Showing posts with label Grubsheet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grubsheet. Show all posts

Saturday, November 06, 2021

X- Post: Justice Denied.

Confidence in the criminal justice system and especially in the independence of the judiciary is the bedrock of any functioning democracy. Yet that confidence is currently being eroded in Fiji by the delay in the convening of the Judicial Services Commission tribunal hearing into the allegation of “misbehaviour” laid against the Solicitor General, Sharvada Sharma, by the Supervisor of Elections, Mohammed Saneem.

The nature of that “misbehaviour” hasn’t been made public and incredibly, even the fact that Saneem is the person who lodged the formal complaint has been withheld and not a single Fijian media organisation has reported it. The Attorney General, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, dodged questions in the parliament about the issue in the September session, at one stage telling Ro Filipe Tuisawau not to believe what “Graham Davis is writing from a little room in Sydney” as the sole source of the story to this day. But it is the truth. And it is scandalous that the information is being kept from the public and that the AG misled the Parliament with his evasiveness.

SG Sharvada Sharma

What has been reported is that the Solicitor General was suspended without pay on Monday, September 20, and escorted from his office after ten years of blemish-free service over the failure of the State’s case brought by Mohammed Saneem to debar the SODELPA MP, Niko Nawaikula, from the parliament for failing to use his birth name in successive elections. That is the extent of the reporting thus far. But Grubsheet understands there was high drama on Level 7 of Suvavou House, with Sharvada Sharma in tears as he was removed from the building and his designated successor, State Solicitor Preetika Prasad, also visibly upset by the enormity of what had happened and the daunting task of assuming the SG’s duties under such dramatic circumstances.

Incredibly, it will be seven weeks tomorrow (Monday Nov 7) since the SG’s suspension and still there is no word on the precise nature of his alleged “misbehaviour”, who brought the charge against him in the Judicial Services Commission, and still no date set by the Chief Justice, Kamal Kumar, for the Tribunal hearing that will determine his fate. The wheels of justice turn slowly – as the old saying goes – yet in this instance, appear to have ground to a halt. There is dismay in legal circles about what has happened to the SG and the potential implications for the holder of any other office of state if Sharvada Sharma can be publicly humiliated, sent home without pay and left to fend for himself, with no knowledge of when the case against him will be heard.

First some background. The Solicitor General is listed as one of the “Independent Judicial and Legal Institutions” in the 2013 Constitution – Fiji’s supreme law – and like other such office holders, can only be removed for an inability to perform his functions or “misbehaviour”, though what constitutes misbehaviour isn’t defined.

In the case of alleged misbehaviour, the Constitution provides for the President, acting on the advice of the Judicial Services Commission, to establish a tribunal consisting of a chairperson and “not less than two other members who hold or have held high judicial office” to investigate and report back to the President on its findings and for those findings to be made public. The Constitution doesn’t stipulate a timeframe for this process, which is why there is no legal imperative to move with any haste. Yet it is clearly a denial of natural justice to suspend anyone from high office without pay and allow the process to drag on.

Grubsheet understand that Sharvada Sharma’s current seven-year contract as SG expires early next year. Is the process of hearing the charge against him being dragged out until his term in office expires and any Tribunal hearing becomes moot? It’s understood that before he was suspended, Sharma was asked to resign. But he did not oblige then, and according to friends, will not oblige now and intends to see the process through.

While the precise nature of Mohammed Saneem’s complaint against the SG hasn’t been made public, it’s understood that it relates to Sharvada Sharma telling the Supervisor of Elections that the grounds on which he was trying to have the courts remove Niko Nawaikula from the Parliament couldn’t be sustained in law. Part of the SG’s job is to represent the State in court in any legal proceedings to which the State is a Party and that includes the Elections Office. As a former Permanent Secretary for Justice, Mohammed Saneem, regards himself as something of a legal expert and indeed has aspirations to be a judge. But were the riding instructions he gave Sharvada Sharma deficient in law to the extent that Sharma refused to argue them before the Chief Justice? We won’t know until the Judicial Services Commission Tribunal delivers its findings. Yet in any event, the State case failed, Justice Kumar ordered the reinstatement of Niko Nawaikula to the Parliament and made unflattering observations about the deficiencies in the state case and of the Supervisor of Elections that enraged the notoriously prickly Saneem. In high dudgeon, Saneem is understood to have gone to the Attorney General, Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum – who was evidently equally aggrieved – and the decision was made that Saneem lodge an official complaint of “misbehaviour” against the SG with the Judicial Services Tribunal.

