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Article 6
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International Crimes (Tribunals) Act, 1973
Sections 3(2)(a)(g) & (h), 4(1), 20(2)
ICCPR
Article 6
Malice in law— Settled principle of law that any action or order tainted
by malice in law is void ab initio and a nullity in the eye of the law—
The judgment passed by the ICT in the instant case has been vitiated by
malice in law, the same constitutes a nullity in the eye of the law.
Accordingly, the judgment of conviction and sentence passed against the
appellant is void ab initio and non est and devoid of any legal validity.
As such, the impugned judgment of conviction and sentence passed against
the appellant is liable to be set aside being a nullity in the eye of the
law, and the appellant is accordingly liable to be acquitted. The impugned
judgment and order dated 24.11.2014 passed by International Crimes
Tribunal-1, Dhaka in ICT-BD Case No.1 of 2013 is, hereby, set aside.
.....Md. Mobarak Hossain =VS= The Chief Prosecutor, ICT, (Criminal),
2025(2) [19 LM (AD) 520]
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Md. Mobarak Hossain =VS= The Chief Prosecutor, ICT |
19 LM (AD) 520 |
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Article 6(2)
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UN and International Law on Death Sentence–
Public International law does not prohibit death penalty. Article 6(2) of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) provides
that death penalty may be imposed only for the “most serious crimes”.
Countries that retain death penalty are required to observe a number of
restrictions and limitations on its use.
The UN safeguards (ECOSOC- safeguards) for cypilet connections require
clear and convincing evidence leaving no room for an alterative explanation
of the facts and their must be a right to appeal to a higher Court. The
rules require that such capital case is carefully scrutinised by domestic
Courts for defoliating possibility of error.
The UN Human Rights Committee has interpreted ‘most serious crimes’ not
to include economic offences, embezzlement by officials, robbery, abduction
not resulting in death, apostasy and drug related crimes. It has also
excluded political offences, expressing particular concern about ‘very
vague categories of offences relating to internal and external security,
vaguely worded offences of opposition to order and national security
violations and ‘political offences.
The UN Commission on Human Rights, a subsidiary body of the UN Economic and
social Council (ECOSOC) , replaced by the Human Rights Council in 2006,
interpreted ‘most serious crimes’ as not including non-violent acts
such as financial crimes, religious practice or expression of conscience
and sexual relations between consenting adults.
Safeguard 1 of the 1984 UN Safeguards Guaranteeing Protection of the Rights
of those Facing the Death Penalty also provides that in countries which
have not abolished the death penalty, capital punishment may be imposed
only for the most serious crimes, it being understood that their scope
should not go beyond intentional crimes with lethal or other extremely
grave consequences.
The UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial summary or arbitrary executions
stated in his 2012 report to the UN General Assembly that the death penalty
should only be applied for offences of intentional killing, based on the
practice of retentionist states and the jurisprudence of UN and other
bodies.
Although Rome Statute does not allow ICC to pass death sentence, it does
nevertheless, recognise death sentence by allowing member states to pass
death sentence upon those accused of War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity
if such sentence is permissible in the given states.
Its statute does, therefore, allow member states to pass death sentence on
those found guilty of crimes against humanity when the national Courts in
those states assume jurisdiction.
The argument that the death penalty has a strong deterrent effect on
crimes, especially serious violent crimes, plays an important role in the
debate in retentionist states. Often, it is the primary reason why the
public and politicians shy away from abolition.
The argument assumes that would-be criminals consider the full range of
consequences of committing a criminal act, anticipate getting caught, and
decide not to undertake the criminal act because they have a strong belief
that if caught, they will be sentenced to death.
Governments in retentionist states often invoke the argument that public
opinion favours death penalty, and therefore they cannot abolish it.
