Jamaica’s Prime Minister Bruce Golding has started to meet opposition to a proposed amendment to the Bail Act.
Under the proposal amendment, an accused person may be detained for 60 days without bail but he must be taken before the court during that period.
However, the Independent Jamaican Council for Human Rights, says this provision is trespassing on the authority and independence of the judiciary.
According to Nancy Anderson, the legal officer for the Independent Jamaican Council for Human Rights, the judiciary is the most appropriate entity to determine whether an accused individual should be granted bail.
She is insisting that the proposal to make it lawful for an individual to be held for as many as 60 days without bail is encroaching on the discretion of the courts.
More than two years ago when the Bail (Amendment) Act was tabled, concerns were also raised about the proposal to detain accused people for as many as 60 days without bail.
The Government has since revised that bill.
It is still suggesting that accused people may be held for 60 days without bail, but on the condition that are taken to court during the period.
Yesterday, in opening the debate on the proposed changes to the Bail Act and five other anti-crime laws Mr Golding said he was expecting resistance.
However, he said the measures are necessary in order to respond to the current crime situation.
The Bail (Amendment) Act and the five other bills are part of the anti-crime legislative framework the Government wants to implement this year.
Under the proposal amendment, an accused person may be detained for 60 days without bail but he must be taken before the court during that period.
However, the Independent Jamaican Council for Human Rights, says this provision is trespassing on the authority and independence of the judiciary.
According to Nancy Anderson, the legal officer for the Independent Jamaican Council for Human Rights, the judiciary is the most appropriate entity to determine whether an accused individual should be granted bail.
She is insisting that the proposal to make it lawful for an individual to be held for as many as 60 days without bail is encroaching on the discretion of the courts.
More than two years ago when the Bail (Amendment) Act was tabled, concerns were also raised about the proposal to detain accused people for as many as 60 days without bail.
The Government has since revised that bill.
It is still suggesting that accused people may be held for 60 days without bail, but on the condition that are taken to court during the period.
Yesterday, in opening the debate on the proposed changes to the Bail Act and five other anti-crime laws Mr Golding said he was expecting resistance.
However, he said the measures are necessary in order to respond to the current crime situation.
The Bail (Amendment) Act and the five other bills are part of the anti-crime legislative framework the Government wants to implement this year.
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