Aside from the injustice of keeping Sharvada Sharma hanging for the past seven weeks and counting, it is clearly not in the public interest for such an important matter to remain unresolved or for the issue to fester. Without risking a charge of bringing the judiciary into disrepute by criticising the Chief Justice for the delay in convening the Tribunal, it is not an offence to make the general point that confidence in the independence of the judiciary and the position of Chief Justice is paramount in a democracy and any loss of public faith in the credibility of the judiciary is a matter of broad community concern.

Chief Justice Kamal Kumar

Every Fijian is entitled to expect that anyone holding the position of Chief Justice upholds the principle of the independence of that office, and especially from the government of the day. We all look to the current Chief Justice to uphold that principle in the same way that all of his predecessors have done. So the following questions – that arise from information Grubsheet has received – are directed not at the Chief Justice but at the chief law officer of the State, Attorney General Aiyaz Sayed Khaiyum.

1/ Is it true that you have asked the Chief Justice to delay convening the Judicial Services Commission hearing into the allegation of misbehaviour against the Solicitor General?

2/ Is it true – as is widely speculated in senior legal circles – that the Chief Justice has been placed on a three-year contract or any short term contract rather than the tenured position other Chief Justices have had in Fiji to protect their independence?

3/ If indeed the Chief Justice is on a limited contract, what confidence can the Fijian people have that he is in a position to fully discharge his public duty to dispense justice without fear or favour?

These are questions that go to the heart of the credibility of the rule of law in Fiji. There is already considerable public disquiet that the FijiFirst government has severely curtailed the power of Parliament – the ultimate authority in the land – to demand accountability and transparency in the conduct of the nation’s affairs. Even the evasiveness of the Attorney General on the floor of the house in answering questions about the removal of the Solicitor General underlines this lack of accountability. But the credibility of the judiciary and public confidence in the independence of the Chief Justice is at another level of importance altogether. And any threat to that independence constitutes an assault on the rule of law and the very foundation of democracy.

Of course, Grubsheet has no expectation that the AG will answer the aforementioned questions. But he can be sure they will be foremost in the minds of the nation’s lawyers when they gather at the Intercontinental Resort on December 10 for the 23rd Attorney-General’s conference – the annual gabfest that has always been a vanity exercise for Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum. For the past decade, Sharvada Sharma had carriage of organising the event and choosing its speakers and while he will be absent this year, he is bound to hover over the proceedings like Banquo’s ghost. And the questions about the circumstances of his removal will dominate the corridor gossip, given the presence of Mohammed Saneem and the Chief Justice, along with the AG and the cream of Fiji’s legal elite. It’s incongruous enough that the AG would still insist on holding a black-tie dinner in luxurious surroundings this year while presiding over the economy of a beggar nation reeling from the Covid calamity. But he, the CJ and Saneem will come under the intense gaze of hundreds of eyes and raised eyebrows if the Solicitor General’s position isn’t clarified by then.

While he waits for the wheels of justice to turn and the opportunity to answer Mohammed Saneem’s complaint against him, Sharvada Sharma is said by his friends to be in good spirits now that the shock of his removal as dissipated. He retains warm relations with many of those he has worked with over the past decade. He has been financially able to weather the shock of being suspended without pay. He remains convinced that he has done nothing wrong and is determined to clear his name. And he hopes that whatever Tribunal the Chief Justice eventually assembles will give him a fair hearing.

Many observers – Grubsheet included – wonder how someone of the status of the Solicitor General can be removed in the manner he was with so little public comment. Why has the Fijian media been so silent on the issue? Why has the Fiji Law Society not issued a statement requesting an explanation for the delay in announcing a date for the Tribunal hearing? It all underlines yet again the prevailing climate of fear in Fiji under the FijiFirst government and its chief architect, Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, and the importance of the Fijian people using their power in the secrecy of the ballot box next year to bring their punitive and capricious reign to an end.



