Case 24/2017: Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of
Justice (Tribunal Supremo de Justicia de Venezuela or TSJ)
ETHICAL
JUDGMENT
Dear Prosecutor, Public Defender,
Ambassador and Jury Members of the International
Buddhist Ethics Committee (IBEC) &
Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights (BTHR), concerning the Case 24-2017
against the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal
of Justice (TSJ), on April 12, 2017, it is put on record that the trial of
the Buddhist Tribunal has been concluded in order to analyze the Human Rights
violation by the accused. This Case has been carried out as a consequence of
"Case 21: Captain Strauss”.
After analyzing the presentation of
the case and the validation of the enormous amount of evidence, there has been
a unanimous vote of 6 members of the Jury, all of whom have sentenced the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice
(TSJ) as "Responsible"
for the serious crimes of VIOLATION OF THE DEMOCRATIC CONSTITUTIONAL
STATE OF LAW AND VIOLATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW.
The actions of Venezuelan Supreme
Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) when carrying out a coup d’état have produced
enormous damage against the Democracy and Justice of the Venezuelan people, but
also a huge damage against the Rule of Law at the international level by
systematically breaching the global standards in matter of Human Rights. These
terrible acts demonstrate that members of the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) have violated both the
Human Rights treaties and the ethical precepts of Buddhist Spirituality, which
is the constitutional guardian of the world. Although during the framework of
this trial the Venezuelan Supreme
Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) has theoretically annulled the coup d'état,
giving back the faculties of immunity and the creation of laws to the
Venezuelan Parliament, actually the Coup continues to exist because the Venezuelan
Tribunal systematically annuls all Parliament’s decisions when declaring it in contempt. In addition, the Venezuelan
Tribunal must be held accountable for having violated International Law and the
very Venezuela's Constitution inspired by the values of the liberator Simon
Bolivar, thus forgetting that the behavior of judges must be ethically
exemplary anytime and anywhere. In this sense, the Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights establishes that the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice
(TSJ) is not only disrespectful to the International Courts, but also has a
lack of impartiality, lack of independence or separation of powers, lack of
transparency, lack of legitimacy, a presence of precariousness and presence of
nepotism.
The international legal reform
carried out by the Buddhist Law has as its core the defense of fundamental
rights, and therefore exercises its Ethical Power as a supreme body to oversee
compliance with the human rights Treaties, which are systems of juridical order
that are superior to any local Constitution. Maitriyana also opened up to the
defense of other fundamental rights that constitute an external human rights
source, since its pluralism expands the fundamental rights by additionally
incorporating the rights of non-human beings. By doing this task, the Buddhist
Law interprets all existing instruments, also validating the Customary Law of
the Tribal Peoples. Precisely the Maitriyana's ethics committees and tribunals
of conscience are international tribal courts whose function is to resolve
cases of violations of Buddhist Ethics and Fundamental Rights contemplated in
both the human rights treaties and the ancient practices of aboriginal peoples.
In the constitutional relationship between countries with international
Treaties, a president or a local court under no circumstances is able to
interpret the international functions of the Buddhist Tribunal, primarily
because they do not have the competence to do so, since there would be a
radical lack of knowledge in the way how Buddhist Law works, which is as
legitimate as the International Human Rights Law. When Maitriyana finds a
violation against Buddhist Ethics or Fundamental Rights it can condemn a
subject, an institution or a State, and there should be no material or legal
obstacle that leaves this Ethical Judgment without effect, otherwise, a
situation of injustice and impunity would be perpetuated. The Buddhist
Civilization of ancient times developed an expansive jurisprudence of the
collective rights of the spiritual commune (sangha), enforcing the ethical
judgments of Buddhist Law against the State and opening the doors to a
tripartite republican relationship in which the spiritual commune was
privileged (Sangha) as an Ethical Power
or supervisory organ of State Power and People's Power. Therefore, Maitriyana
reminds that Buddhist Spirituality is the oldest human rights and animal rights
defending movement in the history of humankind. This juridical and republican
status that the spiritual commune (sangha) had in Buddhist Civilization of the
past undoubtedly allows and legitimizes the Buddhist Law's international
capability to investigate and prosecute cases of human rights violations, such
as crimes against humanity, having the duty to protect democracy, equality, the
right to peace and also freedom of expression and information of peoples. In
this sense, the Maitriyana nourishes the processes of fulfillment of the
political, economic, cultural and environmental rights. Buddhist Law rules
judgments that imply a justifiable evolution of Law, which is a development
that would be the envy of great jurists of history, like Marcus Tullius Cicero,
Jeremy Bentham, John Marshall and Hans Kelsen. Although individuals,
institutions and states may decide not to comply with the ethical rulings of
the Maitriyana courts, this does not necessarily de-legitimize the Ethical Power
of the spiritual commune (sangha), which has been de facto transformed into the
Supreme Court of Planetary Justice,
and at the same time has replaced the UN as an ethical and constitutional guardian of the fundamental rights of
all humanity. This Power comes undoubtedly from the life impulse of the Free
and Enlightened Beings (Arhats-Bodhisattvas) running through the veins of the
Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights. Although States have not voluntarily
submitted themselves to comply with the judgments of Buddhist Law, they have
certainly committed themselves internationally to comply with fundamental
rights through Human Rights Treaties and Conventions which are within the legal
framework of the Maitriyana. In this pluralistic understanding, the Buddhist
Law considers that if its faculties are the defense of human dignity and
fundamental rights, then any State that is governed by Human Rights Treaties is
indirectly under the special and international jurisdiction of the courts of
Maitriyana. After making a legal interpretation based on Tribal Law and the
doctrine of international human rights organizations, the Buddhist Law
interprets it has legitimacy and validity to keep and develop its legal
institutions at the national and international level. Thus, even if the binding
character of the decisions of Maitriyana's international courts are denied,
States have a moral and humanitarian obligation to circumscribe themselves to
decisions on those matters in which Buddhist Law has competence. This
reinterpretation regarding the reception and enforceability of the fundamental
rights contemplated in international human rights treaties shows the
obligations that the States have to the ethical judgments of Maitriyana as the
maximum defender of human dignity. The Buddhist Law is part of the republican
structure of the ancient Buddhist Civilization, whose form of co-government was
composed of the authorities of the Executive Power, the People and the
Spiritual Commune (Sangha). Consequently, States cannot fail to respect the
decisions of the international courts of Maitriyana by claiming that these are
invalid, since Buddhist Law is a millennial institution that precedes the very
existence of States. Nor can States fail to respect these ethical judgments by
claiming that Maitriyana does not have legitimacy in the present, for at
present this community heads the supreme organ of the Global Ethical Power that
is the United Buddhist Nations
Organization. Moreover, in case States fail to respect the ethical
judgments of Buddhist Law, they would be ignoring the role of spiritual masters
as representatives of human dignity. Therefore, States have a legal duty to
observe and comply with international human rights Treaties, not being able to
invoke local provisions to breach their duties, which must always be
progressively in favor of persons. Thus, the States have the obligation to
refrain from dictating acts that may frustrate the purpose and end of the human
rights protected by the Maitriyana. States then have a legal duty that their
actions do not conflict with the values, principles or attributions of Buddhist
Law, which develops architectural principles of a new civilization of human rights, which would not only come from the
international rule of Law but also from the constitutional and customary rules
of the spiritual community (sangha). The international courts of Maitriyana not
only have a collaborative or
complementary nature of the domestic Law of countries, but also have a
status of transcending instance that can review the decisions of the local
States and Courts when they may be violations of Ethics and Human Dignity,
which is an absolute competence of Buddhist Law. Although Maitriyana's
international courts do not have binding power to revoke decisions of States,
they can certainly supervise them ethically, judging them when States do not
take the necessary measures to remedy violations of fundamental rights analyzed
according to the principles of Ethics and Human Dignity. Buddhist Law uses
non-restrictive or non-literary interpretive guidelines with respect to
international human rights instruments, which allows it to develop peak
knowledges (satoris) that are always expansive, virtuous and humanitarian.
Consequently, the use of international human rights Treaties, which have a
higher hierarchy than national laws, validates the Maitriyana international
courts as a supreme trans-sovereign
body. The broad, dynamic and virtuous utilization and interpretation made by
Buddhist Law on international treaties and conventions make that its decisions
have a rank of supralegality. Indeed,
Maitriyana's international courts have been conceived as institutions that are
used to apply on States a view based on the sources of International Human
Rights Law, including the ethical jurisprudence of Buddhist Law. This ethical control of conventionality
states that all organs of a State that are subject to human rights Treaties or
Conventions must comply with and apply the decisions of international courts
defending or protecting such Treaties. It is here where the Maitriyana in a
contemporary way exercises an Ethical Power of supervision or control of conventionality, which paradoxically was
the old role of the spiritual commune (Sangha) in the Buddhic Civilization,
being able to review the issuance and application of legal norms and
administrative decisions of the State, only by granting validity to any action
that is compatible with Ethics and Human Dignity. This interpretation on the
legitimacy of Buddhist Law results in an evolution in the institutionality and
legal security of the international community, strengthening and advancing the
achievements gained in the defense of human rights and fundamental freedoms
built on the basis of two thousand six hundred years of peaceful struggle and
social commitment. Hence, the collective right of the spiritual community
(sangha) to its juridical self-determination is effective and non-illusory,
being broadly protected by international human rights Treaties and also by the
defense of fundamental rights in the local Constitutions. It results also
fundamental the international duty of States toward the right to Truth and the
right of review of the victims of human rights violations. The international
courts of Maitriyana recover the ancient role of the spiritual community (Sangha)
during the Buddhic-Civilization, acting as an Ethical Power or Supreme Ombudsman, a guardian of the fundamental rights of sentient beings, so that the
individual and collective rights owned by the spiritual community (sangha) are
obligatory for all the States of the world.
