Editor’s Word: That is the fifth put up of the CILJ Symposium on ‘Human Rights in Disaster: The July Revolution in Bangladesh.’
July Revolution and Entry to Justice
Between 1 July and 5 August 2024, Bangladesh went via a human rights disaster interval, together with vital obstacles to entry to justice. The July Revolution began with a Excessive Courtroom order in Ohidul Islam and Others v The Authorities of Bangladesh and Others to reinstate the general public service employment quota to 56%, which was finally restricted by the Supreme Courtroom to 7%. Nonetheless, the student-led anti-discrimination quota protest escalated right into a nationwide rebellion within the meantime because of a violent crackdown to suppress protesting college students. In keeping with the United Nations Workplace of the Excessive Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) fact-finding Report, ‘neither prosecutorial authorities nor the judiciary took any significant motion to curb acts and practices of arbitrary detention and torture, or to make sure that any officers perpetrating such acts have been held accountable.’ The report additional documented that no bail software was allowed because of the administration’s intervention, which additional curtailed entry to justice. Entry to justice has additionally been denied by different extended elements, such because the case backlog and lack of judges, and up to date points like not presenting arrested people earlier than the courtroom (para 71)inside due time. Thus, the administration performs a big function in denying the suitable to entry to justice.
Authorized Foundations for Entry to Justice and Judicial Independence
The proper to a good trial is on the coronary heart of human rights, and is important for entry to justice–a basic precept of worldwide human rights legislation. Article 9 of the Worldwide Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) states that ‘anybody who’s disadvantaged of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings earlier than a courtroom.’ As well as, Article 14 of the ICCPR establishes the common proper to a good trial earlier than an impartial and neutral tribunal, whereby it’s a non-derogable proper. Article 14 requires ‘securing entry to justice and the supply of minimal requirements of justice’. Bangladesh ratified ICCPR in 2000 with none reservations. Furthermore, the primary and second ideas of the UN Primary Ideas on the Independence of the Judiciary emphasise, respectively, that the judiciary should be free from political affect and that judges should act impartially, with none type of exterior interference. The European Courtroom of Human Rights, in Findlay v The UK, highlighted the significance of judicial independence by ruling {that a} tribunal missing independence and impartiality violated the suitable to a good trial.
The Structure of Bangladesh lays down additional basic safeguards for the judicial system. Article 22 mandates separation of the judiciary from the manager, Article 27 ensures equality earlier than the legislation, Article 31protects towards arbitrary deprivation of life and liberty, and Article 35 ensures a speedy, public trial by an neutral tribunal and safety from torture and inhumane remedy. Whereas Article 22 is positioned inside Half II of the Structure–Basic Ideas of State Coverage (‘Basic Ideas’), the remainder of the Articles are basic rights (Half III) of each Bangladeshi citizen. The distinction between these two components has been clarified in Article 8(2) because the Basic Ideas ‘shall not be judicially enforceable.’ Nonetheless, the landmark resolution in Masdar Hossain v Bangladesh affirmed judicial independence, requiring government non-interference. Part 24 of the Proof Act (1872) additional safeguards this proper by making confessions obtained via coercion, risk, or inducement inadmissible in courtroom, thereby strengthening the justice system. Moreover, the Torture and Custodial Demise (Prohibition) Act (2013) gave impact to Bangladesh’s obligations underneath the Conference In opposition to Torture and Different Merciless, Inhuman or Degrading Remedy or Punishment (CAT) by criminalising torture and custodial deaths and demanding immediate investigation, trial and sufferer compensation. These legal guidelines strengthen entry to justice and judicial independence by mandating neutral investigations, time-bound trials and authorized treatments towards abuse by state actors. Nonetheless, these measures largely stay ineffective.
Equity on Trial: The Battle for Justice Amid the July Revolution
Through the July Revolution, this government prohibition on the judiciary reached its peak. 1000’s of individuals have been arbitrarily arrested (para 71) for collaborating within the protests. Though Article 33 of the Structure requires that any individual arrested or detained should be introduced earlier than the closest Justice of the Peace inside twenty-four hours of the arrest, the OHCHR report discovered that many arrested protestors weren’t introduced earlier than the Courtroom throughout the given time. The truth is, ‘not one of the victims of arbitrary arrest interviewed by OHCHR have been knowledgeable about costs directly or have been served an arrest warrant (para 159),’ and ‘solely a minority have been introduced earlier than a choose inside 24 hours (para 159).’ For instance, one of many pupil leaders of the protest, Arif Sohail, was detained, however ‘his whereabouts remained unknown for almost 36 hours.’ Equally, Amnesty Worldwide documented the taking of the six pupil coordinators into custody, which was later phrased as for his or her ‘security.’ However, they have been compelled to declare an finish to the motion. These coercive actions by the manager severely affected folks’s proper to a good trial.
False costs have been one other aspect of proscribing a good trial. In Dhaka, there have been 200,000 unnamed folks accused throughout the protest. This leaves room for the legislation enforcement companies to place anybody’s title as they want, particularly framing politically motivated instances–a typical follow that has lengthy saved the judiciary underneath the shadow of the manager. The OHCHR report discovered that not a single choose rejected remand requests for detainees, despite the fact that many of those purposes have been based mostly on mass instances naming dozens of people, each recognized and unidentified, with out credible proof linking them to any prison exercise (para 159). As well as, the members arrested by legislation enforcement and brought to courtroom was denied bail and jailed. Even a 17-year-old boy was remanded throughout this ‘no bail’ directive by the executives. In contrast, almost 5,000 people have been granted bail by judges and magistrates within the subordinate judiciary following the downfall of the earlier authorities, signalling a sudden and welcome assertion of judicial independence within the absence of government intervention.
