Asia Report N°277 11 Apr 2016 / International Crisis Group
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
As the Awami League (AL) government’s political rivalry with
the Bangladesh National Party (BNP) reaches new heights, so has its repression.
At the same time, a deeply politicised, dysfunctional criminal justice system
is undermining rather than buttressing the rule of law. Heavy-handed measures
are denting the government’s legitimacy and, by provoking violent
counter-responses, benefitting violent party wings and extremist groups alike.
The government needs to recognise that it is in its interest to change course,
lest it fail to either contain violent extremism or counter political threats.
A key part of a more prudent course would be to depoliticise and strengthen all
aspects of the criminal justice system, including the judiciary, so it can
address the country’s myriad law and order challenges and help stall a
democratic collapse.
The political conflict between the AL and BNP has resulted
in high levels of violence and a brutal state response. The government’s
excesses against political opponents and critics include enforced
disappearances, torture and extra-judicial killings. Police tasked with
targeting the government’s rivals and an overstretched justice system compelled
to prosecute opposition leaders and activists now also face a renewed threat
from violent extremists. The permissive legal environment, however, is creating
opportunities for extremist outfits to regroup, manifested in the killings of
secular bloggers and foreigners and attacks on sectarian and religious
minorities in 2015. The government’s reaction to rising extremism, including
arrest and prosecution of several suspects without due process and
transparency, is fuelling alienation that these groups can further exploit.
Reconciling with the opposition and hence stabilising the
state requires both political compromises and an end to the repressive use of
law enforcement agencies and abuse of the courts. Politicising the police and
using elite forces, particularly the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB), to silence
political dissent, are laying the seeds of future violence. By concentrating on
targeting the opposition, the police are failing to curb criminality; the
prisons are overburdened by the mass arrests of opposition leaders and
activists; and the judiciary, perceived as partisan for trials and sentences
based on political grounds, is losing credibility. The result is a justice
system that swings between two extremes: woefully slow and dysfunctional for
ordinary cases and speedy, undermining due process, in politically charged
ones.
Any effort to reform a dysfunctional criminal justice
system, including by investing in training, equipping and otherwise modernising
the police, prosecution and judiciary, will be insufficient unless it is also
taken out of politics. Years of partisan recruitment, promotions and postings
have polarised these institutions to the point that officials no longer conceal
their allegiances. Partisanship tends to determine the kinds of complaints and
cases that get filed and prioritised and even informs verdicts and sentences.
The problems surrounding delivery of justice are further
compounded by legal mechanisms to silence civil society and prevent media scrutiny
and parallel processes that undermine due process in politically charged cases.
The deeply flawed International Crimes Tribunal (ICT), established in 2010 to
prosecute individuals responsible for atrocities committed during the 1971
liberation war, is an important example of the dangers of using rule of law
institutions for political ends. Perceptions of injustice are creating
opportunities for extremist groups and fuelling political conflict.
The BNP and its Jamaat-e-Islami ally marked the anniversary
of the disputed 2014 elections with indiscriminately violent strikes and
traffic blockades, which were matched brutally by the state. The BNP now
appears less willing to resort to violence to unseat the government; its
decision to re-enter the political mainstream gives the government an
opportunity it should exploit by urgently resuming dialogue with the
opposition. To demonstrate sincerity and as a first step, it should end use of
the rule of law institutions to target opponents and silence critics. Accepting
legitimate avenues of participation and dissent would also help regain some
lost legitimacy and the trust of citizens in the state’s provision of both
justice and security. So long as there is no independent court system to
arbitrate disputes fairly, the parties are likely to continue taking those
disputes to the streets, but a neutral judiciary could help defuse tensions by
upholding fundamental principles and preventing executive excesses. The
international community can help to promote political reconciliation by, in the
U.S. and EU case, using economic levers to pressure Dhaka to respect civil and
political rights, and in New Delhi’s by using close ties to urge the AL to
allow the opposition legitimate political expression and participation. There
is no time to lose. If mainstream dissent remains closed, more and more
government opponents may come to view violence and violent groups as their only
recourse.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To restore political stability and ensure security
To the Government of Bangladesh:
1. Commit to
accepting legitimate political opposition and dissent, including by ending use
of the criminal justice system to target political critics; and respond
positively to the BNP’s decision to refrain from violence and re-enter the
political and constitutional mainstream through participation in the electoral
process by reopening urgently a dialogue to end the destabilising political
stalemate.
To the Opposition:
2. Commit to peaceful
opposition, including by preventing party activists from using violence to
subvert the political order; and sever ties with political allies who use
violence to destabilise the government.
To the Higher Judiciary:
3. Develop consistent
judicial doctrine/interpretation upholding the right to a fair trial and
restraining the executive branch from undermining fundamental constitutional
rights and principles, including actions against civil society institutions
that undermine their ability to function freely.
To respect the constitutional right to free speech and dissent
To the Government of Bangladesh:
4. Withdraw all cases
against journalists, human rights groups and other civil society actors that
are based on vague and dubious grounds, such as expressing views deemed
“derogatory” of public officials or against the “public interest”, and end
press closures and raids on media offices.
5. Withdraw the 2014
national broadcast policy and remove restrictions on online expression in the
Information and Technology Act.
To the Higher Judiciary:
6. Refrain from
issuing contempt of court citations to media and other civil society
representatives for criticising court judgments, and overturn unjustified
contempt convictions in other courts, including the International Crimes
Tribunal.
To ensure due process and end political interference in the justice system
To the Government of Bangladesh:
7. Enforce the
constitutional requirement for an independent judiciary by establishing a more
transparent, consultative appointment process, including consultations with the
bar councils and parliamentary endorsement.
8. Avoid statements
alleging the identity of those responsible for crimes while investigations are
ongoing; and end the practice of presenting suspects to the media, rather than
in court, as required by the constitution.
To the Higher Judiciary:
9. Issue clear orders
against any executive bodies or officials found to be interfering in the
judicial process.
10. Insist on the
need for an adequately resourced and staffed Supreme Court secretariat as
fundamental to achieving judicial independence; provide the necessary resources
to and scrutinise the workings of the lower judiciary; and hold to account
judges who fail to provide a fair trial.
To modernise the criminal justice system
To the Government of Bangladesh:
11. Introduce
amendments to adapt the Code of Criminal Procedure 1898, Evidence Act 1872,
Police Act 1861, Penal Code 1860 and the Jail Code to modern challenges,
including by implementing Bangladesh Law Commission recommendations on
increasing use of technology and forensic and other modern evidentiary standards
in investigations and trials.
12. Professionalise
the police, prosecution agencies and lower judiciary, including by introducing
a merit-based selection and recruitment process, secure tenure and effective
mechanisms to evaluate performance and check political interference.
13. Identify
personnel, training and resource needs particularly for the Police Bureau of
Investigation, while developing specialised investigation units for national-
and district-level policing.
To push for a broader political reform agenda
To the International Community:
14. Link some
development assistance, and in the U.S. case the restoration of the Generalised
System of Preferences (GSP) facility, to demonstrable improvements in human
rights, free speech and association and fair trial.
15. Use, in the case
of India, its close relationship with the AL to urge the government to allow
legitimate avenues of political expression and participation to the opposition.
Brussels, 11 April 2016
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