Barrister Nazir Ahmed remembers Justice Mustafa Kamal,
one of the most talented judges in the history of Bangladesh.
Former Chief Justice of Bangladesh Justice Mustafa Kamal died of a cardiac arrest at his residence at Gulshan in the capital on Monday, 5th January 2015. He was 81. He left behind a sister, Ferdousi Rahman, a prominent singer; a brother, Mostafa Zaman Abbasi, a noted singer; three daughters, including Dhaka University teacher Dr Nashid Kamal; and a host of relatives who joined well-wishers to mourn his death. He was laid to rest at the City’s Azimpur Graveyard following the second namaz-e-janaza held at the premises of the Supreme Court. The first Namaz-e-Janaza of the deceased was held on the compound of Gulshan Azad Mosque after Zohr prayer. Upon hearing the news, judges of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court came down from the courtrooms as a mark of respect for Justice Mustafa Kamal.
Son of the legendary folk singer of the sub-continent Abbas Uddin Ahmed, Justice Mustafa Kamal was born on 30th December 1934 at Kuchbihar, India, to a dignified Muslim family. His name “Mustafa Kamal,” was chosen for him by the National Poet Kazi Nazrul Islam after his birth.
Justice Mustafa Kamal had a brilliant academic and outstanding legal and judicial career. He demonstrated excellence in each and every stage of his career. He was in seventh position on the Merit List in the Matriculation Examination from the Dhaka Collegiate School in 1948. He also secured fifth position on the Merit List in the Intermediate Arts (IA) Examination at Jagannath College in 1950. He obtained BA (Hons) and MA degrees in Political Science from the University of Dhaka in 1953 and 1954 respectively, securing the first position in the first class.
Justice Kamal then went to the United Kingdom, availing himself of a merit scholarship for higher studies from the Government of the then Pakistan. He successfully completed a Masters Degree at the London School of Economics (LSE), University of London, a world renowned institution. He then completed the Bar-at-Law course and was called to the English Bar by the Honourable Society of Lincoln’s Inn in 1959.
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On his return from abroad, Justice Mustafa Kamal started practicing law in the then Dhaka High Court and Supreme Court of Pakistan and developed a flourishing legal practice. He was a part-time lecturer in law at the University of Dhaka from 1961 to 1968. He was appointed Additional Attorney General of Bangladesh in 1976 and then Advocate General of Bangladesh in 1977.
Justice Mustafa Kamal was elevated to the position of Judge of the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh in 1979. He was appointed a Judge of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in 1989. He was appointed the tenth Chief Justice of Bangladesh on 1st June 1999, and he served in this position until the end of December 1999. Later, after his retirement, Justice Mustafa Kamal was appointed Chair of the Bangladesh Law Commission (a rank and position equivalent to the Chief Justice of Bangladesh) on 6th December 2004, and he served in this position until 5th December 2007.
Justice Mustafa Kamal participated in many international seminars and conferences, representing Bangladesh in the United Nations. He was one of the authors of India-Bangladesh Ganges Water Sharing Treaty that was signed in 1977. He was deeply connected in the field of law for a long period of more than four decades, both as a lawyer and a judge, and contributed enormously to the dispensation of fair justice. He wrote extensively and gave scholarly speeches of high quality on a variety of subjects. His noted two books are: Bangladesh Constitution, Trends and Issues in English and Amar Kichhu Bola in Bangla. Justice Mustafa Kamal was a scholar of exceptional standing who devoted his life to continuous study and sophisticated thought in the realm of legal literature and jurisprudence. He was always vocal in establishing the rule of law in the country and keeping unharmed the independence of the judiciary.
Justice Mustafa Kamal was a great judge of scholarly merit and a great thinker on question of legal theology. He imparted wisdom, creativity and progressiveness to the judiciary for more than 20 years. His judgements remain as exemplary documents to his successors, standing out both in style and content. His legal activities and judicial pronouncements are still treated with reverence. His outstanding judicial career and landmark judgments have made him well known within the legal arena. Through his bravery and boldness, he earned a place for himself in legal history.
