In the mid-eighties, a visiting
American professor of philosophy who lectured at the UP
in Diliman was asked, "What in your opinion is the most
negative aspect of Philippine life?" Without hesitation
he replied, "The administration of justice."
If
he were to be asked the same question today, I wager he
would still give the same reply. The administration of
justice is snail-paced. Investigations go on and on,
ending nowhere, and the cases which have engendered the
investigations of extremely grave offenses, are soon
forgotten.
Police brutality (read unbearable
torture) is administered to innocent people to extract
"confessions" of guilt. Other innocent people languish
in jail under the most inhuman conditions while certain
favored criminals enjoy scandalous privileges.
In this regard, legal luminaries and esteemed
columnists deem a house arrest for the former president
illegal, yet the matter has been the subject of absurd
debate. Further, if Mr. Estrada were to be granted his
request, what would stop other prisoners from making the
same appeal? Then there is the perennial charge of
corruption levelled at the judges themselves – from the
lowest rung of the judiciary to, yes, the highest.
In the light of all this, the latest book of
Associate Justice Art Panganiban, Reforming the
Judiciary, gains immediate, indeed, urgent
relevance. The book is written in layman’s language;
consequently, no legal training or background is
necessary to comprehend or understand it. Nevertheless,
the book should be of utmost interest to members of the
judiciary and to lawyers for which reason I have passed
my copy to the lawyer in the family, my young
grandnephew Patrick V. Orosa.
Here are excerpts
from the foreword of Chief Justice Hilario G. Davide,
Jr. to Reforming the Judiciary:
"Presented in
Justice Panganiban’s inimitable writing style, a subject
that is otherwise ponderous and tedious is again
rendered interesting, even entertaining, yet always
informative and faithful to the facts and the history
that it creates.
"I consider this book the most
important to have been published in many, many years, as
it describes in great detail the ‘Action Program for
Judicial Reform’ which I regard as the centerpiece of my
stewardship of the Supreme Court and the Judiciary.
"In a very real sense, therefore, Justice
Panganiban could very well have entitled this highly
consequential tome – his sixth on the High Court – as
‘Re-inventing the Judiciary’, since he has covered the
entire gamut of our system of justice and governance in
a manner that no one else has attempted or achieved
before. His talent for infusing an eyewitness account
quality into his writings and numerous speeches afford
them immediacy and significance that can only come from
an insider’s heart and mind."
Besides Mr.
Davide’s glowing praise for the man and the book, Mr.
Panganiban’s other peers admire him (and I quote) for
his "clarity of thought and cleanness of prose", adding,
"he is one of the most prodigious members of the
distinguished court in terms of numbers of decisions
authored, legal references published and numerous
articles written in legal journals and various local and
international publications."
All the foregoing
are valid reasons for making Justice Panganiban’s book
imperative reading not only for the New Year but also
for all seasons because the judiciary needs reforming –
at once.
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MESSAGE BOARD |
Should Filipinos in risky
Middle East areas be a) relocated or b)
evacuated once war erupts between Iraq and the
US? Why?
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The question to be
asked is HOW! No one seems to know the answer to
that. |
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for me not nescesary
to do that. we know that the american hit only
those places which is intented t |
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Why worry about war
between iraq and US? If these Filipinos are
professing Christians,then they
sho | |
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