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Kommentar: Migrated to Confluence 5.3

Rule of Law in Iraq

Original contribution by Dr. Bawar Bammarny LL.M., research fellow in the Iraq Rule of Law Project at the Max-Planck-Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg and lecturer for Arabic public and private law at the University of Heidelberg.

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Article 37 of the Iraqi Constitution of 2005 contains many provisions for the protection of fundamental rights and freedoms:

Article 37

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First:
A. The liberty and dignity of man shall be protected.
B. No person may be kept in custody or investigated except according to a judicial decision.
C. All forms of psychological and physical torture and inhumane treatment are prohibited. Any confession made under force, threat, or torture shall not be relied on, and the victim shall have the right to seek compensation for material and moral damages incurred in accordance with the law.
Second: The state shall guarantee protection of the indicidual from intellectual, political and religious coercion.
Third: Forced labor, slavery, slave trade, trafficking in women or children, and sex trade shall be prohibited.

Article 38 Article 38 guarantees the freedom of expression and press freedom and the freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration:

Article 38

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The State shall guarantee in a way that does not violate public order and morality:
First: Freedom of expression using all means.
Second: Freedom of press, printing, advertisement, media and publication.
Third: Freedom of assembly and peaceful demonstration, and this shall be regulated by law.

Article 39 Article 39 guarantees the freedom to form and join associations and political parties.

Article 39

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First: The freedom to form and join associations and political parties shall be guaranteed, and this shall be regulated by law.
Second: It is not permissible to force any person to join any party, society, or political entity, or force him to continue his membership in it.

Article 40 Article 40 guarantees the freedom of communication.

Article 40

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The freedom of communication and correspondence, postal, telegraphic, electronic and telephonic, shall be guaranteed and may not be monitored, wiretapped, or disclosed except for legal and security necessity and by a judicial decision.

Article 42 Article 42 guarantees the freedom of thought, conscience and belief.

Article 42

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Each individual shall have the freedom of thought, conscience, and belief.

Article 44 Article 44 guarantees the freedom of movement, travel and residence of Iraqi citizens.

Article 44

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First: Each Iraqi has freedom of movement, travel, and residence inside and outside Iraq.

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Second: No Iraqi may be exiled, displaced, or deprived from returning to the homeland.

In a decision (No. 34 of November 24, 2008) the Iraqi Federal Supreme Court relied on these articles and cancelled a decision of the Iraqi Parliament which had deprived a parliamentarian of his membership because he had travelled to Israel.

III. Fair Trial

Article 19 Article 19 of the Iraqi Constitution guarantees Fair Trial:.

Article 19

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First: The judiciary is independent and no power is above the judiciary except the law.

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Second: There is no crime or punishment except by law. The punishment shall only be for an act that the law considers a crime when perpetrated. A harsher punishment at the time of the offense may not be imposed.
Third: Litigation shall be a protected and guaranteed right for all.
Fourth: The right to a defense shall be sacred and guaranteed in all phases of investigation and the trial.
Fifth: The accused is innocent until proven guilty in a fair legal trial. The accused may not be tried for the same crime for a second time after acquittal unless new evidence is produced.
Sixth: Every person shall have the right to be treated with justice in judicial and administrative proceedings.
Seventh: The proceedings of a trial are public unless the court decides to make it secret.
Eighth: Punishment shall be personal.
Ninth: Laws shall not have retroactive effect unless stipulated otherwise. This exclusion shall not include laws on taxes and fees.
Tenth: Criminal laws shall not have retroacrive effect, unless it is to the benefit of the accused.
Eleventh: The court shall appoint a lawyer at the expense of the state for an accused of a felony or misdemeanor who does not have a defense lawyer.
Twelfth:
A. Unlawful detention shall be prohibited.

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B

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. Imprisonment or detention shall be prohibited in places not designed for these purposes, pursuant to prison laws covering health and social care, andsubject to the authorities of the State.
Thirteenth: The preliminary investigative documents shall be submitted to the competent judge in a period not to exceed twenty-four hours from the time of the arrest of the accused, which may be extended only once and for the same period.

IV. Equality before the Law

The Iraqi Constitution contains many provisions that call for the equality of all citizens of Iraq, such as Article 14, 16, and 20.

Article 14

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Iraqis are equal before the law without discrimination based on gender, race, ethnicity, nationality, origin, color, religion, sect, belief or opinion, or economic or social status.

Article 16
Equal opportunities shall be guaranteed to all Iraqis, and the state shall ensure that the necessary measures to achieve this are taken.

Article 20
Iraqi citizens, men and women, shall have the right to participate in public affairs and to enjoy political rights including the right to vote, elect, and run for office.

Article 49 Paragraph 4 requires a minimum quota of women in parliament of not less than one-quarter of the members of the Council of Representatives.

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However, Iraq meets all formal legal requirements, which would ensure this country's future progress. And it possesses all the necessary financial resources, due to the enormous oil reserves (about 11% of total oil reserves in the world).

Panel
Bibliography

Al-Istrabadi, Feisal Amin, Reviving constitutionalism in Iraq: Key provisions of the transitional administrative law. In: New York Law School Law Review 50/269, 2005, p. 269-302unmigrated-wiki-markup

Al-Mahmood, Medhat, Al-qada fi al-iraq \ [The judicial system in Iraq\], Bagdad 2nd ed. 2010 [http://www.mpil.de/shared/data/pdf/mahmood-the_judicial_system_in_iraq_2004.pdf|http://www.mpil.de/shared/data/pdf/mahmood-the_judicial_system_in_iraq_2004.pdf] (last visit April 2011)

Carlson, Scott, Establishing the rule of law. In: Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law, 33/1, 2004, p. 119-141

Deeks at al., Iraq´s Constitution: A Drafting History. In: Cornell International Law Journal 40/1, 2007, p. 1-87

Hamoudi, Haider Ala, Toward a Rule of Law Society in Iraq: Introducing Clinical Legal Education into Iraqi Law Schools. In: Berkeley Journal International Law 23/112, 2005, p. 112-136.

Hamoudi, Humam, My perceptions on the Iraqi constitutional process. In: Stanford Law Review, 59/5, 2007, p.1315-1320

Iraqi Legal Database http://www.iraq-ild.org/http://www.iraq-ild.org/ (last visit April 2011)

Mallat, Chibli Mallat, Iraq: Guide to Law and Policy, New York 2009unmigrated-wiki-markup

Naji, Makki, Al-mahkama al-ithadiya al-ulya fi al-iraq \ [The Iraqi Federal Supreme Court\], Bagdad 2007