Written by: Mohamed Abdullah
The UNHRC Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) has given the recommendation to release Colonel (Rtd.) Nazim.
The UNHRC Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (WGAD) has given the recommendation to release Colonel (Rtd.) Nazim.
Is this binding on the government of Maldives and does the
constitution of Maldives allow such actions?
Undoubtedly, the WGAD can only give recommendations, it does
not have the authority to go above the Maldivian constitution.
Even in Julian Assange case the UK Secretary of State for
Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Philip Hammond, rejected the group verdict
and called the group's claims irrelevant stating that the finding is not
binding on British law.
Former two presidents of Maldives have also called for his
release but it can only be viewed as an act against the Maldivian constitution
and a disrespectful action towards its citizen’s. The sincerity of the act is
highly questionable. Former president Nasheed is in hiding after fleeing from a
jail sentence and has a vested interest in the situation. The release of one
prisoner is an opportunity for all. Former president Maumoon is fighting a
popularity contest with his half-brother, the incumbent president Yameen. The
popularity achieved by President Yameen during his short term in office is
enormous and increasing.
This can also be seen as a desperate attempt by President
Maumoon, who have allegedly accepted bribes from President Nasheed to overthrow
the current President Yameen, to actually release President Nasheed, as WGAD
have given a similar recommendation to release President Nasheed.
Such irresponsible calls only open doors for foreign
intervention in our affairs and the constitution does not allow the release of
prisoners jailed after due legal process.
A closure scrutiny on the findings of WGAD reveal many flaws
and factual errors.
WGAD claims that the state did not prove that the gun in
Nazim’s possession belonged to him. Nazim was charged with a strict liability
crime, due to the serious nature of the crime, under this law the burden of
proof is with the defendant. All jurisdictions have prescribed offenses of
strict liability in order to fight certain kinds of criminal offences, and
these crimes in many states include possession of firearms, among offenses such
as narcotic drugs. In case of strict liability offenses, the legal principal
universally accepted and applied in democratic societies throughout the world
is that, once the objective element of the crime is proven against the accused
by the prosecution, there is no need to prove the mental element.
Possession of firearms was prescribed as a strict liability
crime by Law Number 4/75 in the Maldives in 1955, with Section 9 of the Law
specifically stating that once a person is found in possession of a firearm,
the onus of proving how it came to be in his possession, so as to avert
criminal liability is upon him.
Even in Singapore if someone is arrested for drug
trafficking, the burden of proof shifts to the defendant, the prosecutor does
not have to prove whether the drugs in the bag are the defendant’s drugs.
Hundreds of persons have been prosecuted under the above-mentioned
law in the Maldives since the year 1955, and judges have uniformly and
consistently held accused individuals guilty upon establishment of the
objective element of the crime by the prosecution, without the need for the
prosecution to prove the mental element. In the case of Colonel Nazim, the
prosecution proved that Colonel Nazim had firearms in his possession, and
though the chance was given, Colonel Nazim and his attorneys were unable to
justify that possession before the court.
It is clear that Colonel Nazim was treated in accord with
the principles relating to strict liability offenses, and that his case was handled
by the judges in the same way cases of strict liability offenses had been
handled by the Maldives Judiciary since 1955. The WGAD has not shown why the
case of Colonel Nazim should be an exception. In fact, the WGAD demand to make
an exception for Colonel Nazim is nothing but a call for the Maldivian
Judiciary to treat people differently and to undermine the law.
Another claim made by WGAD is that the former Defence
Minister Nazim is a political opponent. However, when he was arrested and
charged for possession of fire arms, he was the Defence Minister of President
Yameen’s cabinet, the most trusted position in the Cabinet.
WGAD has requested to visit Maldives to further investigate the case
but the irony is they could have done this before releasing a factually flawed
report.
According to the group the main reason for judicial system
failures in Maldives is because of the sudden and quick change to the new
constitution in 2008. The WGAD ‘s report acknowledges that time, education and
a good management system is required to address the shortcomings of the
Judiciary. There is no role or failures of the current administration in it.
Rather, the failure is mostly on the part of President Nasheed, who did not
bother to enact much needed laws, regulations and increase resources to address
the limitations of the Judiciary’s well-functioning.
The current Supreme Court bench of Maldives consists of
well-educated and capable judges, comparable to the best in Asia region. However,
the government acknowledges that every judge in lower courts may not have a
degree and the government is fully committed in addressing these issues.
Understandably it takes time to train people - the judiciary
cannot be overhauled overnight.
So, the big question is “who is in violation of the law”?
Undoubtedly, WGAD’s attack on the Maldivian Judiciary can be
clearly seen as a fragrant violation of the sovereign rights of an independent
State which is a member of the UNO, in disregard of the UN Charter. The WGAD
has no authority to interfere and intervene in the judicial systems of UN
member states, and to express unfounded opinions on the judgments of the courts
in those states. Independence of the Judiciary is a principle recognized by the
UNO
and attempts by bodies such as WGAD to interfere with decisions of the
courts of Maldives would be considered as nothing but acts of intimidation
against small countries such as Maldives.
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