reasoning reflects a "grave misunderstanding" of the relevant Jamaican law,
especially the operation of section 25, paragraphs 1 and 2, of the Jamaican
Constitution. The right to apply for redress under section 25(1) is, in the
terms of the provision itself, "without prejudice to any other action with
respect to the same matter which is lawfully available". The only limitation
is to be found in section 25(2) which, in the State party's opinion, does not
apply in the case, since the alleged breach of the right to a fair trial was
not at issue in the criminal law appeal to the Court of Appeal and the
Judicial Committee:
"... If the contravention alleged was not the subject of criminal law
appeals, ex hypothesi, those appeals could hardly constitute an adequate
remedy for that contravention. The decision of the Committee would
render meaningless and nugatory the hard-earned constitutional rights of
Jamaicans ..., by its failure to distinguish between the right to appeal
against the verdict and sentence of the Court in a criminal case, and the
"brand new rights' to apply for constitutional redress granted in 1962".
6.2 The State party submits that the admissibility decision attaches undue
significance to the fact that the Jamaican courts have not yet had occasion to
rule on the application of the proviso to section 25(2) of the Constitution in
circumstances where the appellant has already exhausted his criminal law
appellate remedies. It notes that in the case of Hoel Riley and others v. the
Queen [A.G. (1982) 3 AER 469], Mr. Riley was able to apply, after the
dismissal of his criminal appeal to the Court of Appeal and the Judicial
Committee, to the Supreme {Constitutional) Court and thereafter to the Court
of Appeal and the Privy Council, albeit unsuccessfully. In the State party's
opinion, this precedent illustrates that recourse to criminal law appellate
remedies does not render the proviso of section 25(2) applicable in situations
where, following criminal law appeals, an individual files for constitutional
redress.
6.3 As to the absence of legal aid for the filing of constitutional motions,
the State party submits that nothing in the Optional Protocol or in customary
international law supports the contention that an individual is relieved of
the obligation to exhaust domestic remedies on the mere ground that there is
no provision for legal aid and that his indigence has prevented him from
resorting to an available remedy. It is submitted that the Covenant only
imposes a duty to provide legal aid in respect of criminal offences (art. 14,
para. 3 (d)). Moreover, international conventions dealing with economic,
social and cultural rights do not impose an unqualified obligation on States
to implement such rights: article 2 of the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights provides for the progressive realization
of economic rights and relates to the "capacity of implementation of States".
In the circumstances, the State party argues that it is incorrect to infer
from the author's indigence and the absence of legal aid in respect of the
right to apply for constitutional redress that the remedy is necessarily
non-existent or unavailable. •
6.4 As to the author's claim of ill-treatment by the police, the State party
observes that this issue was not brought to its attention in the initial
submission, and that the Committee should not have declared the communication
admissible in respect of article 10 without previously having apprised the
State party of this claim. It adds that, in any event, the communication is
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