<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Spain’s justice deserves its own Nuremberg - VilaWeb</title>
	<atom:link href="https://english.vilaweb.cat/noticies/spains-justice-deserves-its-own-nuremberg/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://english.vilaweb.cat/noticies/spains-justice-deserves-its-own-nuremberg/feed/</link>
	<description></description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 11 Nov 2022 11:01:50 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>ca</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	
	<item>
		<title>Spain’s justice deserves its own Nuremberg</title>
		<link>https://english.vilaweb.cat/noticies/spains-justice-deserves-its-own-nuremberg/</link>

				<pubDate>Fri, 09 Nov 2018 10:00:52 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[English]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[VilaWeb English]]></category>
					
		<description><![CDATA[During the Nuremberg trials, one of the most interesting debates was to what extent it was Germany as a nation or the Third Reich that was being put on trial, and to what extent, therefore, single individuals might be convicted]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">Of the many lessons we learnt from Montesquieu, one of the most important ones is that &ldquo;n</span><span lang="en-US">o tyranny is more cruel than that which is practiced in the shadow of the law and with the trappings of justice</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">&rdquo;</span>.<span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"> The quote is taken from the author&rsquo;s </span><span lang="en-US">Considerations on the Causes of the Greatness of the Romans and their Decline</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">, a book where the distinguished Gascon describes how Tiberius always managed to find some judge in Rome who was willing to </span><span lang="en-US">unjustly</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"> convict anyone that got in his way politically.</span></p>
<div id="protag-in_content_d_p"></div><script type="text/javascript">window.googletag = window.googletag || { cmd: [] };window.protag = window.protag || { cmd: [] };window.protag.cmd.push(function () {window.protag.display("protag-in_content_d_p");});</script><section class="w-screen -mx-8 lg:hidden mb-10 overflow-hidden"><div id="protag-in_content_m_p" class="vlw-banner-horitzontal"></div><script type="text/javascript">window.googletag = window.googletag || { cmd: [] };window.protag = window.protag || { cmd: [] };window.protag.cmd.push(function () {window.protag.display("protag-in_content_m_p");});</script></section><p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">Nowadays Montesquieu and Rome might seem to be too ancient a reference, but they are not. The essay on the rise and fall of the empire must be one of the most influential works in the political history of humankind. So much so that, when they first considered setting up a special court in Nuremberg to try Nazi crimes, Montesquieu&rsquo;s words warning of a judicial tyranny were instrumental in the decision to ensure that not only politicians sat in the dock, but also judges, court officials and prosecutors. Specifically, sixteen Nazi jurists, judges and attorneys were tried and found guilty of war crimes during the third trial. This was a momentous feat, probably the most dramatic moment of the 20th century, when the world had to come up with no less than a suitable jurisdiction to adequately punish the worst crime every witnessed by humankind. </span></p>
<p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">During the Nuremberg trials, one of the most interesting debates was to what extent it was Germany as a nation or the Third Reich that was being put on trial, and to what extent, therefore, single individuals might be convicted. Justice Jackson&rsquo;s well-known statement resolved the dilemma. Jackson warned that crimes should not be regarded merely as the work of an abstract, metaphysical entity &mdash;a nation&mdash; because it took real people &mdash;toiling and sweating&mdash; to carry them out. The link between the individual actions for which someone was being prosecuted and the general picture of the aggression, indeed the collective brainchild of the Reich, provided Jackson with the key to ensure that those individual judges &mdash;who always claimed to be acting within the law at the time and following orders from their superiors&mdash; would not get away with and would pay for their crimes, rather than use the law to take cover.</span></p>
