BRIDGETOWN, Barbados (CMC) — President of the Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) Justice Adrian Saunders on Wednesday warned that an inefficient criminal justice system has dire consequences for the cohesion of the social fabric, the economy, and the rule of law in the region.
Addressing the start of the three-day seventh Biennial Law Conference of the CCJ Academy for Law (CAL), Justice Saunders said it is important to first recognise that the criminal justice system is an intricate network of actors and systems, comprising multiple stakeholders.
“We have police, and prisons, and prosecutors; lawyers and judges; courts and legislatures; probation and welfare departments to name a few. Each has their own role, and jurisdiction, and priorities. But there must be at least a basic level of coordination among the various players that comprise the system if the system as a whole is to be effective,” he told the audience.
The conference is being held under the theme ‘Criminal Justice Reform in the Caribbean-Achieving a Modern Criminal Justice System’, which Justice Saunders said is “most timely, given the current state of affairs in the region”.
He said many Caribbean countries, governments, and ordinary citizens alike are rightly concerned about the alarmingly high incidence of crime in the region.
He recalled that in April this year, Caribbean Community (Caricom) leaders met in Trinidad and Tobago for a special regional symposium addressing crime as a public health issue. Justice Saunders said that the symposium offered an opportunity for dialogue around the creation of avenues for regional action to address this scourge that faces us.
“I am pleased, therefore, that the academy has chosen to continue the dialogue and bring together stakeholders in the criminal justice system who can provide progressive and achievable solutions with a view to fashioning concrete recommendations for reform.”
The St Vincent and the Grenadines jurist recalled that a few years ago he gave an address in his homeland in which he noted then that, sadly, in some Caricom states the criminal justice system is broken.