Honorific Prefix: | The Honourable |
Mustafa Kamal | |
Native Name: | মোস্তফা কামাল |
Native Name Lang: | bn |
Office: | 9th Chief Justice of Bangladesh |
Term Start: | 1 June 1999 |
Term End: | 31 December 1999 |
Appointer: | Shahabuddin Ahmed |
Predecessor: | A. T. M. Afzal |
Successor: | Latifur Rahman |
Office2: | Justice of the Appellate Division of Bangladesh |
Term Start2: | 1 December 1989 |
Term End2: | May 1999 |
Office3: | Justice of the High Court Division of Bangladesh |
Term Start3: | April 1979 |
Term End3: | November 1989 |
Birth Date: | 9 May 1933 |
Birth Place: | Domar, Rangpur District, Bengal Presidency, British India |
Death Place: | Dhaka, Bangladesh |
Nationality: | Bangladeshi |
Occupation: | Jurist |
Resting Place: | Azimpur Graveyard |
Father: | Abbasuddin Ahmed |
Spouse: | Husne Ara Kamal |
Children: | Nashid Kamal, Naeela Kamal, Nazeefa Monem |
President: | Shahabuddin Ahmed |
Primeminister: | Sheikh Hasina |
Mustafa Kamal (Bengali: মোস্তফা কামাল; 9 May 1933 – 5 January 2015)[1] was the 9th Chief Justice of Bangladesh.[2] His landmark judgment was on the Masdar Hossain case, widely known as the 'separation of judiciary', which was a milestone in the quest for separation of power between the judiciary and the executive of the state.[3] Kamal was a pioneer of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) in Bangladesh, and is considered by many as the 'father of ADR' in Bangladesh.[4]
Kamal was born on 9 May 1933 in the village of Domar in Rangpur District of the Bengal Presidency in British India (now in Bangladesh). He was named by the national poet of Bangladesh Kazi Nazrul Islam after the Turkish President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.[5] Kamal's father, Abbasuddin Ahmed, was a legendary Bengali Renaissance singer and composer. Mustafa Kamal's younger brother, Mustafa Zaman Abbasi, is a musicologist and writer, and his younger sister, Ferdausi Rahman, is a legendary playback singer and vocalist.[6]
Kamal spent his early childhood in the village of Balarampur of Cooch Behar - a princely state during the British Raj and now a district of West Bengal, India. Later, he was moved to the district town of Cooch Behar and attended schools from there. He was shifted with his family to Dhaka, the capital of erstwhile East Pakistan in 1947.[7]
Justice Mustafa Kamal's formal education started in Cooch Behar's Jenkins School, when he got admitted in class three in 1940. Established in 1861, Jenkins School was one of the most reputed schools in the Bengal Presidency. He continued studying in that school until 1946, when he was transferred to Kolkata and was admitted in class nine in Ballygunge Government High School. Kamal had to return to his previous Cooch Behar school later in the same year for there was a communal riot in Kolkata in the month of August. He completed class nine from Jenkins School, and in January 1947, got re-admitted to Ballygunge Govt. High School in class ten. This time again, he could not finish the class in Ballygunge due to the partition of India. In August 1947, Abbasuddin Ahmed, Mustafa Kamal's father, opted to migrate to Dhaka – the capital of East Pakistan. Before the partition was finalized, Kamal, for a brief period of time, took classes in Jenkins School. Finally in the later part of 1947, he moved to Dhaka along with his family, and got admitted in the Dhaka Collegiate School to finish class ten.
In 1948, Kamal appeared in the examination of Matric from the Dhaka Collegiate School. He stood 7th in the merit list of Dhaka Board (all of East Pakistan). He studied Intermediate in the Jagannath College of Dhaka (now a Public University of Bangladesh), and appeared in the I.A. examination in 1950. This time, he stood 5th in the merit list.[8] In 1950, Kamal got himself admitted in the University of Dhaka, Bangladesh. Kamal studied Political Science in his B.A. (Hons) and M.A. In the year 1953 and 1954 respectively, he achieved those degrees securing `first class first’ in both. He also stood first among all candidates in the Arts faculty and was awarded a special scholarship from the Pakistan Government.
In September 1955, he went to England with this scholarship. He obtained an M.Sc. (ECON) in 1958 from the London School of Economics (LSE), London, UK. While he was studying for his M.Sc., Mr. Kamal joined the famed Lincoln's Inn (London, UK) and was called to the Bar in 1959.