Although Article 6 of the Civil Covenant is worded in a way which has led
the Human Rights Committee to believe that it strongly suggests the
desirability of abolition, the second optional protocol to the Civil
Covenant – the treaty by which states can solemnly pledge themselves to
abolish capital punishment, has not attracted many signatories. (The Second
optional Protocol to the ICC PR) The UN Human Rights Committee held that
while execution in a gas chamber is cruel, killing by a lethal injection is
not. (Paras:983-994); .....Allama Delwar Hossain Sayedee =VS= Government of
Bangladesh, (Criminal), 2017 (1)- [2 LM (AD) 76]
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Allama Delwar Hossain Sayedee =VS= Government of Bangladesh |
2 LM (AD) 76 |
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Article 6(2)
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On Death Sentence– Article 6(2) of the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights which has by now, assumed the status of Customary
International Law, affirms that in states that retain capital punishment,
the death penalty may only be imposed for the ‘most serious crimes’.
Human rights monitoring mechanisms support the view that this concept is
confined to murder. (Page-41, Uimaginable Atrocities, Justice, Politics,
and Rights at the War Crimes Tribunal, ProfessorWilliam Schabas OC , MRIA.
Oxford University Press) (A. H. M. Shamsuddin Choudhury, J) …Government
of Bangladesh =VS= Abdul Quader Molla, (Criminal), 2020 (1) [8 LM (AD)
375]
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Government of Bangladesh =VS= Abdul Quader Molla |
8 LM (AD) 375 |
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Article 14(6)
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Prevention of Corruption Act, 1947
Section 5(2) r/w
Penal Code, 1860
Sections 409, 405 and 109 and
Emergency Power Rules, 2007
Rule 5 r/w
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1958
Sections 5, 10(1A)
Trust Act, 1882
Section 23, 94
ICCPR
Article 14(6)
Begum Khaleda Zia under section 409 of the Penal Code as well as section
5(2) of the PCA, 1947. Her sentence was enhanced to rigorous imprisonment
for a period of ten years—
Appellate Division’s summary of core findings are, accordingly,
enumerated hereinbelow:
I. The convictions under section 409 of the Penal Code, 1860 for alleged
criminal breach of trust in the absence of the constitutive ingredients of
such offence as defined under section 405 with illustrations are
misconceived and have resulted in a travesty of justice.
II. To be an offence of Criminal Breach of Trust, there must be an
entrustment/dominion over the property belonging to another and the same
has to be dishonestly misappropriated as per section 405 of the Penal Code,
1860 but in the instant case, there was no element of entrustment upon the
Appellant Begum Khaleda Zia.
III. The general principle of criminal jurisprudence is that the State has
to prove allegation(s) against an accused beyond all reasonable doubts but
both the courts below have violated the said principle and convicted the
Appellants on an trumped-up charges without seeking the aid of the
applicable law.
IV. Both the High Court Division and the Trial Court below passed their
respective judgments on the basis of hypothetical presumptions and
accusations not based on legal evidences.
V. The ACC has stepped beyond its jurisdiction to have initiated the
instant criminal proceeding as the issue revolves around a private trust
and there is no accusation/ complaint from the relevant party concerned.
VI. The very initiation of proceedings is barred by law and as such not
only the judgments below but also the entire proceedings should, therefore,
be set aside giving benefit to all individuals who have been maliciously
prosecuted.
Appellate Division passes the following order:
All the appeals are, hereby, allowed by this Division’s unanimous
decision. Accordingly, the impugned judgment and order dated 30.10.2018
passed by the High Court Division in Criminal Appeal No. 1676 of 2018 with
Criminal Appeal Nos. 2215, 2292 of 2018 and Criminal Revision No. 741 of
2018, and the judgment and order dated 8.2.2018 passed by the Special
Judge, Special Judge Court No. 5, Dhaka in Special Case No. 17 of 2017 are,
hereby, set aside. Consequently, all the Appellants having not been found
guilty of the charges leveled against them, stand fully acquitted. The
proceedings constituting the subject matter of these appeals are found to
be a manifest contrived misapplication of the law as tantamount to
malicious prosecution. This judgment shall also extend to other convicted
persons who, however, did not prefer any appeal. This decision shall,
resultantly restore the Appellant’s and all other convict’s dignity,
reaffirm their innocence, and thereby, put an end to the unwarranted
proceedings initiated against them. .....Begum Khaleda Zia =VS= Durnity
Daman Commission, (Criminal), 2025(2) [19 LM (AD) 14]
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Begum Khaleda Zia =VS= Durnity Daman Commission |
19 LM (AD) 14 |