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Judicial dependence?

Abby Seiff, Phnom PenhJune 13, 2014

Cambodia’s Senate has passed a set of laws that would cement the government's control over the country’s courts. The move also raises questions about the millions of dollars foreign donors have spent on judicial reform.

https://p.dw.com/p/1CHxW
Security forces stand at the Phnom Penh Municipal Court of First Instance before the verdict for the 23 people arrested last January during violent clashes between protestors and security forces is announced on May 30, 2014 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia (Photo: Omar Havana/Getty Images)
Image: Getty Images
The new laws, which await only a rubber stamp from the king, would give the government more administrative control over the judiciary. The move has the potential to further erode an already weak legal system, but also raises questions about donor accountability in a country where tens of millions of dollars have been spent on judicial reform.

"Aid has been particularly ineffective when it comes to judicial reform," said political economist Sophal Ear. "In fact, when I looked at global data on aid and governance, the one dimension of governance that worsened as a result of aid was rule of law."

Ear, who is the author of "Aid Dependence in Cambodia: How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy," tells DW the problem has been particularly protracted in Cambodia, where the executive wields vast control.

The expert points out that democracy is undermined when, for instance, property rights are introduced, but then twisted to grab land from the poor and hand it over to the rich.

"Another example is when a Royal School of the Magistracy is created to train judges but then becomes immediately embroiled in a bribes for seats scandal," he said. "Donors can help, but so far they've been outwitted at almost every turn."

The fundamentals

First proposed shortly after the signing of the Paris Peace Accord in 1991, the "three fundamental laws," as they are commonly called, were envisioned as a way to ensure an independent judiciary.

In 2005, donors and the government ostensibly began a drafting project in earnest. Though progress was sporadic and slow, the draft they produced contained promising provisions. But after eight years of work, the laws were abruptly pulled out of the hands of the working group and handed over to the Ministry of Justice.

Prime Minister Hun Sen (L) attends a meeting at the National Assembly in central Phnom Penh September 24, 2013 (REUTERS/Samrang Pring)
After the last election, Prime Minister Hun Sen vowed to carry out judicial reformsImage: Reuters

While there, checks and balances were stripped out and the Minister of Justice granted control over the administration. "One article which initially said that the judiciary would not be under the power of executive or legislative or any political party, was later removed from the approved version," said Duch Piseth, a Trial Monitoring Project Coordinator at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, adding that that the new laws provided much more power to the Ministry of Justice.

In recent months, as the Law on the Organization of the Courts, the Law on the Statute of Judges and Prosecutors, and the Law on the Organization and Functioning of the Supreme Council of the Magistracy moved through the final stages, legal experts and rights groups grew increasingly agitated.

UN special envoy Surya Subedi said last month that he was "deeply concerned" about the content of the laws, particularly about the Ministry of Justice’s strong hand.

"In order to preserve the independence of the judiciary, no member of the executive should be involved in issues related to the appointment and promotion of judges or any disciplinary matters affecting them,” he wrote in a statement.

Failed models

The judicial law debacle comes on the heels of an even larger, though far less-publicized failed rule-of-law project on "model courts." In 2004, the government launched a legal and judicial reform strategy that included a model court proviso. Donors, particularly Australia provided vast funds and resources to a project that would turn four courts into ideal bodies to be emulated by the rest of the nation’s judiciary.

Over the course of seven years, Australia, with the assistance of Denmark and the US, toiled to set up the program, even with increasing signs of resistance from the government.

"The process of developing the legal and judicial reform strategy was very good and developing the model court program was fine. But when it came to implementation, that’s when it started having problems," said Michael Engquist, a consultant who previously worked on the program as an advisor with the Danish International Development Agency.

In a damning report about the efficacy of its aid programs, the Australian government blasted the model court program and implied donor countries may have been foolish for believing the government strategy was a true reflection of their intentions.

"Like many Cambodian strategies, the Legal and Judicial Reform Strategy appears to have been written to meet the expectations of donors, without any real commitment to its implementation," the auditors wrote in their December 2012 report.

"Some of the change processes promoted… particularly the model courts, were too sophisticated for the counterparts to manage. More fundamentally, they assumed that a lack of institutional capacity was the binding constraint on improving the justice system. In fact, the constraints are largely political."

The government has repeatedly downplayed such criticisms.

After the last election, which the opposition accused the ruling party of stealing, the country’s strong-arm Prime Minister Hun Sen vowed that judicial reform would be a cornerstone of the current mandate.

Engquist, for his part, remains skeptical. Asked if judicial reform is a good area for donors to invest money, he laughed. "When you put it this way, yeah I’m disappointed of course. There’s been a lack of political will, definitely in this area."