|
|
Provisional
edition
Allegations of politically-motivated abuses of the
criminal justice system in Council of Europe member
states
Resolution 1685 (2009)1
1. The
Parliamentary Assembly stresses the fundamental importance,
for the rule of law and the protection of individual liberty,
of shielding criminal justice systems throughout Europe from
politically-motivated interferences.
2.
Successful co-operation between member states of the Council
of Europe in the field of criminal justice (in matters such as
extradition and obtaining evidence, as specified in pertinent
conventions of the Council of Europe) depends on mutual trust
in the basic fairness of the criminal justice systems of all
member states and the absence of politically-motivated
abuses.
3. The
independence of the judiciary, in law and practice, is the
principal line of defence against such abuses.
3.1.
The independence of the courts and of each individual
judge is recognised, in principle, in all member states of
the Council of Europe. This should also be reflected in
their constitutions. True independence of judges also
requires a number of legal and practical safeguards,
including:
3.1.1.
recruitment and promotion of judges must be based solely
on merit (qualifications, integrity, ability and
efficiency);
3.1.2.
protection against unfair disciplinary sanctions (in
particular, dismissal) must be effective;
3.1.3.
salaries and allowances must permit judges and their
families not to depend on the provision of housing and
other amenities by executive authorities;
3.1.4.
the independence of judges vis-à-vis court presidents
and judges of superior courts shall be protected, inter
alia, by the allocation of cases on the basis of
predetermined, objective systems, by strict rules
protecting judges from being taken off individual cases
without reasons specifically defined by law and by
ensuring that the assessment of a judge’s performance is
not determined by the ratio of judgments upheld or
quashed by superior courts.
3.2.
Prosecutors must be allowed to perform their tasks without
interference from the political sphere. They must be
shielded from instructions pertaining to individual cases,
at least where such instructions would prevent an
investigation from proceeding to court.
3.3.
In order for the practical safeguards of judicial
independence to be effective, a strong judicial council
could play an important role in supervising the
implementation of judicial independence.
3.3.1.
Judicial councils must have a decisive influence with
respect to the recruitment and promotion of judges and
prosecutors, as well as concerning disciplinary measures
against them, without prejudice to any judicial review
mechanisms required by certain constitutions.
3.3.2.
Elected representatives of judges and prosecutors should
be at least equal in numbers with members representing
other groups of society appointed by political bodies.
The latter members should be representative of all main
political currents in the country. The existing practice
followed by many states of involving parliamentary
committees in the process of appointing certain senior
judges – also followed for the election of judges to the
European Court of Human Rights – is also
acceptable.
3.4.
The division of labour between judges and prosecutors is a
question of national legal traditions. The right balance,
ensuring the best possible protection from
politically-motivated interferences, also depends on the
degree of independence granted to prosecutors as well as
the procedural rights and material resources available to
the defence.
3.4.1.
In countries such as the United Kingdom and Italy, where
prosecutors enjoy a high degree of independence and the
defence has access to the case file and to the suspect
at an early stage, the role of judges may safely be
limited to legal oversight and final
decision-making.
3.4.2.
In countries such as France and Germany, where
prosecutors are more closely tied into their
hierarchies, judges and defence lawyers must be able to
play a more active role also during the investigation.
3.5.
The success of any changes to the system, such as the
planned abolition of the juge d’instruction in
France or the strengthening, in Germany, of the
Bundesanwaltschaft under recent anti-terrorism
laws, depends on maintaining the right balance between
actors enjoying full independence (judges, defence
lawyers) and the prosecution and the police. Such reforms
may require the increase of the independence of the
prosecution so as to safeguard the overall independence of
the criminal justice system and to protect it from
politically-motivated interferences.
4. The
situation in the four countries examined as examples of the
principal types of criminal justice systems in Europe – the
United Kingdom (England and Wales), France, Germany and the
Russian Federation – is characterised by the following
factors:
4.1.
In the United Kingdom:
4.1.1.
the adversarial character of the criminal justice
system, is underpinned by considerable, though recently
dwindling, resources available for legal aid to ensure
equality of arms between the prosecution and the
defence;
4.1.2.
the long-standing culture of independence and
professionalism among judges as well as prosecutors, is
buttressed by their high social status and further
enhanced by the recent establishment of the Judicial
Appointments Commission;
4.1.3.
Government’s traditionally active supervision by
Parliament and by the lively, pluralistic and free media
scene;
4.1.4.
recent cases (including British Aerospace and “Cash for
Honours”) have shown that the role of the Attorney
General needs to be changed and clarified; a reform
proposal to this effect is currently under
discussion.
