Global Military Justice Reform
Tuesday, May 13, 2025
R v Colonel Kearney
Colonel Rob Kearney was a former officer of the regular force who retired in 2012, and then returned to service as a member of the reserve force a few years later, in order to serve in senior advisory positions at National Defence Headquarters. He was then posted to the Allied Rapid Reaction Corps (ARRC) based out of Innsworth, United Kingdom a few years ago. At the time, he was serving on a 'Class C' period of service as a reserve force officer. [For our American cousins, this is roughly analogous to 'Active Duty' status for an officer of the Reserves or the National Guard.]
According to a Canadian Forces News Release in April 2024, Colonel Kearney was initially charged on 23 April 2024 with five separate charges, each under s 129 of the NDA, with the dates of the allegations ranging from December 2021 to November 2023. A complaint was first made in November 2023, and following a military police investigation, charges were laid five months later. However, by the time that a court martial was convened before military judge, Colonel Nancy Isenor, only a single charge was presented. Colonel Kearney pled guilty to the single charge. And, while the judgment has not yet been published, and news reports did not indicate whether this was a joint submission within the framework established under the Supreme Court of Canada judgment in R v Anthony Cook, 2016 SCC 43, it appears that this may have been the case.
Shortly after the charges were laid in April 2024, Colonel Kearney, who had been posted to the United Kingdom, was repatriated back to Canada. he then retired for a second time.
By virtue of subs 60(2) of the NDA, the Canadian Forces retained jurisdiction to try Colonel Kearney by court martial, even though he had retired prior to his court martial being convened. Former members of the CF remain liable for prosecution under the Code of Service Discipline for any alleged service offence that they are alleged to have committed while subject to the Code of Service Discipline, provided that the alleged offence fell within the jurisdiction of the Code of Service Discipline at the time that it was purported to have arisen.
In light of the sentence imposed, pursuant to s 249.47 of the NDA, this will not give rise to a criminal record.
Uganda Parliament to consider UPDF Act amendments
Monday, May 12, 2025
Head of Royal Navy under investigation
The professional head of the
Royal Navy, Adm Sir Ben Key KCB CBE is under investigation for an
alleged breach of the Values of the Royal Navy involving an extra-marital
affair with a junior, female officer. The allegation is unlikely to be
dealt with via a Court Martial, which would have probably made him the most
senior naval officer to face a Court Martial since Adm Byng, indeed as First Sea Lord he would be senior to
Adm Byng. However, instead Key will be dealt with using Major Administrative
Action a form of work place discipline administered by the chain of command.
Whilst he will be able to instruct a lawyer to write representations on his
behalf he will not be able to have legal representation in any
hearing/meeting.
As a single service policy it is
hard to see who would form Key's chain of command. The Secretary of State for
Defence is likely to be involved but the decision maker is likely to be Key's
predecessor as First Sea Lord and now Chief of the Defence Staff, Adm Sir Tony Radakin KCB ADC. In that case, Key can expect
little mercy as Radakin is an enthusiastic supporter of the Unacceptable Sexual
Behaviours policy which mandates termination of service for those found on the
balance of probabilities to have displayed unacceptable sexual behaviour: a lewd
remark addressed to person A which offends person B will suffice.
Key's routes of appeal are
limited. He may lodge a Service Complaint, an internal complaints process described
a neither 'efficient, effective or fair' in a recent parliamentary
report. If he believes he was discriminated against (unlikely in the
circumstances) he could bring a claim in the Employment Tribunal. Otherwise his
only avenue would be a judicial review. A complicated and expensive process
which would see the former professional head of His Majesty's Navy litigating against
His Majesty's Secretary of State for Defence. The prohibitive costs and
reputational impact of such an action are well known and no doubt relied upon
by those who do not wish due process brought into their internal system.
For an officer like Key whose
pension is secure and who will not be reliant on Service accommodation the
implications are limited; an ignominious end to a successful career. For more
junior ranks though this process can lead to the loss of their home and
hundreds of thousands of pounds of lost pay, resettlement and pension. Major Administrative
Action is an important tool for the chain of command but those at the top of
the chain are beginning to experience the system from the sharp end. It is to
be hoped it will lead to some reform.
