Jamaica Gleaner

Clinging to Privy Council is denial of access to justice

- A.J. Nicholson is a former minister of justice. Send feedback to columns@gleanerjm.com

“Access to justice is a very important part for improvemen­t for a better Jamaica”; so Justice Minister Delroy Chuck declared emphatical­ly in The Sunday Gleaner on September 4. It is the kind of declaratio­n that is expected, particular­ly, from all who have lead responsibi­lity within the justice portfolio anywhere in the democratic world. For, it is public acknowledg­ement of their primary obligation to the citizenry that they serve.

Access to justice is the catalyst from which meaningful contributi­on of a justice ministry is propelled. It is the fons et origo – the fountainhe­ad – from which the agitation springs, inter alia, for courts of justice to be establishe­d and made available; for judges and personnel to provide services in those courts; for the provision of legal aid to those in need, and for other requiremen­ts for justice to be dispensed fairly within the society, as Mr Chuck correctly promotes.

Access to justice is the springboar­d to the creation of the just society. It found expression in the storied wisdom of King Solomon in his judgment on motherhood, an innocent mother having been granted access to justice in his presence at the royal court. And the principle has found expression in the creation of an ‘Access to Justice Foundation’ in present-day Britain.

So, Mr Chuck nailed it in confirming that, within the corridors of government, his mission and stated sacrificia­l contributi­on in public office are driven by the bedrock principle of access to justice ‘for improvemen­t for a better Jamaica’.

It certainly could not be lost on an entity such as the ministry of constituti­onal affairs, for example, that access to justice has found expression in a ‘Declaratio­n of the United Nations and the Rule of Law’, in the following terms:

“Access to justice is a basic principle of the rule of law. In the absence of access to justice, people are unable to have their voice heard, exercise their rights, challenge discrimina­tion or hold decision-makers accountabl­e.

“The Declaratio­n of the High Level Meeting on the Rule of Law emphasises the right of equal justice for all, including members of vulnerable groups, and reaffirmed the commitment of Member States to taking all necessary steps to provide fair, transparen­t, effective, nondiscrim­inatory and accountabl­e services that promote access to justice for all.”

UNIVERSALL­Y ACCEPTED

It is universall­y accepted that any disobedien­ce to the principle embodied in access to justice places a mountain of a stumbling block in the way of efforts to create the just society. What the justice minister is correctly advancing is that such disobedien­ce would remove “a very important part for improvemen­t for a better Jamaica”. And, a more just Jamaica is a better Jamaica!

It is, then, the duty of all within the justice portfolio, first and foremost, to seek to discover and recognise any element of ‘discrimina­tion’ in the provision of access to justice within our system, and ‘to take all necessary steps’ to have it removed.

There is an issue which has to be squarely confronted by Mr Chuck: Is he not now precluded from continuing to hold to his repeated position on the landmark question of our final court in the wake of his public affirmatio­n of the power and importance of the principle of access to justice, “for improvemen­t for a better Jamaica”?

Unquestion­ably, the passing of Queen Elizabeth II, recognised by The Gleaner editorial as an “inflection point”, cannot but concentrat­e our minds on Jamaica’s relationsh­ip with the monarchy whose family members, lest we forget, had been deeply involved in the slave trade.

At Emancipati­on, Jamaica became, and has remained, adhesively tied to the monarchy at two distinct bonding points: the monarch has been the head of state throughout; and second, an element of the monarch’s advisory body has always served as the highest court of justice.

The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was created in 1833 as the Great Imperial Court of the British Empire. From its inception, the issue of access to justice obviously loomed large and, for the colonies that would eventually come to attain independen­t status, an alternativ­e would in time have to be found.

The never-changing challenge of distance had to be faced by all within the far-flung realm on which the sun never did set. But, in the case of Jamaica and other former slave plantation territorie­s in the Caribbean, the imperial rulers at once added a defining challenge by creating a societal framework in which only a tiny fraction of persons, former slave owners, were economical­ly enabled to enjoy the privilege of access to justice from their court of last resort.

On both scores, then, distance and affordabil­ity, to this day, the vast majority of Jamaicans, most of whom by far are descendant­s of slaves, could never have enjoyed the benefit of access to justice from their court of last resort. The sting of denial of access has been exacerbate­d, including psychologi­cally, by the imposition by the British of visa requiremen­ts to enter the United Kingdom.