Justice Mustafa Kamal was a pioneer in establishing and promoting the system of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR). In 2003, he was appointed as a Consultant for ADR by the then Government, and he taught modules on ADR in 64 districts of the country. He may, therefore, be called the “founder of the ADR” in Bangladesh. He attended various international seminars and symposia held at prestigious locations and gave speeches on ADR.
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Justice Mustafa Kamal was the most talented judge of our time. He will be remembered for many things. Among them was his landmark judgment on the case of Secretary, Ministry of Finance v Masdar Hossain (1999) 52 DLR (AD) 82 (popularly known as the Masdar Hussain’s Case), which was a milestone in the quest for the separation of power between the judiciary ad the state and the independence of judiciary in Bangladesh. The landmark decision was determined on the question of to what extent the constitution of the Republic of Bangladesh has actually ensured the separation of the judiciary from the executive organs of the state. In essence, the case was decided on the issue of how far the independence of the judiciary is guaranteed by our constitution and whether the provisions of the constitution have been followed in practice. In the leading judgement, he directed the Government to implement its twelve point directives, including the formation of separate Judicial Service Commission (JSC) to carry out the appointment, promotion and transfer of members of the judiciary in consultation with the Supreme Court. Further directives called for a separate Judicial Service Pay Commission, amendment of the criminal procedure and the new rules for the selection and discipline of members of the judiciary.
On an extensive examination of constitutional provisions relating to subordinate courts (Article 114-116A) and services of Bangladesh (Article 133-136), the Appellate Division headed by Justice Mustafa Kamal held that “judicial service is fundamentally and structurally distinct and separate service from the civil executive and administrative services of the Republic with which the judicial service cannot be placed on par on any account and that it cannot be amalgamated, abolished, replaced, mixed up and tied together with the civil executive and administrative services.” (para 76). It also directed the government to make separate rules relating to posting, promotion, grants of leave, discipline, pay, allowances, pensions and other terms and conditions of the service consistent with Article 116 and 116A of the constitution.
However, in delivering judgment, Justice Mustafa Kamal made an attempt to differentiate between the terms “independence” and “impartiality” and said obiter that he would subscribe to the view of a leading decision of Supreme Court of Canada in Walter Valente v Her Majesty the Queen (1985) 2 SCR 673, on protection of judicial independence under Section ii (a) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Walter Valente held that “the concepts of ‘independence’ and ‘impartiality’, although obviously related, are separate distinct values or requirements. ‘Impartiality’ refers to a state of mind or attitude of the tribunal in relation to the issues and the parties in a particular case. ‘Independence’ reflects or embodies the traditional constitutional value of judicial independence and connotes not only a state of mind but also a status or relationship to others … particularly to the executive branch of government …”
Unfortunately, subsequent governments have failed to implement the judgment in a true and literal sense. The last military-backed Interim Government took a positive stance on the question of separating the judiciary from the executive based on the principles of the constitutional directive and the Appellate Division’s judgment in the Masder Hossain’s Case. Accordingly, the following four service rules were enacted and changes were made in the existing Code of Criminal Procedure 1898 by Ordinance No II and No. IV of 2007: Bangladesh Judicial Service Commission Rules, 2007; Bangladesh Judicial Service (Pay Commission) Rules 2007, Bangladesh Judicial Service Commission (Construction of Service, Appointments in the Service and Suspension, Removal & Dismissal from the Service) Rules, 2007; and Bangladesh Judicial Service (Posting, Promotion, Grant of Leave, Control, Discipline and other Condition of Service) Rules, 2007.
This was considered to be a major change, paving the way for dispensation of Criminal Justice at the level of magistracy by the officers belonging to Bangladesh Judicial Service and thereby removing all impediments to the separation of judiciary from executive control. At last, after a long journey, the judiciary was separated from the executive and started functioning independently from 1st November 2007. However, when the next political government came to office, they were reluctant to implement the judgment and follow it fully. They did not approve of or carry out the steps taken by the military-backed Interim Government. Recent politicisation of the judiciary has made the matters worse. Because of political manoeuvring by, bureaucratic complexities in and short-sightedness of subsequent governments, the judiciary has not been independent and the separation of power has not materialised as envisaged by the judgment of Masdar Hussain’s Case. This is very unfortunate for the nation.
