ninth ammendment to the constitution of belize: tracking the trails
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NINTH AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION OF BELIZE:
Following the Trails
1. The Ninth Amendment
2. Press ReleaseBar Association of Belize
3. Press ReleaseBelize Chamber of Commerce
4. Open Letter from the Prime Minister of Belize
August 2011
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(www.belize.org)
BCCI Calls on the Government to Withdraw the 9th
Amendment Bill
Wednesday, August 3, 2011If enacted, the proposed Ninth Amendment to Belizes Constitution creates a very dangeroussituation, which is not contemplated by our Constitution. It allows the Legislature to have
absolute power to amend the Constitution as long as it has the requisite two-thirds to three-
fourths majority and follows the other procedural requirements under Section 69 to enable theamendment. In effect, we move from a Constitutional Supremacy where the laws passed by the
Legislature must conform to the Constitution, to Parliamentary Supremacy where the Parliament
is supreme and can pass any law without reference to our Constitution. The potential for abuse isreal. If the Legislature has absolute powers it can take away any fundamental right or freedom
from Belizeans by further amending the Constitution, and we will have no recourse to challenge
the substance of the amendments.
In other words, with the passage of the Ninth Amendment we risk losing the basic rights andfreedoms we as Belizeans consider the very essence of our democracy. We would be placing
ultimate control of our democracy in the hands of our elected representatives, without any check
on their powers. As with the recently withheld proposed Eighth Amendment (PreventativeDetention), we note that this current administration had proposed drastic changes to our personal
liberties. With the Ninth Amendment, the Eighth Amendment can be reintroduced, and we would
be unable to challenge its substance in the courts.In our democracy all persons are equal before the law, and all persons are afforded equal rights
to challenge any law passed by the Legislature. While the Chamber recognizes the right of the
Government to nationalize property, every person whose property has been acquired should have
a right to access the Court to challenge that acquisition. If the Constitution is to be amended to
deny that right to certain persons, it creates inequality in our law, undermines our democracy andsets new precedence to which we can all become victims.
Further, the Chamber objects to the proposal that investment of Social Security funds, the peoples money, should now be considered Government shares in public utility companies.
Government control and interference have been shown to be detrimental to the Fund, which is
why the Chamber and other social partners fought in 2005 to take the Social Security fund out of political control. The Ninth Amendment seeks to reverse the people's will as expressed at that
time and to deem the Social Security Boards (SSB) shares in our public utilities as a part of the
Governments shareholding, with the requirement that if the SSB is to sell its shares, it must firstoffer the shares to Government. Aside from infringing on the SSBs freedom to deal with its
property, this gives rise to possible conflict of interest and abuse.
If the entrenchment of ownership of public utilities is all the Ninth Amendment sought toachieve, the Chamber would not be so concerned. However, when the Government goes beyondentrenchment and seeks to interfere with our fundamental rights as Belizeans, rights which if lost
may never be regained, this cannot be taken lightly.
The Chamber calls on the Government to withdraw the Ninth Amendment and renews its call forthe Government to desist from taking any actions that offend the principle of separation of
powers and our democratic institutions enshrined and entrenched in our Constitution.
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Government PRESS OFFICEBELIZE
Phone: 501-822-0094, 0092, 0759 Fax: 501-822-2671 website:www.belize.gov.bz
July 29, 2011
Letter from the Prime Minster of Belize to the People of Belize
Clarification to The Belize Constitution (Ninth Amendment) Act 2011
Dear All,
The competence, or lack thereof, of courts to review Constitutional amendments in countries withwritten constitutions that are supreme, derives from the text, language and provisions of the said
constitutions. Where the Constitution does not expressly grant such a power to the courts, judicial
review of the merits of Constitutional amendments is not possible. Of course, the courts can always
examine, and pronounce on, Constitutional amendments on the ground of failure to comply with the
procedure for amendment to the Constitution.