4.2. In
France and Germany:
4.2.1.
the traditionally inquisitorial criminal justice systems
have taken on more adversarial elements; but in both
countries there has been no commensurate increase of the
resources available for legal aid; in addition, in
France, defence lawyers have not yet obtained the same
degree of access to the suspect and to the pre-trial
investigation as their colleagues in the United Kingdom
and in Germany;
4.2.2.
the independence of judges is respected in law and
practice, but their social status has been allowed to
erode considerably;
4.2.3.
in both countries, the independence of prosecutors is
considerably less developed than in the United Kingdom;
a marked regression in practice has recently been
deplored by senior prosecutors and elected
representatives of judges and prosecutors in France;
4.2.4.
the French Conseil Supérieur de la Magistrature,
which plays an important role in career and disciplinary
matters for judges and, to a lesser extent, for
prosecutors, still does not have an equivalent in
Germany; in France, it was recently decided to double
the number of members appointed by the President of the
Republic and the presidents of the two chambers of
parliament, thus placing elected representatives of
judges and prosecutors in a minority;
4.2.5.
the proposed abolition of the juge d’instruction
in France and the transfer of most of their competences
to the prosecution is widely suspected as being part of
an attempt by the political authorities to increase
their influence on the handling of sensitive cases;
4.2.6.
in both countries, parliaments and independent media
provide fairly solid safeguards against abuses of the
criminal justice system by the executive powers.
4.3.
In the Russian Federation:
4.3.1.
strong improvements in the social status of judges and
prosecutors in recent years have all but eliminated
their dependence on executive bodies for housing and
other basic needs and should help reducing judicial
corruption;
4.3.2.
legislative reforms taking into account European
standards, including the creation of a federal council
of judges in charge of career and disciplinary matters,
have strengthened the status of judges in law;
4.3.3.
the creation of the separate Investigative Committee,
within the Prosecutor General’s Office, may in time
somewhat dilute the overwhelming influence of the latter
over the criminal justice process;
4.3.4.
a number of legislative acts have recently been adopted
strengthening the independence of the judicial system
and protection of defence lawyers from groundless
criminal prosecution : an order for the "lifelong"
appointment of federal judges has been introduced, a
special order for the commencement of criminal
prosecutions in relation to defence lawyers has been
established, and a special judicial body – the
Disciplinary Bar – has been constituted to examine
appeals from judges deprived of their powers;
4.3.5.
the traditionally subservient attitude among many judges
and prosecutors inherited from the past has not yet been
fully overcome; on the contrary, after an encouraging
new beginning in the early 1990s, judges are subjected
to an increasing level of pressure aimed at ensuring
convictions in almost all cases brought to court by the
Prosecutor’s Office;
4.3.6.
the vectors of pressure still include old-style
unofficial methods described as “telephone justice”, but
also official performance evaluation and disciplinary
mechanisms. The number of judges dismissed from their
functions on different grounds is comparatively high.
Court chairpersons have disproportionate power over
individual judges, in particular because of their power
to decide on the distribution of cases. Legal protection
for judges resisting such pressures is very limited, as
the judges’ councils have not yet developed sufficient
independence and standing;
4.3.7.
lawyers are still subjected to searches and seizures and
other forms of pressure in violation of Russian and
European legal provisions;
4.3.8.
a number of high-profile cases, such as the second trial
of M. Khodorkovsky and P. Lebedev, the proceedings
against the managers and lawyers of HSBC/Hermitage, the
investigation into the murder of A. Politkovskaya, the
prosecution of Y. Samodurov and the dismissal of judge
Kudeshkina and several other judges, give rise to
concerns that the fight against “legal nihilism”
launched by President Medvedyev is still far from
won;
4.3.9.
parliament and the media still do not provide sufficient
safeguards against abuses, though some recent, open
debates in certain media give rise to hope for the
future.
5. Noting
that the criminal justice systems of all member states are
exposed to politically-motivated interferences, though to very
different degrees:
5.1.
The Assembly calls on all member states to:
5.1.1.
further strengthen judicial independence and the
equality of arms between the prosecution and the
defence, in particular by providing sufficient resources
to the courts system, including legal aid, by granting
strong procedural rights to defence lawyers, including
during the pre-trial investigation, and by strengthening
judicial self-administration;
5.1.2.
ensure that the instances competent for deciding on
extraditions and other types of judicial co-operation
take into account the degree of independence of the
judiciary in the requesting state – in practice as well
as in law – and refuse extradition whenever there are
reasons to believe that the person concerned is
unlikely, for political reasons, to be given a fair
trial in the requesting state;
5.2.
