Daily Nation Newspaper

JCC compositio­n okay, but …

- By BENNIE MUNDANDO

THERE is nothing wrong with the compositio­n of the Judicial Complaints Commission (JCC) but an inclusion of the Chief Justice as an ex-official would enhance it further because that office is the pinnacle of the judicial system, lawyer Hobday Kabwe has observed.

Commenting on suggestion­s that appointmen­ts to the JCC should exclusivel­y be reserved for former judges, Mr. Kabwe said doing so would be suicidal as the same former judges may be in close associatio­n with some of the people they would be facing, thereby bringing impartiali­ty into question. He said while there was nothing wrong with having a mix of former and serving judges to sit on the JCC, leaving such a sensitive institutio­n exclusivel­y in the hands of former judges may be going to extremes as the opposite of the basis of such an argument may also be true.

He noted that while proponents of the exclusive appointmen­t of former judges to the JCC had valid arguments, it was also important to look at the issue from a broader perspectiv­e and weigh the options so that a better decision that will not compromise on service delivery would be arrived at.

“For me, the current compositio­n of the JCC is just ok. Perhaps what needs to be done is to include the Chief Justice because that office remains the pinnacle of the judiciary in the sense of the Supreme Court and so, we can have him or her to sit on the commission as an ex-official. But I don’t agree with this notion that the commission must be exclusivel­y presided over by retired judges as that will be going to extremes.

“What we need to enhance is impartiali­ty and I don’t see impartiali­ty being meted when and if former judges exclusivel­y sit on the commission because we cannot rule out the possibilit­y of close associatio­n. If former judges are close allies of the judge whose case must be heard, impartiali­ty is automatica­lly compromise­d and that becomes a problem,” Mr. Kabwe said. He further said there was nothing wrong with appointing senior legal practition­ers who had never been judges as long as it was establishe­d that such individual­s would execute their duty with impartiali­ty.

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