Does
the government require releasing the report of the judicial inquiry
on the 21 August grenade attack?
Barrister
Harun ur Rashid
Following the 21st
August horrific and deadly grenade blasts, the government set up a one-man
judge judicial inquiry to address, among others, the question of identifying
the culprits. The Judge was given a specified time and he submitted
the report to the government with his recommendations.
The question that
is agitated in the minds of public in Bangladesh as to whether the report
should be made public. In other words, whether public has the right
to know the contents of the report? Before I discuss the question, let
me first make a few observations.
Judicial
Inquiry Commission: Not a court of law
Judicial Inquiry Commission is nothing new in Bangladesh or in Pakistan
or in India. Ordinarily a judicial inquiry commission is set up through
an executive order in order to inquire into a matter of public importance.
The subject could be diverse as long as it is a matter of serious concern
to public. Furthermore the terms of reference should not be vague but
must refer to a definite subject of public importance.
An
inquiry Commission is ordinarily headed by a judge, retired or sitting,
of a court including the highest court of the land. The person appointed
shall have the ability to carry the impression of dispassionate approach
to the issue referred to the commission.
The commission is
required to investigate facts leading to a particular occurrence and
make a report and appropriate recommendations. The government fixes
a time schedule for the submission of the report. The commission is
essentially a "fact-finding" body to advise the government
of the day with its recommendations.
The
recommendations are not "commands". They are advisory in character
for the government. Justice Williams in Jellocoe vs Haselden
(1902) observed: " The report by itself has no more legal effect
and carried with it no legal consequences than an article in a newspaper".
Once
the report is submitted the commission becomes functus officio.
It has fulfilled its task of inquiring and reporting to the government.
The recommendations are likely to facilitate rectification of procedures
so that in future such occurrence due to certain lapses does not happen.
The government takes action through appropriate legislative or administrative
measures in the light of the recommendations as it deems them proper
and appropriate.
One fact must be
made clear that the inquiry commission is not a court of law and therefore
the status of the report is not similar to that of a judgment of a court,
which is a public document.
Right
to information:
Article 19 of the 1948 UN Declaration of Human Rights states that "
everyone has the right…. to seek, receive and impart information".
The 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights also confirms
this right and elaborates that every one has the right receive information,
"either orally, in writing, or in print." Although the Bangladesh
Constitution is silent on the right to information, it is generally
agreed that a democratic political system requires an adequate and effective
level of public information for citizens.
The
question is as to whether does public have access to the report of a
commission of judicial inquiry?
The answer is yes and no because it depends upon the matter referred
to the inquiry commission. Ordinarily, report on defence, military operations
and national security is not made public because of the sensitivity
of the subject. Inquiry report, which affects fundamental rights of
public, such as food, environment and civil liberties, must be disclosed.
It is also noted
that the government of the day has the unfettered authority to determine
what should be kept secret, unless there is a law that prohibits the
government to do so.
Freedom
of Information Act
In many countries, Freedom of Information Act enables a citizen to secure
access to information under the control of public authorities, consistent
with public interest, in order to promote openness, transparency and
accountability. Freedom of Information Act is the most important innovation
in democracy that allows citizens to right to information. However the
Act also generally provides the power of the authority to deny access
the documents in the interest of security. India enacted the Freedom
of Information Act in 2003.
Government
secrecy
Government al secrecy is as old as government. French statesman and
cardinal Richelieu (1545-1642) once said " Secrecy is essential
in the affairs of a State." As stated earlier, consideration of
national security justify a measure of secrecy and keep sensitive information
out of public information. The purpose of secrecy is to protect the
nation.
In this connection,
Official Secrets Act helps the government in maintaining secrecy and
any leakage by any person or agency is liable to be charged in the court
of law. In bureaucracy, in particular in foreign affairs and defence,
it has been the practice to rely on "need to know" policy
that enables to narrow the circle of bureaucrats with respect to disclosure
of sensitive information.
It is noted that
even the right of freedom of speech and expression and freedom of press
in Article 39 of the Bangladesh Constitution can be exercised "
subject to the reasonable restrictions imposed by law in the interests
of the security of State, friendly relations with foreign states, public
order, decency or morality". This means the right is not unfettered
and the law may impose reasonable restrictions on exercise of this fundamental
right.
However, government
should exercise this power judiciously and not arbitrarily. If it is
not done reasonably, one can go to the court for judicial review.
Precedents
of secrecy
In Pakistan, the report of inquiry into the assassination of Prime Minister
Liaquat Ali Khan was not made public, despite the request of the wife
of the deceased. In the USA, the Commission's report of 600,000 pages
on the inquiry of assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. remains
sealed until 2039. In India, Narsimha Rao government set up Jain Commission
to inquire into conspiracy angle of assassination of former Prime Minister
Rajiv Gandhi. The Commission submitted its report in 1997 to then Deve
Gowda government but it decided not to disclose the details of the report.
Conclusion
The above discussion demonstrates that in the interest of national security
and foreign relations, the government may not make the inquiry report
public. It is noted that in the past some of the judicial probe reports
have not been made public by the government of the day in Bangladesh.
It suggests that decision to release the report is exclusively in the
domain of the government, unless Constitution and law requires the government
to release the report.
It reminds me of
what David Hackett Fisher, the historian, once said: "History is
not what happened but what the surviving evidence says happened."
The
author is former Bangladesh Ambassador to the UN, Geneva.