The Ministry of National Defense is addressing Taiwan’s light sentences for national security contraventions through legal reforms and by improving internal military security, while pushing amendments to the Military Trial Act, Minister of National Defense Wellington Koo said today.
Koo’s statement comes after the Control Yuan yesterday urged stricter punishments for military personnel convicted of contravening national security regulations by spying for China, saying that the average sentence is 12.7 times shorter than in other democratic countries.
The ministry has proposed amendments to the Criminal Code of the Armed Forces increasing the penalties for expressing “loyalty” to the enemy and for “conspiracy” and “premeditation,” Koo said.
Global Military Justice Reform
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Stiffer penalties coming in Taiwan
Monday, March 23, 2026
2026 CAAF CLE and training program
A note on the prosecution of civilians by DRC military courts
Legality of Prosecutions Brought by the Military Prosecutors' Office Against Civilians in the DRC: Analysis in Light of the Constitutional Principle of Legality by François Lukangila N'subi and Jules Mupenda Kangamina can be downloaded here. Abstract:
This article examines the legality of prosecutions initiated by the military auditor against civilians in the Democratic Republic of Congo in light of the constitutional principle of legality and the right to one's natural judge. It demonstrates that, under the Constitution and the Military Judicial Code, military courts are, in principle, not competent to prosecute civilians, except in narrowly defined and legally established exceptions.
Through a legal, doctrinal, and jurisprudential analysis, the study highlights recurring abuses in judicial practice, where civilians are prosecuted by military prosecutors for ordinary criminal offenses that clearly fall under the jurisdiction of civil courts. The article emphasizes that the military prosecutor's office is a specialized institution primarily tasked with maintaining discipline within the armed forces and related services.
The study further exposes the illegality of certain practices involving the collection of judicial fees by military magistrates, particularly transactional fines and bail for provisional release, which are explicitly prohibited by military law. Such practices constitute a violation of the principle of equality before the law and may give rise to disciplinary, civil, and criminal liability. Ultimately, the article calls for strict enforcement of constitutional and legal provisions governing military jurisdiction, in order to safeguard fundamental rights, ensure legal certainty, and strengthen the rule of law in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Sde Teiman (another in a series)
Michael Sfard writes here for +972 about the dénouement of the Sde Teiman affair in Israel. "The truth is that the reason for abandoning the facade of law enforcement is not evidentiary difficulties or harm to procedural fairness, but rather a change in the constellation of pressures applied to the Israeli legal system as a whole."
A habit Pakistan cannot break
The Inspector General of Police (IGP) for the region has formally declared that any protesters challenging the presence or authority of the Pakistan Army will now face the jurisdiction of military tribunals. This directive effectively criminalises legitimate dissent, turning political protest into an “army crime" and sparking a wave of legal and international outrage.
The insecurity of the current administration has been laid bare by the targeting of high-profile local figures. Among those now facing the weight of this military-legal machinery is Ehsan Ali, a 70-year-old veteran lawyer and activist. Ali was arrested following a speech delivered during an Iftar gathering—a traditional religious and social event—proving that the state now views even community dialogue as a direct threat to its stability. By branding a septuagenarian lawyer a military-grade threat, Rawalpindi is effectively imposing a form of “martial law by stealth" on a territory that Pakistan itself technically classifies as disputed, yet governs with colonial-era rigidity.