The Assembly calls on the United Kingdom to:
5.2.1.
complete the reform of the Attorney General’s role
without further delay, strengthening his/her
accountability before Parliament;
5.2.2.
fully implement the Convention against Bribery of the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
including its Article 5;
5.2.3.
reverse the recent erosion of resources available for
legal aid, in order to avoid the development of a
two-tier justice system dependent on the suspect’s
ability to pay for an effective defence;
5.3.
The Assembly calls on France to:
5.3.1.
reconsider the proposed abolition of the juge
d’instruction; in the event of abolition and the
transfer of this institution’s competences to the
prosecution, to strengthen the independence of
prosecutors, and to grant defence lawyers at least the
same access to the pre-trial investigation by the
prosecution, as is presently the case before the juge
d’instruction;
5.3.2.
gradually increase the salaries of judges and
prosecutors to a level commensurate with the dignity and
importance of their office until they reach the average
of all European countries (in comparison with average
earnings of the general population);
5.3.3.
increase the resources available for legal aid
commensurately with the introduction of more adversarial
elements in the criminal justice system;
5.3.4.
consider restoring a majority of judges and prosecutors
within the Conseil Supérieur de la Magistrature
or ensuring that the members appointed by political
bodies also include representatives of opposition forces
and making the Conseil Supérieur de la
Magistrature’s opinion binding also for decisions
concerning prosecutors;
5.4.
The Assembly calls on Germany to:
5.4.1.
consider setting up a system of judicial
self-administration, taking into account the federal
structure of the German judiciary, along the lines of
the judicial councils existing in the vast majority of
European states, as a matter of securing the
independence of the judiciary in future;
5.4.2.
gradually increase the salaries of judges and
prosecutors and to increase the resources available for
legal aid (as recommended for France in paragraphs
5.3.2. and 5.3.3. above);
5.4.3.
abolish the possibility for ministers of justice to give
the prosecution instructions concerning individual
cases;
5.4.4.
strengthen in law and practice the supervision by judges
of the exercise of the prosecutors’ increased powers, in
particular in the fight against terrorism;
5.5.
The Assembly calls on the Russian Federation to:
5.5.1.
strengthen the independence of judges by ensuring that
the evaluation of their performance is not based on the
material content of their judicial decisions;
5.5.2.
increase the independence of the judicial council and
the transparency of its proceedings;
5.5.3.
strengthen the system of allocation of cases among the
courts and to individual judges or sections within the
courts, in such a way as to exclude any “forum shopping”
by the prosecutor’s office and any discretion in this
respect of the court chairpersons;
5.5.4.
promote the development of a spirit of independence and
critical analysis in legal education in general and in
initial and continued training of judges and prosecutors
in particular, and to robustly sanction any local,
republican or federal officials that continue to try to
give instructions to judges, as well as any judges who
seek to obtain such instructions;
5.5.5.
effectively protect defense lawyers from searches and
seizures of documents pertaining to the privileged
lawyer-client relationship and from other forms of
pressure, including abusive prosecutions and
administrative harassment;
5.5.6.
contribute to the development of independence of the
media when investigating and publicising abuses in the
criminal justice system.
6. The
Assembly calls on the European Commission for Democracy
through Law (Venice Commission) and the European Commission
for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ) to continue upholding
the independence of the judiciary throughout Europe and to
speak out in support of colleagues in difficulty and against
any politically-motivated interferences, wherever they may
occur.
7. The
Assembly believes that the Committee of Ministers should
review Council of Europe conventions in the field of legal
co-operation with a view to ensuring that they cannot be
misused for purposes of politically-motivated prosecutions, as
long as comparable standards of judicial independence have not
been reached in law and practice in all member states of the
Council of Europe.
8.
Finally, the Assembly encourages the European Court of Human
Rights to consider giving priority to applications pertaining
to alleged violations of the independence of judges and
politically-motivated abuses of the criminal justice system.
In view of the fundamental importance of independent courts
for the protection of human rights at national level, such a
policy could help stem the flood of applications to the
European Court.
1 Assembly debate on 30
September 2009 (32nd Sitting) (see Doc.
11993, report of the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human
Rights, rapporteur: Mrs Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger, and Doc.12038,
opinion of the Committee on Economic Affairs and Development,
rapporteur: Mr Sasi). Text adopted by the Assembly on
30 September 2009 (32nd Sitting). |
|