Thursday, February 4, 2010

Full of sound and fury, signifying nothing

Interesting piece in Ottawa Citizen:


http://tinyurl.com/ycmzdng



The Supreme Court of tut-tutting


By Amir Attaran, Citizen Special



It is a victory, but it is also bizarre. Last week's Supreme Court ruling in Omar Khadr's case found that Ottawa pulled off a hat trick of shocking illegality. Canada's government violated national law, international law, and the Constitution -- quite a feat.

But did the Supreme Court order the government to do anything about serially breaking the law, such as to ask for Khadr back? No: the court's punch was pulled. To do otherwise, the court said, would interfere with the prime minister's freedom of decision. The court decided only to give a judicial declaration, in effect tut-tutting at the government's illegality.

If this sounds curious, it is. But it is also increasingly normal for the Supreme Court, which is drifting toward becoming the country's leading Supreme Court of Advice.

...

No matter what you think of Omar Khadr, the judgment makes unsettling reading. It advertises the fact that even when Canada's highest court heartily agrees illegality exists, it may refuse to remedy it. In the past, the justices rarely turned away litigants seeking a mandatory remedy with a mere advisory opinion. Under Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin's increasingly timorous leadership, however, they are doing so with unusual frequency.

It is an unwise and unwelcome trend.

...

When courts, by their own admission, advise there is an illegality but in the same breath let it persist, that is not the rule of law. At best, it is rule by law -- something quite different. In treading into this unsatisfactory terrain, the court's judgments increasingly bring to mind Macbeth's lament: "it is a tale ..." Shakespeare wrote, "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

One wonders if the Supreme Court has reflected on the risks of advisory declarations, for its own sake.

Given the government's decision, announced yesterday, that it would not seek to repatriate Khadr, despite the court finding that Canada's illegal conduct "continues to contribute to (his) current detention," it is now very likely that the court will find itself faced with Khadr's case to solve for a third time -- a self-evidently pathetic fact which makes the court look effete, and which damages the institution.
...

Orders of that kind give abundant room for the exercise of executive discretion or the accommodation of practical realities, but without sacrificing the rule of law.

Amir Attaran is a professor in the faculties of law and medicine at the University of Ottawa.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

It is a victory for who?

The author does not address the other concern.That is,what do we do with him once he is here?
Is there at least some concern for the 33 million of us here? Do we get to sue the gov't for not protecting our rights if we are blown up on a bus or subway station?

How did this Canadian child end up in a war overseas as a child soldier? Who is responsible? Does anyone care?

-David

Oxford County Liberals said...

Uh David.. he hasn't even had a trial yet.. he hasn't been convicted of anything.

You conservative guys do realize there is such as a thing called innocent til proven guilty, right?

Anonymous said...

1. Scott I am not a Conservative.I have voted for many parties over the year but have never given any of them a dime.

2. No one doubts, or so I thought, that he was in a war zone fighting. Even Bob Rae recognizes that he is a "child soldier". Save your BS platitudes for less sophisticated blogs.No one buys it.

There is enough evidence to suggest there ought to be a trial.This is not about joyriding in a pick-up. Children under the care of an adult deserve protection.This was denied him.No?

Last of all let it be known to you ,in case you conveniently forgot that it was the Liberals that sent him there in the first place.To suddenly now pretend that their is concern for his welfare is a bit rich.