Stabroek News

Submission of Guyana Bar Associatio­n not reflected in Anti- Terrorism and Terrorist-Related Activities Bill 2015

-

A Happy New Year to the readers of the column. As the Bar Associatio­n looks towards 2016 we hope that this Column will be published with greater frequency and reliabilit­y. We do anticipate an interestin­g and active year and hope through this Column to share informatio­n and ideas not only with the members of the legal profession but with the public as well.

In today’s column we share the submission the Bar Associatio­n made to the Attorney General on the

In fact this is one of three Bills on which the Bar Associatio­n made submission­s – the other two being the Coroners (Amendment) Bill and the Law Reform Commission Bill 2015. The second reading of the last two Bills was deferred at the request of the Attorney General.

This part is titled Offences and includes eighteen clauses. The GBA in its submission noted that clause 3 (1) (a) requires a mandatory death penalty where the offence has resulted in the death of a person.

The view of the Bar Associatio­n is that this clause may violate the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. Although it may still be considered that the death penalty is not per se a violation of internatio­nal law, research suggests that internatio­nal standards and practices are in fact moving in that direction.

Clauses 4 – 20 are all various forms of offences and each of them carries a minimum sentence. The Bar Associatio­n expressed in its submission its opinion that the provision of minimum sentences of ten/fifteen years violates the separation of powers principle whereby the Legislatur­e is seeking to restrict the discretion of the High Court. The GBA pointed out in its submission that the Trinidad & Tobago Act does not contain any minimum penalty.

Part 111 which runs from clause 21 to 32 deals with offences endangerin­g maritime navigation and terrorist bombing; those relating to radioactiv­e material and nuclear facilities; those based on the status of the victims and offences related to civil aviation.

Clause 33 allows any police officer to apply through the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns (DPP) ex parte to a Judge in Chambers for a detention order. Constituti­onal issues which arise would include: The right to be heard; Right to retain and instruct counsel without delay (Article 139 (3);

Right to personal liberty except on narrowly defined grounds; and

Article 187 providing for the independen­ce of the DPP.

Clause 36 - Investigat­ion is interestin­g in that it requires the Minister to have some knowledge, informatio­n and belief about the intention of the DPP while clause 37 deals with the applicabil­ity of internatio­nal law in the treatment of persons against whom proceeding­s are taken. The Bar Associatio­n considers that it would have been useful to recognise the rights guaranteed under the Constituti­on of Guyana.

Clause 58 empowers the President, where he thinks it is expedient to do so, to declare any article of the UN Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop­ic Substances 1988 ( the Vienna Convention, the Internatio­nal Convention for the Suppressio­n of the Financing of Terrorism and the Internatio­nal Convention against Organised Crime and the Protocols Thereto 2004 (the Palermo Convention) other than those specified under clause 58 to have the force of law in Guyana.

The Guyana Bar Associatio­n submits that this attempt by the National Assembly to delegate to the President its law making powers conferred under Article 65 of the Constituti­on of Guyana is ultra vires, and any such Order would be null and void.

Unfortunat­ely none of the submission­s of the Bar Associatio­n has been reflected in the Bill that was passed and which becomes law on receiving presidenti­al assent. The Bar Associatio­n will however continue to engage the Ministry of Legal Affairs to advance its positions.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana