The President of the Caribbean Court of Justice - The Rt. Honourable Mr.
Justice Michael de la Bastide,
Honourable Justices of the Court,
Honourable Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago, and other Heads of Government
of the Caribbean Community,
Honourable Ministers,
Eminent Guests,
Your Excellencies,
Fellow West Indians:
A DAY WHICH RESONATES
This day, this inauguration of the Caribbean Court of Justice, resonates
throughout our Caribbean Community as a moment of unique significance. In our
shared history, we have had many "firsts" since decolonization but
today, more than any other, tastes like true and final emancipation. I believe
that Caribbean people recognize, intuitively what this represents - this
assertion of faith in ourselves and in our custodianship of the values that are
sacred to our societies, none moreso than the rule of law. This is a celebration
of those values, and a proclamation of our intent to preserve them at the centre
of our lives.
A MESSAGE OF CONFIDENCE
My message to the people of the Caribbean Community is summarised in one
word: confidence. Confidence in the "rightness" of the step we are now
taking to establish the Caribbean Court of Justice, and confidence in our
ability to continue the journey, which that first step implies.
Let us recall that our legal profession, which is the bed-rock of our
judicial system, proclaims a glorious past. Excluding the older and larger
countries of the Commonwealth - Britain itself, Australia, Canada and India -
the legal profession in the Caribbean has been among the strongest in the
Commonwealth for three-quarters of a century.
PROFESSIONALS OF CHOICE
Indigenisation of our judicial system and legal institutions did not await
political independence. While we still had Governors and Chief Secretaries from
Britain, we had West Indian Judges and Attorneys General, often, but not always,
serving in countries of the Region other than their own. When African countries
came to independence almost two decades before us, they turned to the Caribbean
for lawyers to hold their highest legal and judicial offices. Caribbean lawyers
filled the office of Chief Justice of Kenya, of Nigeria and of Zimbabwe. Indeed,
the leaders of the Bar in this Region have long been the professionals of choice
throughout the Caribbean - as, of course, they continue to be.
And, West Indian lawyers have held some of the highest judicial offices in
the world. The Caribbean has provided a Judge to the world's most senior
judicial body - the International Court of Justice in the Hague. A West Indian
lawyer is now the Chairman of the International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea
in Hamburg; our Region provides Judges to the Yugoslav and Rwanda War Crimes
Tribunal and the Yugoslav Tribunal's appellate body; we have held the
Chairmanship of the Inter-American Juridical Tribunal; and, now, we have had the
distinction of providing one of the first Judges of the International Criminal
Court. In per capita terms, I doubt if any other community in the world has
served the world-wide cause of justice more comprehensively and more
consistently than has the Caribbean.
My point is simple. It is this: The Caribbean is not a fledgling state
approaching tentatively the threshold of the rule of law. We laid the
foundations of strong legal professions and legal and judicial institutions many
decades ago; and both at home and abroad our lawyers have risen to the highest
levels of legal and judicial service. To question our capacity to complete what
is after all the overdue reform of our regional judicial system is to do a
disservice to ourselves.
But, even more specifically, in the matter of a Regional Court of Appeal, `we
have been there and done that'. And, at a level of high quality. The Federal
Supreme Court was our Regional Court of Appeal during the life of the
Federation; it was staffed for the most part, by West Indian Judges. I was too
young to have appeared before that Court, but I have read and relied on its
decisions. There are some here, today, who did appear before that early Regional
Court of Appeal and can testify to its excellence and eminence. The judgments
were exceptional, erudite and sound. They passed the sternest tests. They earned
the respect of the legal profession and of the West Indian public throughout the
Region.
The Caribbean Court of Justice is therefore, not a leap into the darkness. It
is a leap of enlightenment. This Region has the most sturdy credentials for
creating a Regional Court of Appeal that can respond, and respond with finality,
to the most rigorous standards of the rule of law. These are credentials, which
should have vouchsafed us a more supportive environment for reform from all
concerned, even from those who still decry our aspirations.
This inauguration is, therefore, not about the abolition of appeals to the
Privy Council; that will ultimately be its consequence, and an important one.
This inauguration is about something much more profound and positive - it is
about establishing for ourselves through the Caribbean Court of Justice what the
House of Lords does for Britain - and what the final appellate courts of the
overwhelming majority of jurisdictions in the Commonwealth do for their
respective countries. We are not breaking ranks; we are joining a progressive
process in the Commonwealth, which process will not be stayed.
FAITH IN OUR CAPACITIES
As with all noble undertakings there will be some who are fainthearted; who
question competence; or who are ill at ease with changing the status quo in
which they were nurtured. To them I say with confidence: banish your fears; have
faith in our Caribbean capacities and in our collective ability to sustain and
enhance a regional jurisprudence of which every corner of our Region can be
proud. In the end, the rule of law cannot be in safer hands than our own. This
Region, hands clasped together, will strengthen the rule of law, binding our
separate societies.
We can and must have our own Caribbean Court of Justice with original
regional and final appellate jurisdiction. We shall do so; and we shall do so,
of course, by due process of law, even when we believe that a judgment is
flawed, unsound and laced with intellectual bigotry. Such is the ethos of law
that pervades our regional societies. We must not be balked by fear or
intimidated by sophistries, which would contrive other outcomes.
This Court is one of the institutions we must establish in furtherance of our
regional goals; but I believe that its establishment - as a manifest act of
mature commitment and resolve - will itself make more probable the attainment of
those larger goals and purposes. In that context, this act of inauguration this
morning is of monumental import.
May God's blessings, Mr. President, attend the efforts you and your
colleagues will make in laying the foundations of the Caribbean Court of
Justice. I am certain that as you go forward you can be assured of the enduring
confidence of the vast majority of the people of the Caribbean in your
undertaking.
I thank you, Mr. President, for giving me the opportunity of sharing this
historic moment with you, other colleagues, and the people of our Caribbean
Community.