ADDENDUM: Meanwhile the BBC alleges Key's likely replacement as First Sea Lord, Gen Sir Gwyn Jenkins KCB OBE RM, has been complicit in the covering up of war crimes by the SAS. If true (the allegations are hotly denied) it would unquestionably amount to a breach of the Values of the Royal Navy, not to mention Misconduct of Public Office and conspiracy to Pervert the Course of Justice. Meanwhile, the former Chief of the General Staff, the professional head of the British Army, Gen (Rtd) Sir Mark Carleton-Smith KCB CBE ADC faces less serious but related allegations of failing to report evidence of the same war crimes. Carleton-Smith denies the allegations.
Saturday, May 10, 2025
An insightful article: Disservice to the military Florence Nightingale undone by the Supreme Court (LiveLaw.in)
Disservice
to the military Florence Nightingale undone by the Supreme Court
Ananya Sharma
and Roopan Atwal
A Division Bench
of the Supreme Court comprising Justice PS Narsimha and Justice Manoj Misra recently
paved the way for the first ex-Military Nursing Service (MNS) Short Service Commissioned
Officer (SSCO) to be inducted into the Punjab Civil Services under the
Ex-Servicemen (ESM) category (Civil Appeal 5235/2025 Irwan Kour Vs Punjab
Public Service Commission & Ors decided on 16-04-2025). Captain
Gurpreet Kaur, a retired MNS officer took the Punjab Civil Services (PCS)
Examination – 2020 under the ESM category, sans the apprehension that an
uphill and long legal battle awaited her. It is yet another story that despite
women now being an integral part of the mainstream Defence Services, the
terminology “Ex-ServiceMAN” has still not been changed into a gender-neutral
term, such as “Ex-Servicemember” or “Ex-Service Personnel”, but we will leave
that for another day.
Capt Kaur’s
candidature for the PCS was rejected by the Punjab Public Service Commission on
the ground that being an officer of the MNS, she could not be considered an ESM
in terms of some correspondence received from the Kendriya Sainik Board.
On the last working day of the then Acting Chief Justice, Justice Ritu Bahri (before
she joined as the Chief Justice of the Uttarakhand High Court), a Division
Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court comprising her and Justice Aman
Chaudhary had ruled Capt Kaur to be fully falling within the definition of ESM
as per the Punjab
Recruitment of Ex-servicemen Rules, 1982 (“State Rules, 1982”). The
Bench directed the State of Punjab to appoint her as a PCS officer with
notional benefits of service (LPA
636/2022 Gurpreet Kaur Vs Punjab Public Service Commission
decided on 03-02-2024).
A private
Respondent before the High Court, namely, Ms Irwan Kour, (a retired officer
from the Army Medical Corps who had also applied under the ESM category and was
appointed as a PCS officer), had impleaded herself as a party before the High
Court and challenged the decision through a Special Leave Petition before the
Supreme Court on various grounds, including that it had been clarified by the
Central Government that the Central
Ex-Servicemen Amendment Rules, 2012 (“Central Amended Rules, 2012”) would not
cover MNS officers in the definition of ESM, and further, that the directions
of the High Court in appointing Capt Kaur would endanger the Appellant’s
position as an already serving PCS officer.
THE HISTORY OF
MILITARY NURSING SERVICE AND THE UNNECESSARY ARTIFICALLY CREATED CONTROVERSY
The MNS has its
origins in 1888. The MNS in the current form was raised as an “Armed Force” of
the Union of India as part of the Indian Army vide an Ordinance in the year 1943
and is duly recognized as an integral part of the Armed Forces of India. The
members of MNS are appointed by the Central Government with a commissioned rank
of the Indian Army. The MNS is the only all-woman branch of the Defence Services
in India.
Historically,
retired MNS officers were provided ESM benefits under the Central Ex-Servicemen
Rules, 1979 which defined “Ex-Servicemen” as those who retired or were released
on competition of terms from the “Armed Forces” of the Union of India. The
pensioners from the MNS from the Permanent Commission Cadre were treated as ESM
and so were the SSCOs of the MNS who were compulsorily released after a minimum
5 years of service. However, over the years, the Central Rules were amended and
the term “Armed Forces” was replaced with “Regular Army” (See the Central
Ex-Servicemen Amendment Rules, 2012/”Central Amended Rules, 2012”) with the
purpose of distinguishing Defence Services (Army, Navy and the Air Force) from
other Armed Forces, such as the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs), such as
the BSF, CRPF etc., which are also officially categorized as “Armed Forces” of
the Union of India.
Hyper-technically
picking on this change in terminology, the Kendriya Sainik Board, which
functions under the Ministry of Defence (MoD) issued letters in 2019 and 2021 stating
that the MNS officers are not ESM since the MNS did not fall within the
“Regular Army”. This despite the fact that in 2014, the same Kendriya Sainik
Board had clarified that MNS would, in fact, fall under the definition of
ESM. It was only from 2019 onwards that their stance seemed to switch from the
logical to the absurd, just because apparently some MNS officers had applied to
be appointed for posts under various Sainik Boards. What was interesting to
note in this was that the Kendriya Sainik Board has no standing to
comment on statutory rules under the Constitutional Rules of Business
and is merely a board looking after various welfare activities under the MoD.
Interestingly,
as far as the Central Amended Rules, 2012 were concerned, the matter was
thereafter taken up by the Chiefs of Staff Committee which is the apex body of
the Defence Services, which agreed with an earlier High-Level Committee on the
subject under the MoD, on its findings that the ESM status of MNS officers was
“well-established”. The observation of the committee was ultimately approved by
the Defence Minister. Despite the approval, the Kendriya Saink Board
continued to refuse issuance of ESM cards to MNS Officers.
The
worst effect of this was on SSCOs of the MNS who now, after their release from
MNS in five or more years without pension, became unemployable for civil government
jobs since they were now being released on completion of their contractual
service in middle age without any reservations or benefits of their military
service and without any age relaxation as is applicable to ESM, thus leading to
an uncertain future at a time when familial responsibilities are at peak.
Military service, hence, became a disqualification rather than a qualification
as compared to their peers who joined other services and organizations, and
also male and female officers joining branches of the Army other than the MNS who
faced no such disqualification. Not only was this discriminatory and illogical,
but also highly exploitative of young women who served in the MNS during the
times of their lives only to be discarded and left unemployable, having crossed
the prime of their lives and rendered ineligible due to age and other criteria
due to time spent in the military.
THE CASE AND THE JUDGMENTS OF THE HIGH COURT AND THE
SUPREME COURT
The
argument of Capt Kaur before the Courts was that Central Amended Rules, 2012
would not apply to recruitments made under the State of Punjab, as the State
Rules of 1982 were enacted by the State in exercise of powers under Article 309
of the Constitution, and the State Rules, 1982 which were substantially
different than the Central Amended Rules, 2012, provided for the requirement of
a person to have served in the “Military” and the “Armed Forces” to be eligible
for ESM status, and not the “Regular Army” which was a term used in the Central
Amended Rules, 2012. Capt Kaur had also argued, that in any case, the MNS would
also very much fall within the definition of “Regular Army” since the branch
was recognized by the Army Act as a part of the Regular Army and also by the
Defence Services Regulations.
The
High Court and the Supreme Court agreed with such contention and rejected the ground
urged by the State of Punjab that the clarifications issued by the Kendriya
Sainik Board, an advisory body for re-settlement and welfare of retired
personnel, would have any bearing over the Punjab State Rules, 1982.
The
Supreme Court finally found Capt Kaur eligible to be appointed in the PCS and also
clarified that the Appellant’s (Ms Irwan Kour’s) appointment already
effectuated would not be affected by the appointment of Capt Gurpreet Kaur, protecting
the interests of both the parties.
More
importantly, the Court noted that the restrictive interpretation of rules and insistence
on denial of ESM status to retired personnel of the Military Nursing Service
(MNS) would demoralize the youth from joining the Defence Forces, knowing that
their future would be bleak after their eventual release from military service.
Such a practice, especially in Punjab, which contributes 7% to the military
despite making up only 2% of the population of the country, would, no doubt, be
a discouraging exercise.
THE IRONY
Though
the MNS is celebrated as a form of “nari shakti” in ceremonies and parades, the
irony in the entire episode is the uncalled-for roadblocks created for MNS
officers through the years- not because of systemic discrimination by the
government, but due to wanton prejudice based on hyper-technical interpretation
of rules and contradictory letters issued by various authorities, which the
senior hierarchy, despite its good intentions, has not been able to control or
curtail, at times even after assurances and orders issued by the highest
political executive. Even in the past, pin-pricks have been initiated which
resulted in litigation, which seemed more of personality-oriented ego battles.
