Effective functioning of Environment Court
By: Advocate Md. Rayhan Uddin (+8801914676110)
Agenda 21, a comprehensive action program adopted at the historic Rio
Conference of 1992, was designated to integrate the goals of continued
economic development and environmental protection. In pursuance of this
Agenda, the first Environment Court Act was passed in 2000. However, to
meet the challenge of time and to ensure the proper application of
environmental laws of Bangladesh effectively, the Environment Court Act,
2000 has been repealed in 2010 and the new Environment Court Act, 2010
has been passed with the object of establishing environmental courts for
speedy trial of environmental offences and matters incidental thereto.
But the Court established under the Act is not functioning effectively
due to the following loopholes:
As per section 4 of the ECA, 2010 the environment court consisting of
joint district judge is required to perform the functions of
environmental court in addition to his general duties. Being already
burdened with backlog of cases in civil and criminal courts, how can a
joint district judge perform the gigantic functions of civil, criminal
and environmental courts?
Since the environmental offences are of special nature involving
scientific and technical implications of environmental violations,
expert knowledge is specially required to determine the level or
presence of pollution. But the Environment Court Act, 2010 requires no
such experts in the constitution of environmental courts.
Designing the environmental courts dependent on the written report of
an inspector of the Department of Environment to take cognizance of a
cause gives the executive preference over the judiciary. However, the
court can directly receive a case from private persons without such
prior authorization if the court is satisfied that a person presented a
written request to the Inspector to accept the case and no action was
taken within 60 days after such request or the court, in such
circumstance, may direct the said Inspector to investigate the case. But
the ECA nowhere provides for any time-limit within which the
investigation is to be concluded. As a result the Inspectors frequently
delays in submitting reports to the court.
The ECA, 2010 has not recognized the substantive or procedural
principles of the environmental jurisprudence e.g. Principle of harm
prevention, precautionary principle, principle of sustainable
development, principle of prior notification and principle of public
participation in decision making process etc. Again, the environment
court has no suo moto or epistolary jurisdiction to take up an
environmental cause and to try it. The court also lacks in possessing
the power of judicial review.
The special public prosecutors or the special Government Pleaders
appointed as per provision section 14(4) are not well conversant with
the environmental laws and in some cases they willingly do not produce
evidences and witnesses to establish the violation of environmental
laws. As a result, the court fails to uphold environmental justice.
The ECA, 2010 though intended to provide speedy environmental
protection, the procedure accommodated in sections 10 &14 and
application of CPC, 1908 and CrPC, 1898 to the trial and disposal of
environmental suits and cases make the trial dilatory and procedurally
complicated.
The environment court has also some limitations in exercising its
jurisdiction such as the court can deal only with the matters arising
out of the Environment Conservation Act 1995, keeping a wide range of
other environmental laws beyond its ambit though as per section 2 of the
ECA, 2010 any other law may be specified by the Government in the
official Gazette for the purpose of the Act and another limitation is
that the court as per section 15(1) of the Environment Conservation Act
1995 read with section 2 of the ECA,2010 can impose the maximum penalty
of taka 10 lac irrespective of the gravity of environmental harm or
tort.
The adoption of the Environment Court Act, 2010 is undoubtedly a
milestone in the journey of environmental protection in Bangladesh. The
court established under the Act should have been designed in such a
manner that can overcome the adversarial drawbacks of civil and criminal
courts. But the Act fails to ensure speedy and effective environmental
protection due to some latent defects. Releasing the environmental court
from the workloads of civil suits and criminal cases, entrusting it
with the sole function of trying environmental cause, empowering it with
suo moto and judicial review power, extending its scope of application
and jurisdiction, and removing all other loopholes can make the court
competent for the coherent dispensation of environmental justice in
Bangladesh.