The crux of independent judiciary and governance based on the rule of law is grounded in a societal and cultural appreciation for these values. Although every nation may have a written constitution through which the separate branches of government are formed, a written constitutional framework in the absence of wide spread appreciation for independent judiciary is not sufficient to ensure that the national legal structure will operate independently. In fact the opposite is often true.
The Iranian constitution serves to illustrate the above statements. In section "11", Article “156" of the Islamic Republic’s constitution, one of the constitutionally created branches of government is the judiciary. The constitutional framework, at least on paper, creates the appearance of independence. But this illusion evaporates as soon as the everyday workings of the Iranian judiciary are examined.
Whenever, the balance of power in any society tilts toward totalitarianism, the very first casualty of the shifting political landscape is the independence of judiciary.
The historical events have an uncanny zest for repetition. What is even more amazing is the humanity’s inability to learn from its past. The Iranian judiciary today is an all too familiar reminder of Nazi brutality and Communist savagery of the decades past. The revolutionary courts are remarkably similar to the Nazi Germany’s "People’s Courts".
Authors such a Ingo Muller have correctly argued that when the judiciary loses its independence and becomes a wholly owned subsidiary of the executive branch, not only will totalitarian regimes flourish, but also the judiciary often becomes an accomplice to the regime’s brutality. In these cases, any dictatorial regime can imprison and even murder dissidents under the guise of due process and the rule of law.
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