The Ministry of Justice’s power games continue unabated.
Yesterday, this newspaper ran a story on a proposed amendment to the Criminal  Code that would allow judges and prosecutors to punish defendants, lawyers,  reporters, activists and any other people who publicize evidence or case details  in a manner that upsets the court. Other behavior in or out of court that  “disobeys the orders” of the court in the eyes of judges would also be dealt  with severely.
The main problem with these changes is that they are  impossibly vague, which is sure evidence that they are a kneejerk response from  prosecutorial officials who suffered professional humiliation during the  debacle-ridden trials of former president Chen Shui-bian (陳水扁).
There is  no question that reform of how the media deal with the courts is warranted.  Unfortunately, the ministry and the drafter(s) of the proposed amendment are  exploiting a system in flux and a souring institutional reputation to crack down  on one side. The bias this reflects is distressing for anyone who hoped for a  legal system that placed propriety before political meddling.
The  ministry’s justification for this attempted change is impossibly superficial. It  is not about the law and how it determines guilt or innocence, but about  preventing the impression that the court “indulges madness.”
The result  will be a chilling effect on the activities of lawyers as they set about  defending their clients and on reporters and activists who attempt to expose  judicial abuses and illegalities. The new court environment would resemble the  bad old days of Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) rule, in which judges took their  orders from above as necessary and issued orders below, and defendants had  precious little advocacy and were routinely framed.
Only a decade after  defense attorneys were granted the power to cross-examine witnesses, this  proposed amendment stands as a political counterattack launched against reform  in general, as well as against irritants who have exposed the lack of  accountability of judges who break the law by denying suspects due process in  court, and of prosecutors who habitually leak evidence to damage the standing of  defendants.
We are led to believe, if this amendment is passed, that the  material many prosecutors use to defame suspects through leaks to pliant media  outlets cannot be held to account by legal teams defending their clients — at  risk of prosecution by the same people who leaked the information.
Under  Minister Wang Ching-feng (王清峰), the ministry has ignored its responsibility to  uphold the integrity of the judicial system as a whole and has blocked or  stalled essential reforms. In this context, the proposed amendment is an  unwitting indictment of the sleazy coalition of bureaucrats, prosecutors and  judges who back it, and marks a possible new stage in the degradation of the  nation’s judicial system.
If granted these new, vague powers, certain  prosecutors and judges will crack down on aggressive defense teams for no other  reason than to make their jobs easier and keep dissident opinion in its place.  Inevitably, they will also seek to intimidate, silence and/or punish people who  champion reform of this increasingly maladroit institution.
This pathetic  minister must be thrown out. It appears, however, that the old-school forces she  represents or tolerates are formidable and shaping for a fight.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2009/12/19
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