One such issue was denial of salutations, precedence, star-plates corresponding
to their military rank, and ancillary respect to the military rank held by MNS
officers by other members of defence services. Despite Regulation 733(b) specifically
laying down the inter se precedence, policy letters were issued to deny
precedence and status to such officers. The regulation runs as under:
“Women
officers serving in the Army Medical Corps and officers in the Military Nursing
Service will rank equally with male officers of the same titular rank, e.g., a
captain (woman officer) in the Army Medical Corps, will rank equally with a
captain in the Artillery or Engineers.”
At
one time, the rules provided for compulsory retirement of MNS officers if they
got married. Examining this issue, the Supreme Court in Union of India Vs
Ex-Lt Selina John (Civil Appeal 1990/2019) decided on 14-02-2024, had
observed the following:
“This
rule, it is accepted, was applicable to only women nursing officers. Such rule
was ex-facie manifestly arbitrary, as terminating employment because the woman
has got married is a coarse case of gender discrimination and inequality.
Acceptance of such patriarchal rule undermines human dignity, right to
non-discrimination and fair treatment. Laws and regulations based on
gender-based bias are constitutionally impermissible. Rules making marriage of
women employees and their domestic involvement a ground for disentitlement
would be unconstitutional.”
Despite
the many hurdles in their long path to justice, MNS officers have performed
their duty with utmost dedication. In an ideal situation, it was not the MNS
officers who should have been fighting for their rights, and a serious thought
should have been rendered to resolving their genuine grievances in-house without
resort to litigation or adversarial stands in courts. Egotistical stands should
have yielded to real camaraderie.
In
the crusade against prejudice and gender discrimination, the Constitutional Courts
have repeatedly come to the rescue of women and ensured substantive equality in
the forces, but more than that, it is the duty of the defence services
themselves, and the society at large, to effectively ensure the adherence to
the avowed principles our nation stands for.
Ananya
Sharma, a law graduate, is currently working with an American company as an
in-house counsel.
Roopan Atwal is a practicing advocate at the Punjab and Haryana High Court.
Wednesday, May 7, 2025
Pakistan's Military Courts Case decided, 5-2, for the government
The Supreme Court of Pakistan today handed down its "Short Order" decision in Shuhada Forum, Balochistan v. Khawaja, ICA No. 5/2023. By a 5-2 vote, the Constitutional Bench allowed the intra-court appeals in the Military Courts Case and set aside the Oct. 23, 2023 contrary 4-1 decision of a regular panel of the Supreme Court. Excerpt:
vi. In our view, the provisions merely accentuating the right to a fair trial and due process in any statute and its actual application and proper implementation during the trial are two distinct features and situations. If an independent right of appeal is provided in the High Court for challenging the original order or internal departmental appellate order of conviction, then obviously, the High Court in exercise of its appellate jurisdiction as conferred under the provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, may examine whether an equal and fair opportunity to defend the charges was afforded to the convict, whether sufficient evidence was available to substantiate the charges, and whether proper procedure in the trial was followed in letter and spirit.
vii. It is expansively evident from the impugned judgment, including the additional note, that during the original proceedings, the learned AGP, time and again, requested for time to seek instructions from the government on whether an independent right of appeal may be provided to the persons not otherwise subject to the Army Act, who are accused of the offences of (i) seducing or attempting to seduce any person subject to this Act from his duty or allegiance to Government, or (ii) having committed in relation to any work of defence, arsenal, naval, military or air force establishment or station, ship or aircraft or I.C.A. 5/2023 & connected Appeals otherwise in relation to the naval, military or air force affairs of Pakistan, an offence under the Official Secrets Act, 1923 as provided under clause (d) of Section 2 (1) of Army Act, and even in the concluding session on 5th May, 2025, the learned AGP reiterated that if this Constitutional Bench refers the matter to the Government/Parliament to amend the law and create a window of an independent right of appeal over and above the provision of appeal already provided under Section 133-B of the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, that will be respected and considered seriously. In support of this contention, he also cited the judgment of this Court rendered in the case of Jurist Foundation versus Federal Government (PLD 2020 SC 1).
