Are Judges at the European Court of Human Rights Worse than Terrorists?
Imagine a train hurtling out of control, its passengers’ lives in peril. One traveler reaches for the emergency brake, only for others to disable it, dooming the locomotive to crash into a crowded town and claim hundreds of lives. What charges would follow? Under European criminal law, culpability hinges on intent, context, and motive—ranging from terrorism (requiring a deliberate aim to disrupt society, sow fear, or coerce authorities) to intentional homicide or gross negligence. Absent a political agenda, it might qualify as sabotage or murder. Yet, consider a parallel: what accountability befits a judge who disables the rule of law’s safeguards, such as the European Convention on Human Rights’ (ECHR) provisions for effective remedies and proportionality?
The ECHR as a Safeguard Against Systemic Abuse
The ECHR, particularly through Articles 8 (right to private life) and 13 (right to an effective remedy), empowers courts to scrutinize legislation when political processes falter. It serves as democracy’s emergency brake, protecting citizens from entrenched injustices. Drug policy exemplifies this runaway dynamic: the pursuit of a “drug-free society” has, over six decades, subjected tens of millions to punitive measures without diminishing illicit markets. Empirical evidence consistently demonstrates that criminalization exacerbates violence, insecurity, and public health crises, while over a century of expert reports has questioned its rationale. Nonetheless, institutional interests—power, funding, and prestige—prevail over health and rights, perpetuating prohibition amid outdated fears and moral panics.
This reality grows starker as nations like Canada and Germany regulate cannabis to prioritize public health. When less coercive alternatives are ignored, oversight of law enforcement’s adherence to humane directives becomes impossible. Public hysteria endangers lives and liberties, and judges bear a solemn duty to intervene. Entrusted with leadership and substantial remuneration, they must uphold principles. Indeed, a judge who undermines the ECHR’s remedial framework in drug policy cases may pose a graver threat than a mere saboteur, eroding the foundations of justice itself.
The Imperative of Accountability in the Rule of Law
For over sixty years, Europe’s drug-free ideal has fractured societies. Each year, more than a million individuals navigate the justice system due to drug offenses, amid thousands of preventable overdose deaths—estimated at over 7,000 annually in the EU alone, per recent data—that reform could mitigate. Families shatter, children lose parents, all in service of a paradigm from which increasing numbers of countries diverge. Approximately 19 percent of Europe’s prison population serves time for offenses now regulated elsewhere, underscoring a two-century legal tradition reliant on judicial review.
From this vantage, jurists wield potential for harm surpassing that of extremists: unchecked, they can dismantle the rule of law. It is this concern that prompted appeals to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to hold ECtHR judges accountable for neglecting to assess cannabis prohibition’s legitimacy. Since 2010, Norwegian advocates have petitioned the ECtHR to evaluate prohibition’s necessity in contemporary society, yet for fifteen years, the Court has consistently declined substantive review in such matters, shielding policy from constitutional scrutiny. This pattern jeopardizes Western legal heritage, as judges prioritize entrenched norms over legal certainty, inadvertently bolstering an authoritarian framework.
Confronting Institutional Blindness
Despite admonitions from legal scholars, criminologists, sociologists, and historians, the scapegoating persists, yielding catastrophic outcomes. Six decades of unbridled authority have wrought devastation, sustained by judicial reluctance to challenge entrenched prejudices. It is with good reason that Joseph Conrad observed the policeman and the terrorist emerging from the same ethos, both rationalizing violence for an illusory ideal. Fyodor Dostoevsky expanded on these parallels in Crime and Punishment and Demons, portraying enforcers and radicals entangled in ethical quagmires. Similarly, George Orwell’s 1984 and Franz Kafka’s The Trial illuminate how ideology and bureaucracy erode justice, rendering officials complicit in oppression.
These literary insights remind us that society’s greatest peril arises when powerholders become oppressors. The ECHR arose from this postwar epiphany, yet ECtHR jurists, backed by the Council of Europe’s leadership, have neutralized its protections, allowing an illiberal project to persist. In this light, distinguishing jurists from ideologues proves challenging—save for the former’s amplified capacity for systemic damage. While extremists instill terror, judges can forge police states, which is why the ICC has become involved.
The similarities between drug prohibition, witch hunts, Nazi purges, and apartheid regimes are too obvious to ignore: double standards, public apathy, and exaggerated enemy images transform jurists into instruments of repression. Their ideological fervor brings immense suffering, while the integrity of laws continues to suffer, and history will appraise whether recovery is possible after this prolonged erosion. The rule of law demands accountability, and as the Council of Europe shields drug laws from scrutiny, the ICC must intervene to protect Europe’s rule of law from internal erosion. Absent such action, judicial lapses imperil the entire edifice—and the brake must be engaged.
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