Another great contribution by Justice Mustafa Kamal came when a Writ Petition was filed by an NGO (which appeared to be anti-Islamic) seeking cancellation and/or amendment of the Quranic provision of the iddat, a specific period during which a husband, after divorce, is required to support his wife. The High Court judges gave their judgment against the Quranic provision of the iddat. The matter went to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court by way of appeal. Justice Mustafa Kamal played an active role in dismissing the High Court’s judgment. The Appellate Division called two religious scholars to give expert opinion. Justice Mustafa Kamal played such an active role that he was able to convince a non-Muslim Judge of the then Appellant Division of the Supreme Court and secure a unanimous judgement. In his judgment he strongly condemned High Court Judges’ ignorance of basic Islamic knowledge, norms and philosophy.
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I have very good memories of Justice Mustafa Kamal. I was lucky to have met him three times in London and spent hours with him. I visited the house where he lived and had dinner with him. I was planning to have dinner with him at a prestigious restaurant, but he was keen to go to Bangla Town to have Bengali food. Accordingly, we went there and enjoyed a genuine (khati), ordinary – but very delicious – Bengali food. While he was eating, he described how difficult it was to find halal foods and mosques and/or prayer places in London during the 1950s when he was studying at LSE and for the Bar.
I organised a roundtable discussion on the “Separation of Power and Independence of the Judiciary” in London in 2005, which was attended by more than 100 professionals at short notice, just 24 hours. Justice Mustafa Kamal gave an hour long, in-depth lecture as the Chief Guest. The following week, a leading Bengali weekly made his speech a six column wide lead news story. Before this programme, he gave an interview to the BBC Bangla World Service on the independence of the judiciary, separation of powers and judicial activism.
Justice Mustafa Kamal shared many things during the many hours I spent with him. I found him to be a free and straightforward, sharp intellectual, full of wisdom and talent. His analytical powers and style of expression were extraordinary. He once said “Nazir, I gave the [leading] judgment in Masdar Hussain’s Case for the greater interest of the nation and its constitution. The country would be better off if the subsequent governments had implemented and followed the judgment completely and fully.” He mentioned and praised some lawyers of the Supreme Court and at the same time he expressed concerns about the integrity and honesty of some lawyers – but I shall refrain myself from mentioning their names as they are still alive and practising. In relation to some competent advocates of the Supreme Court, he said “they are competent lawyers at international standard and can easily compete with any competent lawyers of any developed countries of the world.”
On one occasion, Justice Kamal said “isms – such as socialism, capitalism, communism – should never be in the constitution. If these were in the constitution, political tension, deadlock and unnecessary debates would never end. [The] constitution is an operative document and democracy and democracy alone should be in it. Whichever party comes to office, with a mandate from the people, will run the country in accordance with its political ideology or ism.” This is the scenario and position taken by a renowned writer and politician Abul Monsur Ahmed in his book Amar Dekha Rajnitir Ponchas Bochor (Fifty years of my sight of politics). It shows what an extraordinary wisdom and far-sighted mentality Justice Mustafa Kamal had.
Personally Justice Mustafa Kamal was a pious man, but he was liberal, respectful and accommodating in his thinking and approach. In his personal life, he followed Islamic teachings, customs and norms. He was a regular attender at prayers. He used to say “prayers (salat/namaj) are the dues of the body.” Bangladesh truly misses one of its most talented judges in its 44 year history. This week, 5th January 2016, is the first anniversary of his death. May Allah (SWT) give him high rewards in the hereafter.
Barrister Nazir Ahmed: a UK based legal expert, analyst, writer and columnist. He can be contacted via e-mail: ahmedlaw2002@yahoo.co.uk
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