Introduction
Judges guard the law, but who guards judges? That is, who ensures that they enjoy much-needed sanctity in discharging their critical mandate of upholding the rule of law? This question has been debated largely through the dual prism of the independence and the accountability of judges.Footnote 1 In jurisdictions from all legal traditions, courts and judges are vested with the paramount mission of upholding the rule of law, that is, to ensure that all abide by the law. While the rule of law binds judges themselves, the distribution of powers in constitutional democracies has placed courts at the mercy of external interference, mainly from the executive branch of government.Footnote 2 The recent worrying so-called “democracy crisis” appears to have only increased attacks against courts and the independence of judges.Footnote 3
In Africa's nascent democracies, judges themselves have come to the rescue of the judiciary, mainly in its arm-wrestling with the executive. The most emblematic illustrations include Adrian Kamotho Njenga v Attorney General; Judicial Service Commission and Others, where the High Court of Kenya found that the president of the republic is constitutionally bound by the recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) in respect of the list of nominees to be appointed as judges.Footnote 4 The matter arose from the refusal of the president to appoint judges who had been duly selected by the JSC. Similarly, the High Court of Malawi decided, in HRDC and Others v President of Malawi and Others, that attempts by the country's president to get rid of the Chief Justice and other senior judges by placing them on enforced leave pending retirement were illegal and unconstitutional.Footnote 5 Notably, the High Court held that the executive had no constitutional or legal basis upon which to make such a decision, as issues of judicial administration and human resources management remain the preserve of the judiciary; thus the executive intervention breached the separation of powers. The executive was ordered to reverse the decision on the forced retirement and reinstate the judges concerned.Footnote 6 A similar trend is observed in the most progressive civil law constitutional court in Africa, the Constitutional Court of Benin,Footnote 7 which in its Review of the Decree on Appointment and Promotion of Judges held that decrees from the Minister of Justice which omitted to mention the proposed posts were in breach of the independence of the judiciary, namely the principle of the immovability of judges. The court therefore declared the posting of the judicial officers concerned without their prior consent as unconstitutional.Footnote 8
Safeguarding judicial independence has transcended the domestic realm to become an international concern. In its 2020 judgment in Martínez Esquivia v Colombia, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights found that the respondent state breached judicial independence due to the unsubstantiated removal of the applicant, who worked as deputy prosecutor for 12 years.Footnote 9 The same year, in the no less evocative Laura Codruța Kövesi v Romania, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) unanimously ruled that the dismissal of the applicant, a chief prosecutor of the National Anti-Corruption Directorate, on grounds of poor performance breached judicial independence, as the applicant's rights to a fair trial and freedom of expression had not been upheld.Footnote 10 The applicant had opposed the government's amendments to three basic laws that were widely perceived as weakening the judicial system, and the judiciary's oversight body did not approve the removal.
Africa also witnesses regional efforts in support of judicial independence. The normative and institutional armada deployed by African states to protect judicial independence is on two levels. Under the umbrella of the African Union (AU), articles 7(1) and 26 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (the African Charter) unequivocally guarantee the rule of law and judicial independence of member states’ courts.Footnote 11 The same principles are set out in articles 2(5) and 15(2) of the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance (the Democracy Charter).Footnote 12 Within sub-regional spheres, article 1(a) of the Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), article 6(d) of the Treaty Establishing the East African Community (EAC) and article 4(c) of the Treaty Establishing the Southern African Development Community (SADC) offer guarantees for the independence of national judiciaries, either expressly or through pledges to the rule of law.Footnote 13 In order to enforce the normative framework thus set, African states have established (quasi-)judicial bodies within the above-stated intergovernmental organizations. Two main such institutions are the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACmHPR), and the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACtHPR).Footnote 14 Similarly, at the sub-regional level, the ECOWAS Court of Justice (ECCJ), the East African Court of Justice (EACJ) and the SADC Tribunal have been in operation at least for the past two decades.Footnote 15 The ACmHPR, ACtHPR and ECCJ have upheld the independence of municipal courts by enforcing rights and duties contained in articles 7(1) and 26 of the African Charter.Footnote 16 The EACJ, for its part, has performed the same function by enforcing the rule of law as a fundamental principle of the EAC.Footnote 17
This article undertakes an analytical review of the growing body of regional jurisprudence on judicial independence and investigates the extent to which regional courts in Africa are forging armour for judges against external interference. The methodology of the discussion focuses on issues that are relevant to the main standards for assessing judicial independence, especially from the executive, while stressing how and why contextualization matters. In terms of institutional scope, only the ACmHPR, ACtHPR, EACJ and ECCJ are covered, as they represent the most active regional (quasi-)judicial bodies with significant rulings on the issues at stake. Analyses also draw on the general perception that challenges to judicial independence are more serious in countries with a civil law tradition or background due to the significant involvement of the executive in the recruitment, appointment, career management and operation of the oversight body, as opposed to what obtains in common law countries.Footnote 18 In the first substantive section, the article recalls the main elements of judicial independence as drawn from doctrine and international case law. In the following section, the discussion covers occurrences that may be construed as a sanitization of the institutional framework pertaining to the protection of judicial independence, namely through the composition and operation of oversight bodies. The three subsequent sections are devoted to interventions of the most active regional courts aimed at strengthening or supervising the enforcement of legal guarantees for the independent operation of municipal courts. Cases dealing with the appointment and removal of judges and the enforcement of court orders are discussed. A closing query, which is offered to future investigative commentators, is whether regional independence activism remains alert to the very current necessity of preserving judicial dialogue. This concluding part also raises institutional implications and the structural impact of what could be termed the regionalization of judicial independence.
