And the So-Called ‘Internal Rules’ Bite the Court in the Keister Again
Over years I have said
on numerous fora that the document slapped together by ECCC’s judicial brass
entitled ‘ECCC Internal Rules’ is unlawfully constituted if applied as a law in
and of itself (as opposed to, let’s say, an aide memoire of sorts). This has
had very little, if any, effect on the Court who has pigheadedly continued to
do precisely that. It is not clear which part of ‘you are not a legislator and
this is not a common law country’ the judges have had trouble understanding all
this time. Whatever it might be, the ECCC judges have gone even far beyond the
ambit of authority common law judges have vested themselves with (this is
precisely what happened to US courts – Congress never meant for them to have
the authority they gave themselves through Marbury v Madison): common
law judges routinely constrain themselves to making law where the legislature
hasn’t and striking down laws, in whole or in part, on failing the
constitutional muster. The ECCC judges went far beyond that: they legislated on
matters the legislature has spoken about in a clear manner that does not lend
itself to much interpretation. This scope of judicial authority would be scandalous
at common law but it is an absolute outrage in the context of the Cambodian
law, the very law that governs the proceedings before ECCC.
This time the Internal
Rules were pitted against a clear-cut provision of the Cambodian Criminal
Procedure Code (‘CPC’). The incident goes something like this: the defense moved
to have the judges of the Trial Chamber who heard Case 002/01 disqualified from
sitting on Case 002/02 using a CPC provision for disqualification; the defense
demanded that the judges against whom a motion to disqualify was filed immediately
recuse themselves, arguing that immediate recusal is required by law in these
circumstances; the Trial Chamber refused to apply said provision of the CPC
without reasoning, instead basing its position on the Internal Rules and its
own prior decision that said that immediate recusal is not required by law; the
defense boycotted the proceedings in protest; the Trial Chamber engaged in
arm-twisting to get its way, acting as if fighting fire with fire.
Article 559 of the CPC,
inter alia, states the following: “[t]he application [for disqualification]
shall be notified to the judge against whom it is made [;] [t]his judge shall
cease to participate in the investigation or trial.” CPC outlines the rest of
the disqualification procedure following this provision thus making it clear
that said procedure is effected following the suspension of the judge against
whom a motion to disqualify has been filed. As such, the CPC is clear on the
matter: judges are subject to immediate recusal on the mere fact of a motion to
disqualify. The defense got it right, so where is the beef? Well, legally
speaking, there isn’t any but, politically speaking, the Trial Chamber judges
do not want to hold on to the Internal Rules they concocted by substituting
legislature for themselves and they do not want any possibility of being
disqualified as this – unlike it is in ordinary courts – is likely to signal
the end of their tenure on this Court and the judges simply won’t let this ‘grave
injustice’ of a possibility of a rule of law applying happen. The clarity of
the CPC, however, makes it irrelevant what the Internal Rules say or what the
Trial Chamber said on the matter before as whatever else these judicial
pronouncements may or may not be they are not what the CPC is – they are not
law. Therefore, what the Trial Chamber judges are doing is attempting to
substitute the non-law that works best for the judges for the law made through
the constitutionally prescribed democratic choice.
The garbage of the ilk
of the Internal Rules and prior judicial decisions that keeps coming out of the
Court is outrageous and is deleterious to the already squalid state of rule of
law in Cambodia.
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