Perfil (Sabado)

Judicial system ripe for overhaul

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With the government still far from being able to base its campaign on an ailing economy (even with greater stability in the second quarter of this year than in the first), the defence of republican institutio­ns against a populist comeback has frequently been presented as the real choice for voters. While institutio­nal issues always seem abstract when compared to bread-and-butter problems, the opposition has obligingly lent substance to this platform – within hours of his surprise anointment as a presidenti­al candidate late in May, Alberto Fernández was virtually saying out loud that all corruption trials against his new running-mate Cristina Fernández de Kirchner and

most of her cohorts should be scrapped, while in the same direction former Supreme Court justice Eugenio Zaffaroni was urging a drastic reform of the Judiciary which could be interprete­d as being tantamount to its eliminatio­n.

Such proposals are naturally repudiated as being blatantly unconstitu­tional but another prominent plank in the government’s platform might well unwillingl­y lead it to urge judicial reform likewise. Until President Mauricio Macri so unexpected­ly picked Peronist Senator Miguel Angel Pichetto as his running-mate, Security Minister Patricia Bullrich was a frontrunne­r to be his vice-presidenti­al candidate in order to give pride of place to crime-fighting as an effective vote-catcher – while this is not Pichetto’s main function (which lies more in appeal to moderate Peronism and provincial governors), his past statements on this subject with their heavily xenophobic overtones certainly lend themselves to this purpose.

Ye t t h e d a y i s f a s t a p - proaching when law and order politician­s need to graduate beyond rhetoric and stiff penal legislatio­n to serious judicial reform. In the last three decades (perhaps starting in 1990 with the kidnap-murder of Guillermo Ibáñez, son of the trade unionist and later Lower House Majority Leader Diego Ibáñez) there has been a cycle of a crime coming along every few years which provokes so much public indignatio­n that it rouses Congress into a frenzy of stern legislatio­n stiffening punishment. And what happened each time? If and when the criminals are apprehende­d, it takes forever to bring them to trial, a stage which then drags

on endlessly until finally there is a sentence read out in full several weeks later, and then there comes the seemingly endless round of appeals – this is all due to a cumbersome judicial system. Should there be a crime outraging public opinion in these weeks, neither rhetoric nor legislatio­n from a dormant Congress (due both to campaignin­g politician­s and to a government averse to exposing its minority position) might suffice – the government might then feel obliged to embrace the cause of judicial reform for entirely different reasons.

This does not just apply to common crimes either. Looking at the Kirchnerit­e corruption trials, Fernández de Kirchner is widely considered as being spared a faster prosecutio­n in order to sustain a polarisati­on favourable to the government but while her parliament­ary immunity does indeed complicate matters, the fact remains that her trials are not much slower than anybody else’s. Such a blatant corruption case as exofficial José López only received sentence three Junes after he tossed US$9 million over a convent wall. The Jujuy social activist Milagro Sala is widely defended both at home and abroad as a political prisoner but even those who consider her a thug deserving all the punishment coming her way should deplore the fact that well over 40 months since her arrest most of the numerous trials against her have barely started. Police brutality and vigilante justice are both unacceptab­le evils but they risk enjoying more public tolerance if the establishe­d legal system cannot deliver justice.

With one side having a hidden agenda of impunity from corruption while the other views crime-fighting from the standpoint of the police precinct rather than the courtroom, a serious modernisat­ion of the judicial system is an orphan of this campaign but remains an urgent need. Something like the Napoleonic Code, which has stood the test of time over two centuries, would be one model. That took four years to produce – today it might require less time with modern technology or more with the vastly increased complexity of the law – but something on that comprehens­ive scale is needed rather than spasmodic legislativ­e flurries.

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