Understanding the doctrine of judicial independence
The independence of the judiciary is often discussed intimately with its twin concept, impartiality. The ECHR has frequently stressed this reality by referring to the maxim that “justice must not only be done, it must also be seen to be done”.Footnote 19 In this context, independence is understood as a presupposition of impartiality.Footnote 20 Yet the two concepts cannot be conflated; while impartiality is more about the attitude of judges towards the parties or in adjudicating specific matters, independence describes functional and structural safeguards against external intrusion into the administration of justice.Footnote 21 As such, judicial independence is intrinsically assessed within the framework of the rule of law and the separation of powers. It is also logically framed by the particular statutes of each country, although common requirements are expected for any given system to be deemed independent or otherwise. There have been attempts to formalize these requirements through international regulations, such as the United Nations Basic Principles on Independence of the Judiciary (1985), the Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct (2006), the Beijing Statement of Principles of the Independence of the Judiciary in the LAWASIA Region (1997) and the Commonwealth Principles on the Accountability of and the Relationship between the Three Branches of Government (2003).
Two main approaches to judicial independence emerge: functional independence, which excludes interference from non-judicial organs with the performance of judicial functions, and institutional independence, which requires that judicial institutions are not made up of members sitting in other branches of government and that the judiciary enjoys a certain institutional autonomy in the administration of court-related matters.Footnote 22 Generally, courts are believed to enjoy functional independence when judges do not receive direct instructions from other branches of government in the course of proceedings, when courts orders are not ignored, and when legislation is not adopted to change the course of pending cases.Footnote 23 Institutional or organizational independence, for its part, is assessed in light of three main components: the appointment of judges, the composition of courts and security of tenure.
Regarding the appointment of judges, it is usually agreed that the process should be established by law, and there should be no appointment for certain cases or benches that might influence an outcome. The determinant is less the nomination procedure itself but rather whether or not the selected judges enjoy functional independence from the person or body that nominated them.Footnote 24 Notably, the main internationally recognized standard setters cited earlier, such as the Bangalore Principles, do not include a provision on nomination procedures, and the ECHR for instance has concluded in Sutter v Switzerland that even a nomination solely by the government does not in itself affect the independence of the court.Footnote 25 The position of international human rights bodies has been that executive appointments are not the issue as such. The problem is rather that independence would, for instance, be seriously impacted if the executive could annul the inauguration of judges by way of a simple contrarius actus – meaning that an authority with power to make an act is assumed to have the power to annul the same act.Footnote 26
As for the composition of courts, the aim is to avoid members of the executive and legislature being appointed as judges. More importantly, there is a paramount need to ensure that courts do not administer justice under the influence of superior authorities who are members of the two other branches, not just that the latter are excluded from appointing judges. On this point, the ECHR has held in Sramek v Austria that a bench composed of a majority of civil servants does not necessarily affect independence, as long as the government is not a party to the case and that no one on the bench is a subordinate to a civil servant representing the government.Footnote 27 Similarly, the ACmHPR has concluded in The Constitutional Rights Project v Nigeria that special criminal courts cannot be seen to be impartial when members of the executive branch sitting as judges outnumber the regular judges on the bench.Footnote 28
Finally, security of tenure comes into play to cater for circumstances where judges may fear disciplinary or other consequences due to the exercise of their judicial functions. As a matter of principle, the requirement is not that judges are necessarily appointed for life or enjoy statutory irremovability but rather that stability of tenure is guaranteed for the duration of their term. Comparative approaches reveal, for instance, that while the duration of the term of office does not in itself impact independence, the transfer of judges to other courts or functions and the dismissal of judges from their office implies a considerable risk to judicial independence.Footnote 29 There is case law in support of this standard, as exemplified by Campbell and Fell v UK, where the ECHR considered the irremovability of judges “a necessary corollary of their independence”.Footnote 30 It appears that the removal of judges is governed by practices that vary depending on the country, legal tradition and history. They include removal by a resolution of parliament (the UK and Canada), binding decisions of judicial service commissions (France and Uganda) or court orders (Germany and Denmark). Although irremovability is a strict requirement of institutional independence, the ECHR has held that failure to meet this condition may not in itself imply a violation of the human right to an independent tribunal.Footnote 31
Another unavoidable standard setter in assessing judicial independence is whether any given judiciary involves an oversight body, what the composition of such a body is and how it operates.Footnote 32 In Africa, oversight bodies are generally known as Judicial Service Commissions or Councils (JSC) in common law countries, whereas the civil law sphere has borrowed the French tradition of the Conseil supérieur de la magistrature (CSM). Some key parameters can affect the effectiveness of such commissions. Firstly, their entrenchment in the constitution may guarantee that they are insulated from political pressure. Secondly, their composition should not be dominated by political appointees, who may tend to be guided by loyalty in performing their duties. Finally, their procedures should be led by openness and accountability in order to avoid appointments and other career management functions being performed in a manner that does not promote judicial independence.Footnote 33 Commentators have also suggested that some main principles should guide the operation of JSCs: appointments should be merit-based, the process should be led by the desire to preserve judicial independence, and nominations should reflect social diversity and should preserve accountability through transparency.Footnote 34
Notwithstanding the merits of these innovative proposals towards such composition and operation, there is no international norm or doctrinal position that suggests that these standards would guarantee judicial independence. In fact, experiences reveal that fully or partly executive-free JSCs, as known in most common law countries, including in Africa, still grapple with challenges to judicial independence in respect of the operation of the oversight body.Footnote 35 Overall, there is a suggestion that a pertinent approach to assessing judicial independence should be multifold and pluri-dimensional.Footnote 36 One of these dimensions may be understood by asking whether and to what extent a determinant control of the judiciary's oversight body holds the potential to inhibit independence.
Determinant control of the oversight body inhibits independence
Traditionally, JSCs are headed and run largely if not exclusively by professional judges themselves, while CSMs are headed and run by the president of the republic or cabinet members, although judges have the largest membership and prominent substantive roles on the body. The recurring issue is therefore, especially when it comes to civil law countries, whether and to what extent involvement of the executive in the operation of the oversight body inhibits judicial independence. In the following cases, regional adjudicatory bodies have grappled with the question. The analysis seeks to demonstrate that determination of actual bias requires evidentiary investigation, and executive membership of oversight bodies cannot in itself establish the required dependence nexus.