Having completed the Bar-at-Law course, Barrister Mustafa Kamal was called to the Bar from the Hon’ble Society of Lincoln's Inn (London, UK) in 1959.[9] He returned to Dhaka, and began his professional career as a lawyer in the same year. In 1961, he also joined the Department of Law in the University of Dhaka as a part-time Lecturer, and continued until 1968. He also served as the legal advisor to Rajuk at that period of time. The Government of Bangladesh appointed him as an Additional Attorney General in 1976. In 1977, he was appointed as the Advocate General of the High Court, when the High Court got separated from the Supreme Court.[9] After eleven months, the Supreme Court and the High Court got reinstated, and the position of Advocate General was dissolved. Barrister Kamal returned to the practice of law. He was, however, called to the bench on 9 April 1979 as a Justice of the High Court Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh, and was elevated to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh on 1 December 1989.[9] Justice Mustafa Kamal became the Chief Justice of Bangladesh on 1 June 1999, and took his retirement on 1 January 2000. His final judgment was on the famed Masdar Hossain case, popularly known as ‘ The separation of judiciary’, which is considered as one of the five most important cases in the constitutional history of Bangladesh.[3]
In the year 2000, Justice Kamal joined the World Bank as a Consultant from Bangladesh. He helped introduce Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) in Bangladesh serving as the overall coordinator of the Legal and Judicial Capacity Building Project (L&JCBP) of the World Bank. He is titled the `Father of ADR in Bangladesh’.[4]
Kamal was also appointed as the chairman of the Law Commission of Bangladesh on 6 December 2005, and carried out his responsibilities until 5 December 2007.[9]
Kamal's landmark judgment was on Masdar Hossain case (Secretary, Ministry of Finance v Masdar Hossain, 1999), widely known as the ‘separation of judiciary'.[3] In this case, Justice Kamal laid out a clear road-map for the separation of the lower judiciary from the Executive. The decision was determined on the question of to what degrees the constitution of Bangladesh has in effect secured the separation of judiciary from the executive organs of the State, and whether the provisions of the constitution that may grantee the independence of judiciary have been followed in practice.[9] The judgment with 12 directive points was pronounced on 7 May 1997 (reported in 18 BLD 558). The Government appealed, and the Appellate Division upheld the decision of the High Court Division with some modifications. The judgment was delivered on 2 December 1999 (reported in 52DLR 82). The Government was given clear directions in order to complete the process of separation of the lower judiciary from the executive by undertaking steps, such as
However, the implementation was being delayed; seemingly, there was a lack of political goodwill. Justice Mustafa Kamal, after his retirement, continued to advocate the cause, and spoke boldly on the reluctance of the Executive to implement the directives of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh. After a long period of political procrastination, the implementation started in 2007.[11]
Kamal felt the need of independence and autonomy of the judiciary even before 1995, when a group of judicial officers brought before the court the constitutional issue that led to the outcome of the Masdar Hossain case. In 1994, Kamal was invited by the University of Dhaka to deliver the prestigious Kamini Kumar Dutta Memorial Law Lecture; he chose the topic ‘Bangladesh Constitution: Trends & Issues’. This lecture provided with invaluable insights that helped build a consensus on necessary reforms.[8] Barrister Manzoor Hasan, who was the founding executive director of Transparency International Bangladesh (TIB), observed in 1997: "As TIB was advocating for improved governance, Justice Mustafa Kamal was exercising his judicial mind to call for an independent lower judiciary or redefining the limits of 'locus standi' in relation to writ applications."[11]
Kamal's resolute stand in favour of the independence of the judiciary was evident in his first speech as the newly appointed Chief Justice of Bangladesh addressed to the members of the Supreme Court Bar Association on 1 June 1999. Kamal stated:
In the judgement of Dr. Mohiuddin Farooque Vs Bangladesh (Civil Appeal No. 24 of 1995), the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh took a firm stand on the modern liberal trend of Public Interest Litigation leaving aside the traditional view of locus standi. The Supreme Court decided to interpret the term ‘a person aggrieved’ in a liberal mood and with a progressive attitude, and thus widened the writ Jurisdiction of the High Court conferred on it by Article 102 of the Constitution of the People's Republic of Bangladesh.[12] The leading judgment was delivered by Justice Mustafa Kamal on 25 July 1996.[12] In his explanation of the scope of 'locus standi', Kamal stated in his judgment:The implication of the judgment was that voluntary societies, representative organisations, trade unions and constitutional activists and individuals having no personal interest would now be able to test the validity of a law or an action of a public official affecting the general public by making the power of judicial review of the Supreme Court on their own standing.
'Iddat' is a 'Quranic provision' which maintains that 'the husband', after divorce, is required to support 'the wife' for a specific period of time. A Writ Petition was filed by a Non Government Organization (NGO) seeking cancellation or amendment[13] of the provision. The High Court gave its judgment against the Quranic provision of Iddat. The case was forwarded to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court by way of appeal. Justice Mustafa Kamal played an active role to overturn the judgment. The Appellate Division called two religious scholars to provide with their expert-opinions. The bench of the Appellate Division agreed unanimously to overturn the High Court judgment. In his judgment, Kamal expressed his complete disapproval of High Court judges' ignorance of basic Islamic knowledge, norms and philosophy.[13]
Having long been concerned about the growing backlog of cases, which were delaying court decisions and denying justice to many, Justice Mustafa Kamal was interested in alternatives to formal litigation. Soon after his retirement as the Chief Justice of Bangladesh, Kamal headed a five-person legal study group - formally called The Bangladesh Legal Study Group (BLSG) - with the purpose of introducing Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), more particularly mediation, into the legal and judicial system of Bangladesh.[4] For the next few years, he led from the front to introduce ADR in Bangladesh. Justice Mustafa Kamal was committed from the start to introduce the benefits of mediation and other forms of ADR in reducing backlog of cases and making justice more accessible to the citizens of Bangladesh. He trained, for four years, mostly voluntarily, about fifteen hundred lawyers, judges and court officials in the principles and practice of different forms of ADR. The Government of Bangladesh introduced ADR in many areas including environmental and family laws in 2010. Many consider Justice Mustafa Kamal as ‘the father of ADR' in Bangladesh.[4]
Kamal was married to professor Husne Ara Kamal. She retired as the director of the Institute of Social Welfare and Research, Dhaka University (ISWR) (1934-2009). They had three daughters Nashid Kamal, Naeela K Sattar and Nazeefa K Monem.[6] Nashid Kamal is a vocalist, writer, and professor of demography. Naeela K Sattar is a special needs teacher in Amherst, US and also a lawyer (from Cornell, Ithaca, US). Nazeefa K Monem is a first class holder in Biochemistry from Dhaka University (1994). His granddaughter, Armeen Musa, is a grammy nominated singer-songwriter and composer.[14]
Kamal died on 5 January 2015 of heart disease in Gulshan, Dhaka at the age of 81.[1]
1. according to the press release by his daughter Nashid Kamal[6]