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Thursday, 4 May 2017

Spasmo Proxyvon Plus, Justice and Rule of Law

This Article was published as Opinion on The Bhutanese on 29 April 2017 
The whole Bhutanese Criminal justice system rest’s on the Article 7(16) “a person charged with penal offence has right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty in accordance with the provisions of the law”.
This means, any person charged for
penal offence can only be convicted if found guilty as per the provisions of the law. Therefore, law enforcement or the judiciary is impliedly prohibited from convicting any person, if there is no law prescribing that as penal offence.
Further, even if there is a law, the state (Prosecutor/Office of the Attorney General) must prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused committed the offence in the law as provided under Section 204 of the Civil and Procedure Code. In nutshell, if something is not an offence, then any kind of criminal proceedings against that person would cause gross miscarriage of justice. This Article is supplemented by inherent judicial principles on the benefit of doubt. The principle of benefit of doubt is fundamental in criminal jurisprudence and the accused is entitled to benefit of any reasonable doubt. This means if there is any ambiguity in law or evidence, the accused gets the benefit.
The recent news about numerous cases where a person is accused of an offence of  abuse, possession, illicit trafficking of a drug known as  spasmo proxyvon plus being prosecuted under Section 139 of the Narcotic Drugs, Psychotropic Substance and Substance Abuse Act 2015 (NDPSSA Act 2015) pending in the court for numerous months is something of a concern. If true, the law enforcement agencies or courts have failed to protect the rights of those accused as most of them have languished their lives in detention centers not only due to the loophole in law but because of failure of agencies and the prosecutor’s inability to provide concrete answer to the courts. The problem emerged not few a months ago but a long time back.
The existing law is not only clear but also very specific by providing the exact list of drugs as controlled substance.  By examining the Section 139 of the Act, it makes an offence of trafficking of narcotic drugs or psychotropic substance only if a person is found in possession, importing, exporting, storing, selling, purchasing, distributing or supplying these drugs. The offence would have been committed only if the accused fulfills the either of the two conditions provided under Section 139(1) or (2) and not otherwise merely for the possession of the controlled substance. Section 139 (1) says the substance must be listed under Schedules I and II and 139(2) says the substance must be listed under Schedules III and IV. Thus, it is the duty of the prosecutor to prove beyond doubt that the accused have committed the offence under this section. Going by the current reports, the substance in question does not seem to fulfill the conditions and any criminal proceedings against them would not sustain at all as there is no locus standi (Legal Standing).
Therefore, whether it is named spasmo proxyvon or spasmo proxyvon plus or some other brand name, so long as it is not listed in the schedules, it would not amount to offence under this law.  The justification as provided in the reports that alleged drugs have same or more effect on the person or it is presumed to be listed in the schedule does not provide any discretionary authority to initiate criminal proceedings nor the courts to pass judgments convicting the accused, no matter how it has impacted in the society, as the law explicitly lists down the controlled substances in detail.
The only way to initiate criminal proceedings is by including this drug in the schedules of the law by parliamentary act and not otherwise. The custodian of the law, Bhutan Narcotic Control Authority can no longer act complacent by keeping the accused in detention for indefinite period or the courts cannot halt the decision only because there is a loophole from the responsible agencies.
However, there are no information that the concerned agency proposed for amendment which proves the complacency of those responsible and so they should be held accountable if the evidence proves that the substance does not fall within schedules for the arbitrary arrest and detention, deprivation of their liberty, mental trauma, economic and financial loss and sufferings of his or her family. They should be held accountable to compensate the accused as per Section 212 of the Civil and Criminal Procedure Code Amendment Act 2011 in case the substance is not on the list after the confirmatory test.
Courts in the country as custodian of the rule of law and Justice for all should not have admitted any such case or kept the decision pending only because BNCA failed to provide clear and accurate evidence before the court.
If the judiciary would have passed judgment and convicted any person only because it is causing inconvenience to the state or this drug has similar effect on the humans, it would only deprive the liberty, right to presume innocence and benefit of doubt and lead to miscarriage of justice.  Therefore, for just and equal society in a democracy, rule of law must prevail. It is far better that ten guilty men go free than one innocent man is wrongfully convicted.
By sonam tshering
The writer is a lawyer based in Thimphu