The factual nexus is key in determining bias
In Samuel Mack Kit v Cameroon (Mack Kit), the ACmHPR considered the complainants’ claim that courts of the respondent state granted the use of a disputed name and emblem to the opposition political party because the courts operated under the influence of the executive, as the president of the republic is the guarantor of judicial independence, appoints judges and presides over the CSM.Footnote 37 The issue set out for determination was whether impartiality was not observed where three different domestic courts dismissed the applicants’ request to regain the use of the name and emblem of their political party on the same ground, ie lack of jurisdiction. The ACmHPR undertook an examination of the matter with a particular emphasis on whether and why the role of the executive in the operation of the CSM impacted on judicial independence. It may be relevant at this juncture to note that in its case law on judicial independence, the ACmHPR had set out that independence should be assessed against the absence of pressure or interference, mainly from the executive.Footnote 38 Some specific criteria considered include appointment, security of tenure, protection from external interference, perception of independence and the CSM being headed by the president of the republic, assisted among others by the Minister of Justice.Footnote 39
In considering the complainants’ allegation of partiality in Mack Kit, the ACmHPR first set out a factual basis drawn from the manner in which domestic courts handled the original case.Footnote 40 The first court dismissed the case for lack of merit, namely in respect of the counterclaim seeking the protected use of the disputed name and emblem being declared illegal. The same court also failed to make any ruling on its jurisdiction to hear the counterclaim. The second court ruled only on the jurisdiction of the first court but not on the counterclaim. Furthermore, the latter court reversed the sentencing of one of the applicants for illegal use of the name and emblem yet declined to rule on the applicants’ request to nullify the protected use of the emblem by the opposing party. Finally, in adjudicating a subsequent suit filed by the applicants, a third court arrived at the same conclusion as the second court.
Based on this factual setting, the ACmHPR found that there was ground for legitimate suspicion of bias. The Commission relied on the traditional subjective versus objective approach to impartiality using mainly the public perception of dependence – generally vis-à-vis the executive branch – as the rationale.Footnote 41 It found that, given complexities inherent in the concept of impartiality and the difficulty of proving bias, public perception remains the most reliable assessment parameter.Footnote 42 It took the view that, in the case at hand, public perception was drawn from constitutional provisions assigning the president to guarantee judicial independence and preside over the CSM, which appoints judges, manages their careers and oversees the operation of the judiciary.Footnote 43 The ACmHPR therefore concluded there had been a breach of the applicants’ right to be tried by an impartial tribunal protected under article 7(1)(d) of the Charter and called on the respondent state to take all the necessary legislative measures with a view to removing all mechanisms through which other branches of government may interfere with the operation of the judiciary and administration of justice. The respondent state was specifically directed to bring relevant provisions of its constitution in line with articles 7(1)(d) and 26 of the Charter.Footnote 44
Understanding this case requires contextualized analysis. Firstly, the ACmHPR relied on the consistent common finding of all three domestic courts to establish reasonable suspicion of partiality. The courts’ finding may not necessarily mean there was bias, given that the trend of upper courts upholding the first-instance ruling should be the norm. As a matter of course, consistency in decisions should affirm good law-making across the system, although it would be rather curious if three courts that are all competent by their statutes would decline to exercise jurisdiction in respect of the same matter. It might have therefore been more judicious for the Commission's reasoning to rely heavily on the inconsistencies in the findings of the respective domestic courts but also on the political context of the case. The latter factor is determinant given that the applicants were known as decade-long opponents to the ruling party which was largely in control of the executive. It is worth recalling that the dispute involved the protected use of the name and emblem of the leading opposition group by what was purported to be a faction of the ruling party.
Secondly, the Commission was called to settle an issue which is systemic to the operation of the judiciary's oversight body in French-speaking or civil law Africa, ie the CSM. A decisive question may be: Does the mere and sole fact that the president of the republic chairs the CSM form sufficient ground for reasonable suspicion of control and bias? The ACmHPR's answer was that the role of the president is actually so central that it provides the executive with a determinant control over the CSM in a manner that impedes the independent functioning of the judiciary as a whole – hence the recommendation that the Constitution be amended to remove the operational and oversight control of the CSM from the executive. It may be argued that in the circumstances of Mack Kit, a joint appraisal of the executive's presence and the particular manner in which domestic courts validly settled a specific case led to the Commission's findings. The hypothesis here is that nexus or causality is key in determining bias.
However, the question that arises about this second leg of the ACmHPR's finding is whether, considered in isolation, the executive oversight factor would systematically lead to a perceived control by the latter branch that induces bias on the part of the judiciary in discharging its duties. In dealing with the scenario of isolated executive oversight, the Commission's outstanding answer seems to be affirmative. In Kevin Gunme and Others v Cameroon (Gunme), involving the same respondent state, the Commission found a breach of judicial independence under article 26 of the Charter, on the grounds that the Cameroon CSM being chaired by the president of the republic and the Minister of Justice “is manifest proof that the judiciary is not independent”.Footnote 45 Knowledgeable commentators may find such a conclusion rather hasty and simplistic, if only for the need to account for the very plausible hypothesis that a bold judiciary could well assert strong independence from the bench. The differentiating factor between Mack Kit and Gunme is that the former involves both executive oversight (by the president and members of cabinet) and direct, perceived involvement or interference, while the latter does not. The distinguishing factor is the Mack Kit context in which three domestic courts with different jurisdictions dismissed the complainants’ claim in a political battle involving the ruling coalition and an opposition party. Besides, in Gunme, pertinent evidence examined by the Commission in assessing the right to be tried by an impartial court could have been used to buttress allegations of judicial bias. These include the complainants’ allegations that anglophones facing criminal charges were transferred to the francophone jurisdictions of the country for trial under the Napoleonic Code, thus adversely affecting their civil rights; the common law presumption of innocence upon arrest was not recognized under the civil law tradition, since guilt is presumed upon arrest and detention; the courts conducted the trial in the French language without interpreters; Southern Cameroon court decisions were ignored by the respondent state; and military courts tried civilians.Footnote 46 Even if the complainants made a general allegation with regard to the state's duty to guarantee judicial independence under article 26 of the Charter, the ACmHPR was availed of the full facts of the case to contextualize its finding on judicial independence.Footnote 47
The point is not that the format in which most CSMs operate in civil law Africa may not lead to judicial dependence. Rather, making a determination in that regard, especially in an adjudicatory framework that seeks to be protective of judicial independence, should be faultless from a law-making standpoint given the paramount importance of the issue at stake. As a matter of fact, illustrations abound of causality between executive-chaired judicial oversight bodies and challenges to judicial independence in Africa, whether in so-called civil or common law countries.Footnote 48 It is interesting in this respect to explore the approach taken by the ACtHPR in one of the most recent regional rulings on the issue.