Friday, January 11, 2013

You Can't Please Everyone- Fiji's Draft Constitution

Jenny Hayward Jones latest post on The Interpreter on Fiji's draft constitution has some valid points, buttressed by conjecture:
This announcement was the culmination of a campaign from the Fiji regime to distance itself from the Commission it had itself established, which begs the question of why the regime bothered with the expense and effort of engaging international expertise, attracting support from donors and seeking the views of the people[...] It is difficult now to see how the Constituent Assembly, even if it has a fair representation, will have a reasonable opportunity to provide independent advice on the new constitution. It seems likely it will be hounded into rubber stamping the regime's new draft, with only a month promised for consideration.
Grubsheet post addressed some of the reservations Jones had penned:
Some, of course, will accuse the Government of disregarding the advice of the constitutional referee it appointed because what he came up with didn’t suit its purposes. Others who appeared before the Commission or lodged submissions will be aggrieved that the views they expressed are being ignored. Yet as the Bainimarama Government sees it, there are sound reasons for it to take the course it has and also to be aggrieved about many of the provisions of the document bequeathed to the nation by Professor Ghai and his fellow Commissioners.

Croz Walsh latest post, further provides salient points and reminds the astute political observer of the ineffable setbacks on Fiji's path:
The road from December 2006 to the promised elections in 2014 was never going to be an easy one. The potholes and patch-overs have proved to be far worse than those on Fiji roads.  And, as with the roads where cyclones, floods and poor workmanship, have often undone the good work, so also in the political scene.  Promising steps forward have too often been followed by too many steps back.
Jones while seemingly concerned about the democracy in Fiji, however- Jones' florid sentiments on Fiji's future democracy are incredibly disingenuous and misleading:
Fiji may end up with a flawed democracy but it wouldn't be the first flawed democracy to participate in international forums and enjoy stable diplomatic relations with the world's powers. Many flawed democracies have improved over time and even though Fiji has a way to go, there has at least been a public discussion about the future, which cannot be undone.
Croz outlined the benevolent policies :
There is far more to the credit of a government that launched the People's Charter that won the support of two-thirds of the adult population, despite opposition from these self-same critics and others in the old political establishment.  I cannot believe that a government that has placed so much emphasis on racial equality, a shared Fijian identity, national unity, and has done so much towards improving the country's physical and institutional infrastructure, not to mention its efforts to assist rural communities and the poor, is merely in power for self-serving purposes.
It is rather reprehensible of Jones, to gloss over the exceedingly greater flaws of preceding democracies in Fiji, in comparison to the existing path mapped out by the current Fiji Government.

Unfortunately, Jones has some disconcerting history of blatantly flippant analysis on Fiji's domestic politics, as highlighted by a 2009 SiFM post:
Interpreter's Melanesia specialist Jenny-Hayward Jones has got it wrong yet again, along with the biased media reports from ABC. Jones' latest posting, unashamedly uses the talking points of the SDL segment, highlighting the 2 pillars of society, warning of imminent danger to the general public if their dual-pronged influence is permanently removed from the landscape of Fiji politics.
Ironically both pillars were also intimately involved with Fiji's 1987 and 2000 coups and it is rather myopic and repulsively selective for Jones to obfuscate that well documented fact.
Radio Australia host Bruce Hill interviews Brij Lal, the academic from Australia National University on retainer, who cynically (as usual) opines on the draft constitution . Unsurprisingly, Bruce Hill's maker's mark of yellow journalism was underscored in the interview, by the routine absence of alternative perspectives in providing balance. Furthermore, Croz Walsh had highlighted in a blog post, the journalistic bias in Bruce Hill. Croz also posted the defense by Radio Australia of Bruce Hill.

 (Interview of Brij Lal /Bruce Hill posted below)


Brij Lal appears to echo his default reaction to any changes to the 1997 constitution, as addressed in a 2009 SiFM post:
Dr. Lal, later questioned the issue about the consultation phase, regarding this new Fiji Constitution. However the ABC host did not bother to challenge Lal's remarks or even bother to compare the present and continuing consultations, to the diluted 1997 version. Neither did ABC offer any other opposing views, apart from their favorite talking heads, in their so called forum.

A surreptitious version of due diligence; that was formed during Lal's celebrated and at times, over-glorified tenure as 'architect' of the 1997 Fiji Constitution. Irregardless of the glaring failures of the 1997 legal document; in the context of racial equality- a crucial issue which Brij Lal has vacillated on repeated occasions.

Video of Fiji President and Prime Minister's joint address on the draft constitution (posted below).


Club Em Designs