Spasmo Proxyvon Plus, Justice and Rule of Law

This Article was published as Opinion on The Bhutanese on 29 April 2017 
The whole Bhutanese Criminal justice system rest’s on the Article 7(16) “a person charged with penal offence has right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty in accordance with the provisions of the law”.
This means, any person charged for

Monday, 1 May 2017

Lawyering for a good cause

Many have the perception that lawyer means arguing and always with books of law and legal jargon. During the last three days, we proved that lawyers are in deed a great enterprising and above all a Bhutanese at heart, the heart and soul of compassion and charity. The team was further blended with various great human qualities of JSW School of Law led by our ever humble,
yet smart and intelligent Dean.
Without a single day break, the last three days, the fundraising event organised by Tarayana Foundation, the JSW School of Law team coordinated by young, amateur and dynamic leader Kesang and her team just did a fantastic generating a good amount for our rural people.
Our team using the advantage of legal arguments, converted thier directions in our stall, changed their minds to spend more so that we generate as much as we could, because it is for a good cause.
As days passed, our tiredness grew into strengths and passions to work harder, our hunger manifested into hungers of convincing more already belly packed guest to still try at our stall.
Our discipline of being lawyer translated into gentle gesture of inviting our guests into our stalls and thanked them to visit us again into be next two days.
Our Jumble sells sold more than what we could imagine. The other team members bearing various other qualities such as management, reception blender completely with out legal jargons and we immersed to form a strong, small and remarkably convincing and fun loving team. Our three windy day with dust and cold from the river went like minutes, ever losing our motivation to work more hours and  generate more. The going home of dusk seemed like dawn as if we didn't mind working for more hours and waking up early during weekends and sacrificing our cause seems more enjoyable than we would have stayed in our own room.

Lawyering for a good cause

Many have the perception that lawyer means arguing and always with books of law and legal jargon. During the last three days, we proved that lawyers are in deed a great enterprising and above all a Bhutanese at heart, the heart and soul of compassion and charity. The team was further blended with various great human qualities of JSW School of Law led by our ever humble,

Friday, 21 April 2017

The war between the two constitutional bodies: Whether constitutional or not

The interesting war between the two constitutional bodies on constitutionality of their functions are worth to be examined as lawyers in the country.

My basic analysis is that OAG's argument that the Article 29(5)  of the Constitution which states that " The Attorney General shall have the power to institute, initiate, or withdraw any case in accordance with the law" gives power to OAG for this purpose as only provided under the law. Thus, OAG's very power of institution of suit relies on the law made by the parliament  which basically means it is an exceptional clause to the power of the OAG. This means, this Article seems to me that instead of empowering the OAG, the Article limits the power of OAG since it states that OAG can only prosecute in accordance with the laws made by the parliament. This also means, that if parliament decides to empower other agencies in prosecution, it can do so, as long as there is law made by the parliament.

Another interesting thing is that in fact for me, Section 128(2) which states "The Office of the Attorney General shall undertake
prosecution of persons on the basis of the findings
of the Commission for adjudication by a Court." makes the OAG to prosecute mandatory once the ACC sends the findings to the OAG  which means OAG does not seem have the choice to reject or refuse prosecution. The subsequent sub-section 128(3) which states "(3) Notwithstanding subsection (2), the Commission may carry out its own prosecution of a person
charged with an offence under this Act or take over
the prosecution process from the Office of Attorney
General when the case is:
  (a) Delayed without a valid reason;
(b) Manipulated; or
(c) Hampered by interference"

Thus,this section further reduces OAG's power by empowering the ACC to prosecute on any of the three grounds.
Further Section 16 of OAG Act 2015 states that "16. The Office shall prosecute criminal cases in accordance
with the provisions of this Act when referred to it by any
agency of the Government under the relevant laws" which means OAG is required to prosecute when referred by the other agencies.
However, the Section 29, 30 and 31 of the OAG Act grants the discretionary power subject to conditions laid down to prosecute or not to prosecute the cases.
Now reading the Article 29(5), 128(2) & (3), the Section 128 (2) mandates the OAG to mandatory to prosecute while Section 128(3) provides the power to ACC to prosecute under three conditions, I personally feel that both OAG Act and ACC Act are fulfilling the conditions of the Article 29(5) hence should be both constitutional as long as prosecution is carried within the threshold provided under these laws.
 The News paper reports 

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