this country do not know what Article 46 talks about
and how it contradicts with the other fundamental rights guaranteed
under Part III of our Constitution (e.g. 27, 31, 32 and 35). Our politicians
to justify their actions always say that their actions were constitutional;
even when actually they were not. Both the indemnity ordinances passed
after the liberation, although the requirements or conditions required
to take resort to Article 46 were absent, were done in clear violation
of Article 26 of our Constitution and should be declared void. Article
26 clearly states that laws inconsistent with the fundamental rights
are void.
Whatever be the
label of an unconstitutional ordinance; be it "Operation Clean
Heart" or otherwise, the culprits who tortured citizens to death
should be brought before court of law to ensure justice. Otherwise people
will loose faith on the democratic institutions. To break the chains
of impunity, amongst others, firstly, we need to separate the judiciary
from executive, should uphold constitutional provisions by giving its
true and correct interpretation.
Barrister
M. Moksadul Islam is an advocate of the Supreme Court.