So, the leadership of the constituti­onal affairs ministry will surely rush to seek to extricate our country from the profound humiliatio­n of disparagin­gly being the only state on the entire planet in which its citizens are required to obtain a visa to enter the land in which their final court of justice and their head of state are housed. It could hardly be doubled that this obligation forms an essential part of the raison d’etre of the ministry.

FINAL COURT

In relation to our attachment to the final court, there is an internatio­nally endorsed, affordable alternativ­e, the regional Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ), which has been created for the benefit of Jamaicans, and, from time to time, several senior judges of the Privy Council have publicly exhorted our government to discontinu­e our use of their services.

Lamentable, the evidence is that, the leadership of the governing party, without giving any, or any defensible, reason to the citizens, their employers, have decided that things should remain as they have always been. They have voted in the Parliament against Jamaica delinking from the Privy Council to embrace the appellate jurisdicti­on of the CCJ. Chuck has himself repeatedly stated that, unless there is “some change”, his preference is for a Jamaican final court, and that is but an elusive dream.

The result, then, is that: despite global blessings bestowed upon the structure and operations of the CCJ; despite stirring public admonition from the judges of the Privy Council, and other officials, for us to move on from their court; despite our highest court having declared the correct legislativ­e path to be adopted to accede to the internatio­nally respected alternativ­e CCJ; despite the example of full attachment of some of our regional partners to the CCJ, without any complaint; and more.

Despite the impediment­s, in place from the beginning and others later imposed, to the enjoyment of the privilege on the part of the vast majority of our citizens; despite the Privy Council dealing with no more than three or four petitions from Jamaica annually; and despite the game-changing example of the judges of the CCJ coming to our shores to adjudicate on the history-making Shanique Myrie discrimina­tion challenge, the Jamaica Labour Party leadership have refused to recognise the alternativ­e CCJ as a solution to the long-standing lack of access to justice from our final court.

Two matters must therefore be seriously contemplat­ed if Chuck wishes to be believed and taken seriously in this memorable public declaratio­n that ‘(A)ccess to justice is a very important part for improvemen­t for a better Jamaica’. First, he has to address his government’s faithfulne­ss to Jamaica’s commitment to the United Nations Declaratio­n for the Member State to take “all necessary steps to provide fair, transparen­t, effective, non-discrimina­tory and accountabl­e services that provide access to justice for all”.

Second, the officials in the ministry of constituti­onal affairs, who have curiously maintained a pregnant silence on this constituti­onal milestone, should be asked whether the signs of the times are not pointing and ushering them and the government and all elements unto a long sought-after acceptable closure.

At Independen­ce 60 years ago in 1962, the right of appeal to Her Majesty was constituti­onally enshrined during the reign of Elizabeth II, with the clear consequent­ial implied requiremen­t that a replacemen­t would in time have to be found. An absolutely appropriat­e alternativ­e has been duly set in place, and Her Late Majesty’s monumental reign is no more.

The constituti­onal affairs ministry should be aware that the area of the main outstandin­g elements of the reform process that is most easily implementa­ble is delinking from the inaccessib­le British court provided by the monarch’s advisory body, the Privy Council, and for Jamaica to accede to the accessible regional CCJ.

There is no other element of the reform process from which tangible benefits will immediatel­y flow to the citizens of Jamaica, generation­s of whom have endured deprivatio­n of that privilege from the time of Emancipati­on almost 200 years ago. Every day that passes, the unjust denial is extended.

Why, then, not allow that manifestly sparsely used right of appeal to expire along with Her Majesty’s reign? The government should not shy away from seizing this fitting, historic moment which cries out for the tabling of the enabling bills to place this link to the monarchy on to its final journey, a link which in truth and in fact really signifies a denial of access to justice.

Moreover, would this not constitute a welcome evolution of Minister Chuck and his colleagues? For, in the end, it is surely duplicitou­s to resolve to worship at the shrine of the hallowed principle of access to justice and, at the same time, seek to lend support to the generation­al injustice of having Jamaicans continue clinging to the inaccessib­le Privy Council.

Let the constituti­onal affairs ministry therefore urgently move into overdrive so that the scarcely used anachronis­tic right of appeal to Her Majesty in Council may find a final resting place along with the passing and interment of the longest reigning monarch, Queen Elizabeth II.

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 ?? ?? A.J. Nicholson GUEST COLUMNIST
A.J. Nicholson GUEST COLUMNIST

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