Marafa Hamidou : Gaining freedom soon? |
The United Nations body has demanded that he be
released immediately and be awarded compensation by the GOC for the harm caused
by being deprived of his liberty. The Working Group established that Mr. Marafa’s detention violates
Articles 9 and 10 of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights as well as Articles
9 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. In its
decision the WGAD recommends that if the Cameroon Government can come up with
legitimate grounds for a new trial then Marafa should be given one where all
his due process rights will be scrupulously respected. It urged President
Biya’s government to take diligent steps to address Marafa’s failing health
which is worsening to the point of becoming irreversible. It then referred the
decision to Monica Pinto, the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on
the Independence of Judges and Lawyers, for appropriate action.
Asked to comment on the decision, Professor Kale had
this to say:
“The
decision of the Working Group vindicates my client and confirms what he has always
said that he is innocent of all the charges leveled against him. But before professional
talking heads spin this momentous decision out of control, let me make three observations.
First, unlike the Thierry Atangana and Lydienne Eyoum cases where the Cameroon
Government did not bother to file any pleadings, in this case the Government
not only filed but even requested a 60-day extension to prepare its reply to my
preliminary submission. Both the Government’s and the complainant’s submissions
were backed by supporting documents. As a matter of fact these documents were
so voluminous that they contributed in prolonging the deliberations of the
Working Group. It is therefore important to note that we don’t have here a
judgment in default but the reasoned outcome of a contested dispute where both
parties were allowed to lay out their case. And the five distinguished jurists
who comprise the Working Group had before them the same set of documents as the
prosecutors who indicted Marafa, as the judges of the Mfoundi High Court who
declared him guilty and the venerable justices of our Supreme Court who
confirmed the judgment of the lower court. Yet after reviewing the same
evidence, the panel of jurists on the Working Group came to the opposite
conclusion! How did our jurists get it wrong? Perhaps it is the search for an
answer to this question that the Working Group decided to refer their decision
to the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges for further
probing. In any event, it does not speak well of Cameroon’s judiciary as this referral
now puts in doubt its vaunted claims of independence and impartiality. My
second observation is that inasmuch as Cameroon is a State party to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, she is legally bound by this
decision and cannot refuse to execute it. Finally, it remains my hope that President
Biya will do the right thing and instruct his Government to abide by the UN
ruling against it and take the steps that are necessary to bring Mr. Marafa’s arbitrary
and unjust detention to an end. At issue here is Cameroon’s willingness to
respect the Rule of Law not only in theory but in actual practice as well. It must
demonstrate evidence of that willingness by resisting the temptation of aligning
itself with those rogue states that flout the decisions of international
tribunals and by so doing become complicit in weakening the
global/international community’s efforts to protect some of the most vulnerable
victims of human rights violations!”
Under the authority of the U.N. Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the WGAD was
established in 1991 to investigate and adjudicate whether states are in
compliance with their international human rights obligations. It receives
submissions from the individual complainant and the respondents (the states),
and decides whether the case amounts to arbitrary (that is to say unlawful, or
prohibited) detention. It will be recalled that the WGAD had earlier ruled
against the Cameroon Government in Michel Thierry Atangana Abega v. Cameroon, WGAD, Opinion No. 38/2013, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/WGAD/2013/38 (2014) and Pierre Roger (alias Lapiro) et al. v.
Cameroon, WGAD, Opinion No. 32/2011, U.N. Doc. A/HRC/WGAD/2011/32 (2011). The WGAD
decision on Marafa which is legally binding will now be reported to the United Nations
Human Rights Council.
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