Executive presence alone does not establish a dependence nexus
The judgment rendered on the merits and reparations in Sébastien Germain Ajavon v Benin (Ajavon) can be seen as the most emblematic ruling of the ACtHPR in respect of judicial independence assessed by the operation of the CSM. The application covers a wide spectrum of claims relating mainly to certain legal reforms implemented by the Benin government, including on the holding of the 2019 parliamentary elections and the amendment of the Constitution. The present discussion focuses on the applicant's allegation that the composition of Benin's CSM, which, in addition to the president of the republic as the chair, includes the ministers of justice, economy and public service and one member appointed by the president, breaches the separation of powers and judicial independence.Footnote 49 The respondent state averred that the Constitution guarantees judicial independence, including through immovability of judges, and the Constitutional Court had declared executive actions unconstitutional in that respect. It was the respondent's submission that the appointment of the concerned ministers to the CSM, including the disciplinary section, was justified by the functions they performed in respect of the remuneration of judges as well as their promotion, career management and retirement.Footnote 50
In finding that the composition of the CSM breached judicial independence as prescribed under article 26 of the Charter, the court sought to establish dependence by functionality. It stressed that the fact that the CSM had been vested with a role to “assist” the president of the republic in chairing necessarily places the oversight body below and therefore in dependence on the executive.Footnote 51 In the ACtHPR's view, such dependence is only amplified by the fact that the executive holds ex officio membership of the CSM while other members are appointed by presidential decree. The court then held that “the membership of the President as the CSM Chairperson and that of the minister of justice is glaring evidence that the judiciary is not independent”.Footnote 52 It finally held that appointees that belong to none of the government branches should have been picked by no organ other than the judiciary.Footnote 53
The ACtHPR ordered the respondent state to “take all necessary measures to guarantee judicial independence”. There surely is some rationale for the framing of the order, even if it does not seem to clearly emerge from either the reasoning or the operative section of the judgment. As the case may be, the matter involved a very specific issue of regional relevance; that is, whether and how the role played by executives in the operation of judiciary oversight bodies affects judicial independence. It would thus have been more purposive law-making, in light of the regional cross-cutting nature of the matter, to provide clearer guidance as to what action is to be taken to reshape the CSM in a way that meets the expected standards.
There is no dispute that the ACtHPR's pronouncement sends a strong signal on the role of the executive in the CSM in Benin, and also to about 15 civil law countries across the continent which adopt similar judicial oversight apparatus. The question may be whether, given the crucial importance of the issue, there could have been a more purposive approach to the adjudicatory solution. Critical sections of the reasoning on the merits, however, help understand the solution. It must first be noted that the applicant's claim, as restated by the ACtHPR, is that the decision of the Constitutional Court to introduce a certificate of conformity as a new requirement for candidature breached his right to participate in the election.Footnote 54 This poses a jurisdictional question, which is how a determination by the Constitutional Court, a tribunal that is out of the judicial structure in civil law countries such as Benin, would form material ground for a claim on causality between executive presence on the CSM and the judicial independence of the Supreme Court and lower courts as prescribed under article 26 of the Charter. I advance that the jurisdictional question is paramount because it has the potential of setting the ambit and efficacy of the adjudicatory solution. A literal reading suggests that individual challenges to judicial independence are regulated under the subjective right to have one's cause heard by an impartial tribunal, protected under article 7(1)(d) of the Charter. Conversely, article 26 prescribes a duty which would apply to judicial independence as an objective and systemic inter-state requirement involving institutions such as the CSM or national electoral commissions. The bottom line is that adjudication of the individual claim under the general ambit of the systemic issue of judicial independence did not provide the most essential ingredient of the context and history of the issue being examined. The fact that the operative reparation order on judicial independence does not seem to apply to the applicant supports such a conclusion.
Similarly, consider for instance the soundness of the systematic finding of a breach of judicial independence solely based on the presence, number and role of executive members on the CSM. Most obviously, from a practical standpoint, an executive presence could have the effect of leading to bias, and thus both realities warrant investigation before one is elected and duly substantiated in context. As a matter of fact, the fully or partly executive-free model of the JSC has not preserved common law judiciaries from interference and dependence.Footnote 55 Conversely, illustrations exist of judiciaries in civil law countries having asserted strong independence despite executive omnipresence in the operation of the CSM.Footnote 56 A comparative perspective from common law spheres shows that two such appointees – members of the public – are picked by the president of the republic in Kenya to sit on the JSC.Footnote 57 In Malawi, the president even designates representatives of the judiciary as members of the JSC, although “in consultation” with the Chief Justice.Footnote 58
In Ajavon, the background check called for a more thorough scrutiny of factors such as immovability of judges, consistent constitutional case law on enforcement of judicial independence, efficacy sought by the involvement of finance and public service ministries, and lack of legislative oversight such as is done in common law countries. Finally, the potentially far-reaching outcome in this case confirms the need for purposive adjudication. Indeed, the pronouncement applies, with insignificant caveats, to many other CSMs across Africa. It remains to be seen if implementation of the judgment will provide the regional impetus that should be expected from such a ruling.
