The principle of bail is a cornerstone of a just legal system, deeply rooted in the constitutional guarantees of the 1992 Constitution.
Article 14 enshrines the sacrosanct presumption of innocence, a fundamental tenet that demands every individual be treated as innocent until proven guilty.
Similarly, Article 296 imposes a clear obligation on courts and relevant authorities to exercise discretion judiciously, ensuring that such discretion does not devolve into arbitrary or punitive measures. Regrettably, contemporary practice often betrays these principles.
There is a troubling tendency to conflate mere allegations or arrests with conclusive evidence of criminality, resulting in the imposition of bail conditions that are excessively onerous and, in effect, punitive.
This approach undermines the very essence of bail as a mechanism to secure liberty pending trial, not to preemptively penalize.
To declare, as a matter of principle, that all offences are bailable while simultaneously erecting formidable barriers to accessing this right is to pay lip service to justice while eroding its substance. Such practices risk transforming bail into an instrument of oppression rather than a safeguard of freedom.
The exercise of discretion must be tempered by rationality, proportionality, and a profound respect for the accused’s rights, lest it morph into a tool for perpetuating injustice.
As we navigate the complexities of criminal justice, we must remain vigilant, for the precedents we set today shape a future fraught with consequence.
A system that casually erodes the presumption of innocence or wields discretion as a blunt weapon risks birthing a legacy of inequity, where liberty is contingent not on justice but on the whims of authority.
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