For two thousand six hundred years
the Buddhist Law was constituted as a revolutionary social movement that gradually
developed a Civilization system throughout Southeast Asia, providing a response
to the lack of values that suffers much of society. Indeed, in the Buddhic
Civilization system, the spiritual commune (sangha) functioned as a Republican Ethical Power, overseeing the
righteous behavior of both the people and the government. This Ethical Power regulating the executive,
legislative, judicial and electoral powers is the historical origin of the
great spiritual renewal that the Maitriyana currently leads, promoting a
political, economic, cultural and environmental revolution. This process of
transformation of the human community is a process of Liberation,
Egalitarianism and Fraternity, raising the voice of mutual support to save the
world from the onslaughts of immorality, which affects the internal and
external world. Therefore, the Buddhist Law provides an ethic that acts from
the field of what is personal and the linkages to the field of what is social,
institutional and political. Faced with a world with war crises, social
injustice, ignorance of values and environmental corruption, the Maitriyana
expresses that it seeks the democratic development of human life, promoting the
participation of every human being in decision making on the welfare of the entire
planet. Certainly, humanity will not be able to survive and evolve if
political, economic, cultural and environmental actions are not guided by the
ethical principles of Buddhist Law, which develops its activity not to seize
power or to enrich itself selfishly but with the aim of serving the
international community. In the Maitriyana's Analytical-Existential-Libertarian
Discourse (Buddha-Dharma-Sangha) it is noted that the loss of the essential
values that characterize contemporary civilization is a process of increasing desacralization of life, so that it is
fundamental seeking to transform the ways of cultural transmission and
production, abandoning materialism, consumerism and superficialism in pursuit
of the advent of the ethics of solidarity, mutual support and detachment. In
seeking to displace the psychic and social evils of greed, hatred and deceit,
the Buddhist Law creates and produces a new human being. This ethical
revolution of Maitriyana is the development of spiritual values, reaffirming
once again the millenarian republican Power that the spiritual commune (sangha)
played in the ancient Buddhist Civilization: the Ethical Power. Therefore, the
Buddhist Tribunal would not only be a new creation in Asia, but would also
exist a precedent in America, because the great revolutionary Simon Bolivar
proposed to develop a Moral Power as
a social institution directed both to the formation of a responsible
citizenship and to ensure the ethical exercise of public offices. Thus, the
proposal of Buddhist Law as an Ethical Power in republican States results no
stranger to the historical experience of the peoples of East and West, which
thanks to Siddharta Gautama and Simon Bolivar know that it must be avoided to be dominated by deceit and to be degraded
by vice. Without the presence of this Republican Ethical Power, governments
are neither free nor enlightened, falling into corruption, warmongering and
manipulation. To restore the old form of ethical and altruistic civilization,
the Maitriyana is proposed as a Supranational
Power that educates and keeps humanity in the field of ethical and
spiritual values. In short, the spiritual masters are the only ones who reflect
deeply on the future of humanity, while at the same time working daily for
their event. Natural resources are often a source of economic development for
States, so that spiritual resources,
that are the Free and Enlightened Beings (Arhats-Bodhisattvas), are essential
sources for enabling a cultural growth and evolution of the world. Buddhist
law, as the supervisor of the international community, is then a true ethical revolution that offers the
antidote to the main poisons of society. Although corruption in Latin America,
war in America, xenophobia in Europe, marginalization in Africa, terrorism in
the Middle East, authoritarianism in Asia and depredation in Oceania seem to be
structural behaviors of contemporary civilization, the Maitriyana teaches righteous
actions and adequate measures to prevent or evade these evils, cultivating the
seeds of a better world for the sake of present and future generations.
Although the mass media often
transmit a world that has lost the values of contemplation, knowledge and
solidarity, the Buddhist Law develops the vision of Gautama and Bolivar on the Republican Ethical Power in order to
build a more equal, democratic and harmonious society. This vision is drawn
daily from the experience and reflection of the spiritual masters of the last
two thousand six hundred years, who constitute the main paths towards the
realization of the Supreme Purpose (Dharma) of humanity. This effort of
Maitriyana is linked to the system of Buddhic Civilization in which there was a
form of republican co-government between the king, the people and the spiritual
commune (sangha). This shows that the future always has precedents in the past.
Like the Vatican during the medieval era, in the contemporary world, the United Nations has attempted to
exercise the role of Supervisory Ethical
Power proposed by Gautama and Bolivar, although undoubtedly both the
Vatican and the UN have failed in this mission by maintaining a system of
corruption and impunity. Buddhist Law, instead, has the fundamental ethical
guidelines to be able to guide the nations of the world with purity in pursuit
of a common action between different States and organizations in favor of the
collective interests of humanity and Mother Earth (Pachamama), avoiding any
kind of corruption, warmongering and deceit. This Ethical Power should not be installed, since it actually has
already existed for two thousand six hundred years. Maitriyana's ethical
commitment is nothing more than the Discourse attempting to reveal the true
nature of society, by regulating the conduct of the international community by
nurturing and becoming transparent the available mechanisms of Ethical Power that already exist in the
governments of the world. The Ethical
Power of Buddhist Law encompasses politics, economics, culture and
environment, having universal jurisdiction over the defense of the rights of
all sentient beings. Therefore, this rectification and evolution of individual
and social behaviors must be supported, strengthening the foundations of the
Path toward a new human life. Maitriyana's tradition takes care of values and
virtues, because its work and spirit of service promotes and develops the
growth of a healthy and educated society. The strong engagement of Buddhist Law
with the ethical and spiritual values strengthens mechanisms of Ethical Power that ensure the
fulfillment of the righteousness in the subject and in society.
In conclusion, the Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights has
the Purpose (Dharma) to save all sentient beings through the Supreme Law, which
implies a direct criticism of corrupt Courts attempting against Justice.
Therefore, it is established that the Venezuelan
Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ) is violating human rights, especially
violating the constitutional democratic State of Law. Undoubtedly, national and
international Courts should be working together in creating a civilization
governed by the Rule of Law, thinking of bringing righteousness to society instead
of creating ways to corrupt it. Without an ethical and spiritual guidance the
Courts become corrupt and partial, leading the sacred practice of Justice
through a Pathway of totalitarian and antidemocratic perversion whose
consequences are no less than the perversion of the Social Contract. Only by practicing the Way of Ethics and Liberty,
as prescribed by Master Gautama, the Courts will not only be able to avoid
damaging human dignity and fundamental rights, but they also will be able to
develop Justice as a form of social evolution. In this way, the Case on the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice
(TSJ) is a great teaching for the international community, proving
perfectly that if Courts operate lacking of ethics and righteousness - as
happens in the Justice of dictatorial countries - then the Courts become an
evil in the world, because they only provide greed, hatred and deceit instead
of providing solidarity, empathy and Truth. Instead, when Courts are guided by
the Ethical Power of human rights and
the Buddhist Spirituality, then they remain free of all destructive power,
being able to help the human being is liberated by means of righteousness.
It is also recorded that during the
framework of the Ethical Judgment against the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of Justice (TSJ), the government of
such country has violently suppressed manifestations carried out by the
citizens in protest of the antidemocratic situation. The Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights demands respect for the civil and
political rights of demonstrators in order to meet peacefully and express
freely without discrimination on the grounds of political orientation, so that
any kind of police repression against public political demonstrations should be
prohibited. This type of human rights violations are also being carried out in
another country in Latin America, because in Argentina violent repressive
techniques are also being used and even the right to strike by teachers seeking
a living wage is being attacked. All this shows that in both Venezuela and
Argentina there is a lack of understanding about what a democratic
constitutional State of Law really is, since democracy is associated only with
the act of voting rather than associating democracy with ethical principles
that put limits on governmental Power by intervening in decision-making. In
short, true democracy does not happen in the illusions of electoral processes,
but when the people perform an ongoing ethical supervision of government
decisions, because otherwise democracies are perverted into dictatorships of majorities.
Following the Path of Master
Gautama, who developed the most righteous and restorative Justice system in the
history of humankind, the Buddhist
Tribunal on Human Rights oversees that national and international courts
not to pervert and commit violations against ethics and human rights, so that
the Venezuelan Supreme Tribunal of
Justice (TSJ) has been sentenced as "Responsible"
for VIOLATION
OF THE DEMOCRATIC CONSTITUTIONAL STATE OF LAW AND VIOLATION OF INTERNATIONAL
HUMAN RIGHTS LAW.
With spirit of reconciliation
(maitri),
Master Maitreya Samyaksambuddha
President and Spiritual Judge of
the International Buddhist Ethics Committee
(IBEC) and Buddhist Tribunal on Human Rights (BTHR)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario
Nota: solo los miembros de este blog pueden publicar comentarios.