Executive-free operation of oversight bodies does not guarantee independence
As discussed earlier, the executive may use the doctrine of contrarius actus to circumvent its duty of non-interference with the operation of the JSC or CSM. One manifestation of a breach of judicial independence is through abuse of appointment or revocation powers, even when applicable regulations exclude the executive from the oversight body. The decision made by the ACmHPR in José Alidor Kabambi Beya Ushiye and 35 Others v DRC (Kabambi) provides an engaging instance to debate this question.Footnote 59 The matter arose from the removal by presidential decrees of 96 judges, including the 36 complainants. The decrees were issued without the judges being heard by the competent body, the Disciplinary Committee of the CSM. Besides, the decision to dismiss was not made after a proposal of the CSM, as prescribed by the DRC Constitution, the Judges Act and the CSM Act, and the dismissal was based on a ruling of the Supreme Court finding the complainants guilty of bias subsequent to a trial prompted by the Minister of Justice.Footnote 60 According to the complainants, the bias trial, being a civil suit, could not lead to a criminal ruling that could have justified the dismissal. It is therefore not surprising that, arguably, in a bid to cover the wrong, the cabinet tabled before parliament a bill seeking to make the bias trial a criminal proceeding.Footnote 61
Prior to setting out the issues arising, the ACmHPR recalled the criteria for assessing judicial independence under article 26 of the Charter in light of its previous decisions. The ACmHPR restated the criteria as being: i) pressure or interference mainly from the executive, ii) security of tenure, and iii) the role of the executive in the operation of the oversight body.Footnote 62 In a notable departure from its case law, the ACmHPR expounded on the role of the executive in the functioning of the judiciary as one of ensuring the smooth running of the judicial service. Such a role, it stated, requires that the executive performs certain functions, including the appointment of judges, which cannot be viewed or used as a means of interference with the performance of judicial functions. Guarantees that come into play to ensure this separation of functions are known to be: i) predetermined rules for disciplinary procedures in cases of removal, ii) immovability, and iii) consultation prior to appointment or transfer.Footnote 63 The ACmHPR consequently found that, in Kabambi, judicial independence was breached mainly on the ground that the dismissal decrees were issued by the executive without the request of the CSM.Footnote 64
It appears that the ACmHPR rejected the respondent's argument that, by parallelism of forms, appointment powers vested the executive with the unilateral prerogative of dismissal. It must be noted that, prior to Kabambi, the DRC had amended its Constitution to restrict direct executive involvement in the operation of the CSM while retaining nomination and dismissal powers subject to certain requirements. The dismissal decrees therefore constituted an attempt to circumvent the constitutional reform.Footnote 65
The Kabambi decision warrants some observations. The measure directed at the respondent state mirrors the orders in the Ajavon judgment. The Commission recommended that the DRC should “take all legislative or other measures to guarantee judicial independence”.Footnote 66 This measure might be understandable in the context of Kabambi, given that under municipal law, the executive had already been removed from the operation of the CSM, unlike in Ajavon. Therefore, it might have been more purposive to direct that independence be guaranteed in accordance with domestic law and articles 7 and 26 of the Charter. Be that as it may be, Kabambi fails the doctrine of a systematic causal link between executive presence on the CSM and interference or dependence, as suggested in Ajavon. In the former instance, the executive still (ab)used formalistic appointment powers to tamper with judicial independence in bypassing the CSM. Analogy would allow a reference to Gerald Karuhanga v Attorney General (Karuhanga), where the Constitutional Court of Uganda found the president's decision to appoint a retired Chief Justice to succeed himself, in disregard of the recommendation of the JSC, to be in violation of the Constitution.Footnote 67 Karuhanga offers a counter-scenario to the executive presence doctrine, as Uganda adopts the common law regime to the operation of the JSC by which the president of the republic is confined to the formal role of rubber-stamping processes of the oversight body, including appointment and dismissal. Again, as earlier discussed, the executive-free model of oversight may not prove of absolute relevance in context, considering the DRC Kabambi illustration.
It is worth restating that Kabambi occurred in a civil law jurisdiction where reforms had been conducted towards the fully executive-free model applied in common law Africa.Footnote 68 A comparison within the same French-speaking sphere shows that the Senegalese CSM is overwhelmingly composed of judicial officers elected by their peers,Footnote 69 while Ivory Coast adopts a mixed model excluding executive membership.Footnote 70 As alluded to in the introduction to this article, Kenya and Malawi have faced similar challenges as in Kabambi, despite having JSCs which exclude executive membership.
Appraising appointments to civil law constitutional courts
Determination of independence yielded from the oversight body should be multifold
Recent developments in the case law of the ACtHPR corroborate a trend of judicial protection of the rule of law and judicial independence in regional forums. In Ajavon, the Court found that the discretionary powers of the president of the republic to appoint constitutional court judges are not consonant with the duty to guarantee their independence as prescribed under article 26 of the African Charter. According to the applicant, the Constitutional Court was not independent, as its sitting president was the personal lawyer and adviser to the president of the republic for 15 years, presided over the court's proceedings that found the Strike Bill constitutional after holding public views on the right to strike while he was Minister of Justice and Legislation, and participated actively in the drafting and tabling of the Strike and Penal Code Bills.Footnote 71 The respondent state rebutted these submissions by asserting that independence should be assessed against statutory and appointment criteria; that there should be a distinction between the personal views of a judge and whether the statutory framework provided sufficient guarantees of independence; and that the Constitutional Court is a collegial body whose partiality has not been proven.Footnote 72
In determining this issue, in the same judgment in which it ruled on the CSM, the ACtHPR set out a broader range of factors for assessing judicial independence. In respect of the institutional aspect, these include a lack of external unjustified interference, a lack of relationship between the executive and legislature, exclusive judicial competence, administrative functional independence and adequate resources for an effective operation. From an individual's perspective, the court singled out the appointment scheme, security of tenure (in particular, transparent criteria for selection, appointment and duration of term), adequate guarantees against external pressure, and immovability, namely at the discretion of the executive.Footnote 73