viii. While restoring the provisions of Army Act, that were struck down by means of the impugned judgment in the original proceedings before this Court, we, in unison, sensitize the need of legislative changes, which will also be compliant to the requirements laid down under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) for maintaining and preserving the constitutional and societal norms in the existing legal framework. Therefore, the matter is referred to the Government/Parliament for considering and making necessary amendments/legislation in the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, and allied Rules within a period of 45 days in order to provide an independent right of appeal in the High Court against the conviction awarded to the persons by the Court Martial/Military Courts under sub-clauses (i) & (ii) of Clause (d) of subsection (1) of Section 2 of the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, read with sub-section (4) of Section 59 of the Pakistan Army Act, 1952.
ix. Subject to clause (viii) of this Short Order, the limitation period for filing an appeal by the convicts against their conviction before the High Courts shall be reckoned and applied from the date of notifying the amendments under the Pakistan Army Act, 1952, and their conviction shall be subject to the final outcome/decision in appeal by the High Court.
The Constitutional Bench has thus ruled that if Parliament now provides a right of appeal to the High Court, it was acceptable for the civilian defendants to have been tried by court-martial.
Justices Jamal Khan Mandokhail and Naeem Akhter Afghan dissented, writing:
For the reasons to be recorded later on, we dismiss these appeals on the following grounds:
(a) The Pakistan Army Act, 1952 (‘PAA’) is a disciplinary statute, relates to members of the Armed Forces, for the purpose of ensuring the proper discharge of their duties or the maintenance of discipline amongst them, as provided by clause (a) of sub-Article (3) of Article 8 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 (‘Constitution’), hence, does not offer fundamental rights to persons under the military discipline.
(b) To the contrary, clause (d) added to subsection (1) of section 2 of the PAA relates to persons not otherwise subject to the PAA (‘Civilians’). It does not relate to members of the Armed Forces, nor serves the aforesaid purpose, as provided by sub-clause (a) of sub-Article (3) of Article 8 of the Constitution, as such, it does not qualify for exemption from fundamental rights, hence, cannot be retained as part of the PAA.
(c) Article 175 of the Constitution provides the establishment and jurisdiction of courts. It requires that in order to fully secure the independence of judiciary, it must be separated from executive in all respects. The courts martial comprising of executive, being outside the scope of Article 175(3) of the Constitution cannot prosecute the civilians.
(d) The trial of civilians by courts martial offends the fundamental principle of independence of judiciary, fundamental rights of security of person, safeguard as to arrest and detention, fair trial and due process, right to information, equality of citizens and Injunctions of Islam, as guaranteed by Articles 2A, 9, 10, 10A, 19A, 25 and 227(1) of the Constitution, respectively.
(e) Denial of right of appeal to civilians against the conviction and sentence by courts martial before an independent and impartial forum is also violative of fundamental right of fair trial and due process.
(f) The trial of civilians by courts martial presided over by active military officers, is violative of the recognized covenants of the United Nations Human Rights Commission ("UNHRC’) as well as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966 (‘ICCPR’) and treaties, to which Pakistan is a signatory.
(g) The trial of civilians by courts martial is in excess of the functions assigned to the Armed Forces by Article 245 of the Constitution.
2. The convictions and sentences awarded to civilians by the courts martial for the occurrence of 9th May, 2023, are declared to be without jurisdiction, hence, the same are set aside. They shall be dealt with as follows:
(i) The accused under custody shall be treated as under-trial prisoners. Their cases stand transferred to the concerned courts of competent jurisdiction for trial. Upon receipt whereof, the concerned courts should proceed with their trials expeditiously and decide the same at the earliest, in accordance with law.
(ii) The persons who have completed/undergone their sentences or have been acquitted of the charge by the courts martial or Forum of Appeal under the PAA, shall have the effect of their discharge under section 169 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (‘Cr.P.C.’).
The majority's decision is preposterous and flies in the face of settled human rights jurisprudence, which strongly disfavors the trial of civilians by military courts. It also cannot be reconciled with the fact that the last time Pakistan used its military courts to try civilians, it was deemed necessary to amend the Constitution to authorize it -- a temporary amendment that ultimately expired.
This decision is likely to embolden those in Uganda who have resisted compliance with that country's Supreme Court's decision in the landmark Kabaziguruka decision.