In the Irish Supreme Court case of Riordan v An Taoiseach, the constitutionality of the Nineteenth
Amendment to the Irish Constitution was challenged. The applicant Dennis Riordan asked for a
declaration that the 19th
Amendment.is repugnant to the Constitution and is therefore
unconstitutional, null void, and inoperative. The Court refused on the ground that a Constitutionalamendmentis different in kind from ordinary legislation.A proposed amendment to the
Constitution will usually be designed to change something in the Constitution and will therefore, until
enacted, be inconsistent with the existing text of the Constitution, but, once approved.under Article
46 and promulgated by the President into law, it will form part of the Constitution and cannot be
attacked as unconstitutional.
The position in the US, Canada, the Caribbean and Belize, is the same as in Ireland: except for
procedural non-compliance, no court can enquire into the merits of, or strike down, a Constitutional
amendment. The Constitution of Belize, in section 69, sets out exhaustively the manner in which the
Constitution can be altered. Nowhere in the Constitution is any power given to the courts to add a
further requirement, such as a referendum. Therefore when ex-Chief Justice Conteh did so in the Barry
Bowen land case, he was quite wrong. And the Privy Council refused to follow him in the Vellos case.
When Conteh gave the Bowen decision, he was following the ruling of the Indian Supreme Court in
the case of Kesavananda Bharati v State of Kerala. In that judgment it was held that the amending
power in the Constitution, even if properly exercised procedurally, cannot be used to modify the basic
structure of the Constitution.
But Kesavananda, which was extremely controversial in India, has been rejected everywhere else
except by Conteh in Belize. That is because, in the absence of express substantive limits on theamending power in a Constitution, Kesavananda implies such limits. But the Irish Supreme Court, the
US Supreme Court and the Canadian Supreme Court all refuse to imply such limits. As various
scholars have pointed out, it is logically impossible to accept the legal validity of implied limits when
they have no textual support in the language and provisions of a Constitution.
The position in Belize even without the 9th
Amendment is clear. There is no limit on the power of the
National Assembly to amend the Constitution, once the National Assembly acts in accordance with
section 69. And the Courts should have no power to strike down amendments properly passed under
section 69. The 9th
Amendment is only spelling out the law as it currently is in Belize and every other
Constitutional Democracy in the world, except for India.
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Those campaigning against the Bill, which we must never forget has the enshrinement of public
utilities in state control as its principal objective, say two very wrong-headed things: that the unlimited
power to amend, which the Constitution has given to Parliament, is a sure open-door to abuse; and that
the Bill would deny access to court for anyone wishing to challenge a Constitutional amendment.
If it is true that the unlimited power of the Legislature to amend the Constitution is an invitation to
tyranny, then that has been the position since 1981 when the Constitution came into force. And to
argue about what, as a result, is possible in theory without accepting what is impossible in practice, is
to proceed in error or deception. We share the same Constitutional democratic system as the big
countries. And it is insulting to our people to suggest that there is any greater practical chance of the
abuse happening here, as opposed to happening in Canada or the US. Just as in those two countries,
there is in Belize the kind of democracy, tradition, and people power that is the ultimate safeguard
against abuse.
Then, of course, the 9
th
Amendment Bill does not stop any citizen from going to court. And thecampaigning Lawyers know this. The Bill says that a law passed by the National Assembly to alter
any of the provisions of the Constitutions in conformity with this section shall not be open to challenge
in any court of law on any ground whatsoever. That language does not mean that an applicant is
unable to make a claim in Court; that he would be debarred from filing his papers in the Registry; or
that the court would turn back the suit and not hear the matter. The language does mean that a Court,
and this is the position even without the Bill, should find against an applicant who seeks to strike down
any amendment passed in conformity with Section 69.
That no one is stopped from going to court is made clear by the Irish Supreme Court case earlier
referred to, in which the court did not refuse to hear the challenge to the Constitutional amendment.
The Pakistan Constitution, in its Article 239, unequivocally states that (1) there is no limitation on the
authority of parliament to amend the Constitution, and (2) the Court must not entertain legal challenges
against Constitutional amendments. Yet there have been countless cases brought in that jurisdiction
attacking Constitutional amendments. The Courts have heard everyone.
I hope this clarifies things and, needless to say, the Government will consider itself bound by the
outcome of the public consultation process.
Sincerely,
DEAN BARROW
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