In assessing the above criteria, the ACtHPR found that the Constitutional Court met the institutional standards of independence as “in countries of Francophone tradition, located out of the judiciary branch”, the Constitution and Organic Law on the Court includes provisions that guarantee the court's administrative and financial autonomy.Footnote 74 The ACtHPR stressed that “neither the Constitution nor the Organic Law provides that the Constitutional Court can be subjected to direct or indirect interferences or is subordinated to one or more authorities in discharging its jurisdictional mandate”.Footnote 75 The ACtHPR consequently concluded that the independence of the Constitutional Court is guaranteed.Footnote 76 Conversely, with respect to the individual aspect of independence, the ACtHPR preliminarily found that such independence is secured given that the Constitution provides for the immovability of judges of the Constitutional Court, guarantees them immunity from unjustified prosecution and sets out predetermined professional qualification and deontology requirements for appointees.Footnote 77 The ACtHPR concluded, however, that the same cannot be said of security of tenure, especially regarding the renewable term in office of the judges, four of whom are appointed by the Bureau of the National Assembly and three by the president of the republic for a five-year term which is renewable once.Footnote 78 It found that independence was breached within the meaning of article 26 of the Charter because the criteria for renewal of terms were not provided for in the law; the executive and legislature retain discretionary appointment powers; and the president of the republic can initiative review before the Constitutional Court.Footnote 79 Most emphatically, the ACtHPR held that the “renewable nature of the terms of Judges of the Constitutional Court is such that it can weaken their independence in particular for Judges who seek reappointment. In this respect, it is important to note that perception [of independence] is as important as the actual independence of the judiciary.”Footnote 80 The Court thus concluded that the renewal of term does not guarantee independence.Footnote 81
The Ajavon ruling can be hailed for its greater elaboration in the reasoning on independence criteria and method of assessment, as compared to the determination on independence in light of the operation of the CSM in the same case. Having said that, as a standard setter on judicial independence at the regional level, the determination on such independence in respect of the operation of the Constitutional Court might have required a more contextualized approach to adjudication. A first point to make in this respect is that the appointment of a Constitutional Court judge does not raise an issue of the independence of the judiciary as strictly as does the operation of the CSM. One factor to consider might be that the Benin Constitutional Court judges are appointed for only two five-year terms, while their counterparts in the ordinary judicial system, ie the lower courts and the Supreme Court, are appointed once and cease their functions only upon the age of retirement. Furthermore, the latter are career judicial officers to whom security of tenure and other office guarantees are more relevant than they are for the Constitutional Court judges.
A subsequent issue of interest is whether the individual versus system questions of judicial independence under article 26 of the Charter might have affected evidencing and purposive law-making in the determination of this matter. As earlier proffered, the Charter should be read as providing access to an independent and impartial judiciary as an individual subjective right under article 7(1)(d) while prescribing judicial independence as a directive principle of state policy under article 26. As a matter of fact, under article 26, judicial independence is framed as a duty and not the subjective right guaranteed under article 7(1)(d). The crux of the argument is that an individual averment of breach of judicial independence under article 26 would face the evidentiary hurdle of establishing the necessary causal link between the victim and the reprehensible act or breach. A claim of and adjudication on a breach of judicial independence would therefore have a firmer foundation in a joint application of both the abovementioned provisions of the Charter, with article 7(1)(d) taking the lead. It may not be an exaggeration to say that the linking parameter might not have fully emerged in the Ajavon determination.
Testament to the missing parameter is found not far away within the Ajavon judgment where the ACtHPR examined judicial independence from the personal standpoint. The ACtHPR found that judicial independence was not breached, as the applicant failed to prove that the whole Constitutional Court bench was influenced by its president while reviewing certain bills which the applicant claimed affected his rights.Footnote 82 As per the facts of the case, prior to sitting on the Constitutional Court, its president had, as Minister of Justice, defended the same bills at public events and before parliament, which the applicant alleged constituted bias.Footnote 83 Notably, the ACtHPR found “of great concern and emblematic of a disregard to principles of good administration of justice” the attitude of the president of the Constitutional Court, who did not recuse himself after he had played an active role and aired public views about matters on which the latter court adjudicated after he became president.Footnote 84
Ultimately, going by the overall ruling on judicial independence, it would appear that the ACtHPR considered that the systemic parameter of the renewable nature of the term of judges superseded the specific parameter of evidenced perception of bias of the president. Would it then be considered that the impartiality or independence of a judge would be more contingent on the mere fact that his or her term could potentially be renewed by the same authority that held discretionary and exclusive prerogative to make the initial appointment? Another factor worthy of interest is that in civil law Africa, where the executive's obsession with their majority in parliament is a main feature of constitutional democracies, the appointment of constitutional court judges in almost equal shares by the president of the republic and the Bureau of the National Assembly – in some cases by the Speaker or the National Assembly – ultimately results in an exclusive, controlled executive designation. The argument is that, in light of the perception-centred approach taken by the ACtHPR towards breaches of independence, adjudication could have been more context-oriented by checking the weight of the renewable terms against the many other factors, such as direct initial appointment, budget allocation and dispatching, and deliberation by consensus and lack of dissenting opinion, which are all applicable in the case of the Constitutional Court of Benin.
In this discussion, it is relevant to seek comparative guidance from another judgment of the ACtHPR, in Alfred Agbesi Woyome v Ghana (Woyome).Footnote 85 In this case, the court held that comments made by a single Supreme Court judge, in his concurring opinion to the ruling of the Ordinary Bench composed of eight judges, were not sufficient to conclude a violation of the right to be heard by an impartial court.Footnote 86 The ACtHPR further found that the applicant failed to prove how these remarks subsequently tainted the ruling of the 11-judge Review Bench of the Supreme Court in the same matter.Footnote 87 It is notable that, in arriving at this conclusion, the ACtHPR agreed that the statements made were “regrettable and beyond appropriate judicial comments”,Footnote 88 yet it did not consider them as determinant: i) to the role of the concerned judge in the Ordinary Bench proceedings, ii) to the fact that the matter was still pending before the Supreme Court and that he drafted the lead judgment of the Review Bench, iii) to the fact that the impugned statements in the concurring opinion did not aim at expressing the legal position of the judge but rather were factual and subjective about the applicant, and finally iv) to the fact that the key to impartiality determination is perception or reasonable doubt. The dissenting opinions of Justices Niyungeko and Ben Achour unequivocally suggest that the majority could have conducted a better context-oriented impartiality test.