Judiciary-Govt Dynamics and the Battle for Judicial Independence
The July Revolution didn’t result in Bangladesh’s rule-of-law disaster; it uncovered how many years of government encroachment had hollowed out the courts simply when society most urgently wanted them. Whereas the Structure of Bangladesh ostensibly offers a strong framework for the separation of powers, the sensible actuality is much extra compromised. The judiciary, removed from being an impartial department, has traditionally confronted systemic encroachment by the manager–a problem that lengthy persists earlier than the July Revolution however grew to become significantly pronounced throughout and after it.
One of the vital putting manifestations of government dominance was the enactment of the Sixteenth Modification (2014), which empowered the Parliament to take away Supreme Courtroom judges. Though this modification was later declared unconstitutional in Authorities of Bangladesh and others v Advocate Asaduzzaman Siddiqui and others, the very try and legislate such a sweeping energy shift demonstrated a danger of eroding judicial independence. Past this, judicial appointments to the upper courts have lengthy been decided by the manager, making a tradition of dependency and political loyalty. The processes of recruitment, promotion, switch, and sanction of judges additionally stay closely influenced by the manager, undermining any claims of impartiality or institutional autonomy. Subsequently, the specter of ‘casual elimination’, akin to withholding promotions, transfers and housing, persevered, which consequently compelled the rubber-stamping of 1000’s of unnamed instances.
Underneath Article 95 of the Structure, Supreme Courtroom judges ‘shall be appointed by the President,’ however Article 48(3) requires the President to behave on the recommendation of the Prime Minister. In impact, judicial appointments stay executive-controlled. Through the quota protest, the Legislation Ministry relied on this dependency, instructing officers (para 159) to disclaim bail and permit police remand. These July-specific info replicate the underlying danger that when the identical organ that instructions the police additionally controls the judiciary, courts could convert constitutional rights into discretionary privileges. The true disaster, due to this fact, is structural fairly than episodic, and any sustainable answer should sort out appointments, self-discipline and financing in a single bundle.
These erosions of checks and balances are acutely mirrored within the disruption of the constitutional equilibrium among the many three branches of presidency. When the manager department assumes the roles preserved for different branches, the very cloth of democratic governance begins to fray, and judicial independence is disrupted. In keeping with the International State of Democracy 2023 report, Bangladesh ranked 134th for ‘rights’ and one hundred and thirty fifth for ‘rule of legislation’. These metrics replicate not simply theoretical considerations, however the lived experiences of residents more and more excluded from authorized protections.
Bangladesh’s judiciary has been strategically co-opted underneath successive regimes, significantly throughout the tenure of the previous authorities. As detailed by the Worldwide Human Rights Fee, one tactic concerned populating senior judicial and quasi-judicial roles with people loyal to the ruling regime, thereby entrenching cronyism on the expense of benefit and competence. Such a manipulated judiciary not solely diminishes public confidence within the judiciary but in addition weakens the general legitimacy of democratic establishments.
The result’s that the judiciary was perceived not as an impartial guarantor of justice however as an arm of the ruling authorities. Public frustration with these failures contributed to the groundswell of resistance that culminated within the July Revolution. Many seen the denial of authorized treatments and politicised judicial choices as signs of a broader authoritarian shift. In mild of this, the July Revolution was not merely a political upheaval. Quite, it was a requirement for institutional integrity and real rule of legislation.
Publish-July Judicial Reforms: Foundations for Democratic Renewal in Bangladesh
To rebuild a functioning democracy in Bangladesh, justice for previous abuses should be central to nationwide reconciliation and institutional reform. The July Revolution, which noticed mass protests towards authoritarian practices and the erosion of democratic establishments, uncovered the judiciary’s restricted capability to function an efficient verify on government energy. In response, the Interim Authorities has constituted aJudicial Reform Fee to look at and deal with the structural and useful deficits throughout the judicial system. Nonetheless, for these efforts to be credible and transformative, judicial reforms should transcend beauty adjustments.
According to this, the Interim Authorities has already launched the Supreme Judicial Appointment Ordinance (2025), establishing an impartial council accountable for appointing judges to the Supreme Courtroom. It’s argued that the perform of the council ought to prolong to the self-discipline of the judges. Furthermore, reforms ought to guarantee appointment of judges within the subordinate judiciary based mostly on meritocracy, strengthen entry to justice via modernised courtroom administration, cut back case backlogs by introducing various dispute decision mechanisms, and broaden authorized help providers, significantly for marginalised populations. Moreover, in an effort to be absolutely impartial for delivering justice, the monetary autonomy of the judiciary (at the moment managed by the executives) can be essential.
In the end, judicial independence just isn’t merely a authorized or institutional perfect–it’s foundational for shielding human rights, resolving political conflicts peacefully, and upholding the rule of legislation in occasions of disaster. With out a genuinely impartial judiciary, the prospects for democratic consolidation in Bangladesh will stay fragile.
Dr Masrur Salekin is a Hardiman Analysis Scholar and holds a PhD in Collaborative Constitutionalism, Judicial Professional-Activism and Environmental Justice from the College of Galway, Eire. He’s additionally a Chevening Scholar and accomplished an LL.M in Worldwide Legislation and Improvement from the College of Nottingham, UK.


