<p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">This week the European Court of Human Rights ruled that </span><span lang="it-IT">Arnaldo Otegi, Rafa D</span>&iacute;<span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">ez, Sonia Jacinto, Miren Zabaleta and</span> Arkaitz Rodr&iacute;<span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">guez had been denied a fair trial and that Spain&rsquo;s Audiencia Nacional [a special court that sees major crimes] had violated the European Convention on Human Rights. Specifically, the European court ruled that judge Angela Murillo was blatantly biased, </span><span lang="en-US">first</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"> in the Gatza case and then </span><span lang="en-US">during</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"> the Bateragune trial. The European court states that Murillo&rsquo;s bias is &ldquo;clearly incompatible&rdquo; with her office as judge and admits that the defendants were right &mdash;but promptly ignored&mdash; when they queried the impartiality of the other two judges, Juan Francisco Martel and Teresa Palacios, who eventually sentenced them to six and a half years in prison.</span></p>
<div class="remp-banner"></div><section class="w-screen -mx-8 lg:hidden mb-10 overflow-hidden"><div id="protag-in_content_m_1_p" class="vlw-banner-horitzontal"></div><script type="text/javascript">window.googletag = window.googletag || { cmd: [] };window.protag = window.protag || { cmd: [] };window.protag.cmd.push(function () {window.protag.display("protag-in_content_m_1_p");});</script></section><p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">Nevertheless, the Strasbourg ruling comes very late. </span><span lang="en-US">Following an unjust trial which &mdash;</span>like Tiberius <span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">did </span><span lang="fr-FR">in Ancient Rome</span><span lang="en-US">&mdash; merely sought to push out of public life people who bothered the Spanish government at the time, Arnaldo Otegi and his associates were convicted and spent between six and six and a half years in prison</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">. In this case, as Otegi himself has pointed out, the one particularly grave fact is that we all know Catalonia&rsquo;s pro-independence leaders are headed in the same direction [as their Basque counterparts]: they will be found guilty after an unjust trial and only years later will Europe make amends, once the court&rsquo;s decisions have made their impact on political life and the lives of innocent people have been severely damaged. That is the way Strasbourg works. To witness and to be aware of that, precisely where we stand today, is outrageous and most unfortunate, indeed.</span></p>
<p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">However, it should be pointed out that Spain&rsquo;s collection of unfavourable rulings keeps growing, which proves beyond all doubt that Madrid&rsquo;s exceptional courts of law are actually indecent political tools that are instrumental in the perpetuation of injustice. There is plenty of evidence that this is neither an anecdote in a trial nor a one-off technical error, but that there is a system in place which serves the powers that be. On this point, I wonder if the time has come to start arguing internationally that the abnormal behaviour of Spain&rsquo;s top judiciary, which repeats itself with every political trial, demands a Nuremberg, a trial where they are held to account. Not just the system itself, but the individual people. One day the likes of Murillo and Llarena ought to pay for their crimes, if necessary before an international court of law or perhaps before a Catalan court, once Catalonia is independent. As shown in Nuremberg </span><span lang="nl-NL">in 1945</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"> by the honourable Robert H. Jackson, this tyranny that has befallen (and will befall) several concrete human beings, all of whom have a name and surname, would simple not have existed </span><span lang="en-US">without the</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">se</span><span lang="it-IT"> individual</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">s&rsquo; personal</span><span lang="en-US"> effort</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">s</span><span lang="en-US"> and dedication</span><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">. It would have never happened.</span></p>
<p lang="es-ES-u-co-trad"><span lang="es-ES-u-co-trad">PS: Also this week Spain&rsquo;s Supreme Court has shown how pliable it is when it comes to appeasing banks: it has had no qualms about reversing its original decision to make banks (rather than borrowers) pay mortgage tax, thus saving them a pretty penny. Truly shocking &hellip;</span></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://english.vilaweb.cat/noticies/spains-justice-deserves-its-own-nuremberg/">Spain’s justice deserves its own Nuremberg</a> appeared first on <a href="https://english.vilaweb.cat">VilaWeb</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	        <enclosure url="https://imatges.vilaweb.cat/nacional/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/tribunal-suprem-20161718-1024x683.jpg" length="10" type="image/jpeg" />
        
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