It could also be said that Ajavon is a context-blind stare decisis (sticking to precedent) of Woyome. Judicial independence as prescribed under article 26 of the Charter might equally fall within the political question doctrine. Is judicial independence a legal quandary or rather a political or policy one? Can the law ever adequately frame winning modalities to guarantee such independence? Authors suggest that whatever rules are set, independence is unrealistic when the judges involved lack personal character and technical competence. Recourse has been made to sociology, psychology or even idiosyncrasy to determine the independence of judges or courts.Footnote 89 Voices from within courts have advanced the extremes of life terms or longest non-renewable terms as the most effective guarantee of judicial independence.Footnote 90 Doctrinal views have, however, equally shown that such judges might also expect subsequent appointment in government or state parastatals or even private companies.Footnote 91 Similarly, independence has been solely interrogated from the standpoint of which judges are involved. As Melton and Ginsburg have rightly argued, “[a] local court may be quite independent of local government but beholden to senior judges who control promotions”, “[a] supreme court might be subject to no political influence or pressure yet be so ideologically in line with government that it never rules against it in salient cases”, and “[t]he supreme court may be independent but local courts corrupt”.Footnote 92
In the wake of these considerations, the Ajavon ruling should have perhaps tightened up the independence feature by appreciating the very sui generis nature and history of the origins of constitutional courts, especially in light of the nature of their mandate,Footnote 93 and the centralized constitutional adjudication in civil law jurisdictionsFootnote 94 – factors that inform the political nature of the appointment of judges, instead of election or recruitment as applies to judges of ordinary courts in the same jurisdictions, but also the term- instead of career-based appointment.Footnote 95 The discomfort in addressing a systemic issue governed by article 26 of the Charter through an individualized litigation that should have come under the purview of article 7(1)(d) is more perceptible in the operative declarations. After concluding on the systemic question of the initial and subsequent appointments of constitutional courts that applies to civil law Africa at large, the ACtHPR in the operative section ordered that the respondent state should “take appropriate measures that guarantee such independence”. The measure does not necessarily speak to the individual situation of the application, given the above arguments. Furthermore, given the systemic nature of the issue, more specific measures that take into account the multifold legal and historical context might have served a greater regional-interest adjudication.Footnote 96
Separation of powers demands contextualization in determining interference
It can only be a reinforcing argument to put into jurisprudential perspective the exclusive approach to appointment as decisive for control and dependence. This could be relevantly done by taking a leaf from the EACJ, which is arguably the leading rule-of-law regional adjudicator in Africa.Footnote 97 The following illustration is based on the largely agreed link between the rule of law and judicial independence. Reliance on the EACJ's decision in Simon Peter Ochieng and Another v Uganda (Ochieng) seeks to show how the appointment factor can prove limiting when observed in common law jurisdictions, which are seen as applying the greatest severance of executive interference in appointment processes. Ochieng was concerned mainly with whether the alleged refusal of the president to appoint judges of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal and the High Court of Uganda violated the rule of law and good governance as prescribed in EAC law. Although the EACJ did not make an operative finding on this specific issue, it took the view “by passing” that the decision to increase the number of High Court judges only upon a recommendation of parliament and not by statute violated the law that Uganda set itself and must obey.Footnote 98
However, when it considered the actual issue agreed among the parties as arising from the case, the EACJ took a very flexible approach to the rule of law and the separation of powers. The court posited that although the executive cannot make rules to negate statutory obligations, such a principle is tempered by executive prerogative to formulate regulations to effect a smooth functioning of the central administrative structure.Footnote 99 In fact, the issue hinged on the practice of certificates of financial implication, with respect to which the court found that there is no utility for the executive to effect judicial appointments and then fail to provide the funds required for such appointments.Footnote 100 In the court's view, the practice of certificates is an exception to the rule of law.Footnote 101
In response to the applicant's submission that, by not acting within the recommendations of the Judicial Service Commission as ordered by the Constitutional Court of Uganda in Karuhanga, the executive failed to observe separation of powers, the EACJ similarly disfavoured an absolutist approach. It found that “the interdependence of each branch of government for the internal functioning of the State does not negate the doctrine of separation of powers but is, on the contrary, important for the manifestation of the rule of law”.Footnote 102 The following excerpts of the EACJ's judgment are worth replicating for ease of analysis:
“In our considered view, the question that must occupy a constitutional lawyer (and by extension a constitutional court) is whether and to what extent such a separation actually exists in any given constitution. A purposive interpretation that obliterates the possibility of absurdity is of paramount importance. This position is in part informed by the existence of a school of thought that defines the Executive branch of government to include all state or public officials who are neither legislators nor judges. By implication this would extend to the composition of a Judicial Service Commission such as that in Uganda, which performs a public function.”Footnote 103
As alluded to earlier, Ochieng in the EACJ had a domestic counterpart. In Karuhanga, the Constitutional Court of Uganda was called to decide whether the appointment by the president of a retired Chief Justice to succeed himself was consistent with the relevant provisions of the Constitution. The court found that a Chief Justice who has vacated office by reason of having attained the mandatory age of retirement is not eligible for reappointment because such an appointment violates the relevant provisions of the Constitution. The court's finding was also rooted in the refusal of the president to consider the recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission.Footnote 104 Having the Ajavon standards in mind, Ochieng shows that the appointment factor is only a minimal investigative tool in apprehending the much broader independence quandary. This factor therefore requires thorough and multifold contextualization for enlightened determination.
The need for a nexus and contextualization in assessing the presence of non-judicial branches of government is confirmed by the ECCJ in Jérôme Bougouma and Others v Burkina Faso involving the composition of the Haute Cour de justice, which is a special court largely adopted in civil law Africa with jurisdiction to try the president and ministers for certain predetermined offences, including treason.Footnote 105 The ECCJ held that the mixed membership of the Haute Cour, composed of judicial officers and members of parliament, as well as budgetary allocation subsidiary to that of parliament, cannot be said to violate separation of powers and judicial independence for lack of direct instructions from the appointment authority.Footnote 106 As the ECCJ also held in Sawadogo Paul and Others v Burkina Faso, the fact that the investigating trial judge of the military tribunal was a senior military officer and the Minister of Defence set the prosecution in motion does not suffice to establish dependence.Footnote 107 The court buttressed that the prosecution order is not a judicial order, and appointment of members of the judiciary by executive does not automatically suggest interference because courts are subject only to the authority of the law.Footnote 108 An active nexus was further stressed when the ECCJ held in Counsellor Muhammad Kabine Ja'neh v Liberia and Another that the applicant, a Supreme Court judge who underwent impeachment proceedings before the Senate, did not prove that the Chief Justice presiding over the trial was biased.Footnote 109 As the ECCJ found, the Chief Justice was a single judicial officer who ensured abidance with the law, while other members were senators and triers of facts; his previous judicial roles in respect of the case had negligible bearing on the Senate proceedings; and the applicant failed to raise legitimate doubt in the observer's mind in respect of the Chief Justice's previous roles.Footnote 110
Attempts to prevent enforcement of court orders negate justice
Circumstances where the executive undertakes to stand in the way of court orders also constitute a breach of judicial independence. Court orders ought to be obeyed by all, including government, for the sake of the rule of law. There lies the principle that the EACJ was called to uphold in the well-publicized James Katabazi and Others v Uganda (Katabazi), where it held that the intervention of state-armed agents who surrounded the High Court premises to prevent the issuance of bail documents and the release of the applicants constituted a violation of the rule of law.Footnote 111 While the matter did not involve a direct attack on judges or courts, it is well admitted that the rule of law is critical to judicial independence. Therefore, in instances where the outcome of court processes encounters hurdles to enforcement, the public develops distrust in the justice system and judicial independence is frustrated. Arguably, active or passive acts of the executive to prevent implementation of court orders obviously constitute interference from outside the judiciary and therefore impact on judicial independence.
In Katabazi, the originating events occurred in 2004, when the applicants were charged with treason and misprision of treason and consequently remanded in custody. However, on 16 November 2006, the High Court granted bail to 14 of them. Immediately thereafter the High Court was surrounded by security personnel, who interfered with the preparation of bail documents; the 14 were rearrested and taken back to jail. On 24 November 2006, all the claimants were taken before a general court martial and were charged with offences of unlawful possession of firearms and terrorism. Both offences were based on the same facts as the previous charges for which they had been granted bail by the High Court. All claimants were again remanded in prison by the general court martial. The Uganda Law Society went to the Constitutional Court of Uganda challenging the interference in the court process by the security personnel and also the constitutionality of conducting prosecutions simultaneously in civilian and military courts. The Constitutional Court ruled that the interference was unconstitutional. Despite that decision, the complainants were not released, which led to the application before the EACJ.
Again, while the main issue before the EACJ was not directly whether the acts complained of violated the principle of judicial independence, the rule of law involves separation of powers, hence interference is proscribed. The EACJ's finding should therefore be read through a determination of the rule of law as a channel to the realization of respect for the powers vested in the judiciary to administer justice without interference, namely from the executive. It is of interest to note that, in arriving at its finding in Katabazi, the EACJ employed jurisprudential dialogue as it leant significantly on the views of the ACmHPR in Constitutional Rights Project and Civil Liberties v Nigeria, which stated that government refusal to release the victim despite an order of the Court of Appeal constitutes a violation of article 26 of the African Charter, which obliges states to guarantee the independence of the judiciary.Footnote 112 By leaning on such an approach to judicial independence as grounded in the rule of law, it is not surprising that the EACJ concluded that preventing the release of Katabazi and others as ordered by the courts of law was in breach of the EAC Treaty. The regional court stressed that “abiding by the court decision is the cornerstone of the independence of the judiciary which is one of the principles of the observation of the rule of law”.Footnote 113
Conclusion
This article undertakes a critical assessment of the extent to which Africa's most active regional courts have been guarding the rule of law by protecting the independence of their national counterparts in a context of fragile democracies and hyper-presidentialism. The analysis reveals with certainty that, based on the existing legal framework and mandate granted to them, the regional courts examined have undoubtedly begun to build harbours in support of the independence of national judiciaries. A question for further investigation is whether these efforts can nurture hope for the formation of the much-debated advent of an international rule of law in Africa.
As alluded to, this regional activism in favour of judicial independence has implications. Firstly, it is relevant to bear in mind that judicial independence can be adequately comprehended in the light of the judicial history and legal systems adopted in the continent. Issues pertaining to executive appointment and presence on oversight bodies exemplify such a need. Secondly, recent developments should not be overlooked, such as the shortcomings of reforms in Ivory Coast, DRC and Senegal aimed at expunging executive presence or interference. Thirdly, while it indisputably strengthens judicial independence in Africa, regional jurisprudence should seek to factor in differences between common law and civil law spheres more adequately. The aim is to avoid eroding the understanding and observance of judicial independence while trying to enforce it.
Further observations arise from the analysis. Critical erosions of judicial independence cannot be discussed without considering the global trend towards some kind of “democracy crisis”. The outcome of adjudication on judicial independence in Africa should therefore serve as a foundation for regional intergovernmental organizations, such as the African Union, ECOWAS, EAC and SADC, to contextualize the debate on their top-down approach to constitutional democracy. There may be a need for convergence, full or partial, given that the current trend of enforcement is simultaneously continental and sub-regional. One ancillary question is whether guaranteeing judicial independence from above will prove effective with municipal systems that are prone to alarming regression regarding most tenets of constitutional democracy. It would seem that, for regional independence harbours to be effective, minimum vetting improvements are needed within national justice systems.
Institutional implications and structural impact should also be considered. Regionalization of judicial independence surely comes with issues of relationship, dialogue and coordination between regional courts and their national counterparts. As regional courts already face the challenge of state-led resistance, it is critical that efforts to strengthen judicial independence are preserved by ensuring a vertical judicial dialogue free from unnecessary antagonism.Footnote 114
Competing interests
The author is Ag Head of Legal Division and Principal Legal Officer at the African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights. The views expressed in this article are exclusively those of the author and do not in any manner represent the views of the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights.