The
Dependency Studies Project
Study and Analysis on Dependency Governance
__________________________________________
Assessment of
self-governance sufficiency in conformity
with
internationally-recognised standards
Country: Bonaire
In the aftermath of the five-year review of the ‘public entity’ status, a constitutional process was initiated in The Hague to embed/anchor the three polities of Bonaire, Saba and Sint Eustatius (BES Islands) in the Dutch Constitution. With specific reference to Bonaire, this procedure was followed despite persistent questions about the legitimacy of the status which had been repeatedly opposed by the people through democratic expression in multiple referenda.
Despite the misgivings formally expressed on multiple fronts in Bonaire and Sint Eustatius, and following independent critique by various scholars and legal authorities in and out of the Kingdom, the Netherlands proceeded, nevertheless, to embark on an internal political process as a ‘final solution’ of anchoring the status in the Dutch Constitution. This process was accelerated in the aftermath of the five-year review even as it was strenuously opposed in Bonaire to no avail.
By 2019, a main Dutch objective was to encourage BES participation in the election for the nine-member Electoral College newly created under Article 132a(3) of the Dutch Constitution. This was designed to project a certain legitimacy of the foregone anchoring procedure on the assumption that the BES would participate overwhelmingly in the process. Accordingly, the voter participation for the Electoral College was a bare majority of 50.7 % (blank ballots which may have been cast in protest and which may have dropped the final count below 50 % were excluded from the final count). [1] Thus, a modicum of participation in the Dutch political system may have been the result, but its significance severely limited in accordance with the level of representation for the BES. Overall, the unilateral annexation of Bonaire would be violative of the international legal principle of "ex injuria jus non oritur" (“unjust acts cannot create law”).
TABLE: Comparison of ‘public
bodies’ in Dutch Constitution
2002-2018 (emphasis added)
Dutch Constitution 2002 |
Dutch Constitution 2008 |
Dutch Constitution 2018 |
Article 134 1. Public bodies for the professions and trades and other public bodies may be established and dissolved by or pursuant to Act of Parliament. 2. The duties and organisation of such bodies, the composition and powers of their administrative organs and public access to their meetings shall be regulated by Act of Parliament. Legislative powers may be granted to their administrative organs by or pursuant to Act of Parliament. 3. Supervision of the administrative organs shall be regulated by Act of Parliament. Decisions by the administrative organs may be quashed only if they are in conflict with the law or the public interest. Article 135 Rules pertaining to matters in which two or more public bodies are involved shall be laid down by Act of Parliament. These may provide for the establishment of a new public body, in which case Article 134, paragraphs 2 and 3, shall apply. Article 136 Disputes between public bodies shall be settled by Royal Decree unless they fall within the competence of the judiciary or decisions are referred to other bodies by Act of Parliament. |
Article 134 1. Public bodies for the professions and trades and other public bodies may be established and dissolved by or pursuant to Act of Parliament. 2. The duties and organisation of such bodies, the composition and powers of their administrative organs and public access to their meetings shall be regulated by Act of Parliament. Legislative powers may be granted to their administrative organs by or pursuant to Act of Parliament.
3. Supervision of the administrative organs shall be regulated
by Act of Parliament. Decisions by the administrative organs may be quashed only
if they are in conflict with the law or the public interest. Article 135
Rules pertaining to matters in which two or more public bodies are involved shall
be laid down by Act of Parliament. These may provide for the establishment of
a new public body, in which case Article 134, paragraphs 2 and 3, shall
apply. Article 136 Disputes between public bodies shall be settled by Royal
Decree unless they fall within the competence of the judiciary or decisions
are referred to other bodies by Act of Parliament. |
Article 132a 1. In the Caribbean part of the Netherlands, territorial public bodies other than provinces and municipalities may be established and dissolved by Act of Parliament. 2. Articles 124, 125 and 127 to 132 shall apply mutatis mutandis to these
public bodies.
|
The spectre of political, economic and social inequality and the accompanying asymmetrical balance of power continues to linger when such distinctions between the Caribbean and Dutch ‘parts of the Kingdom’ are articulated as they are in the new constitutional provisions of the Dutch Constitution of 2018 related to the ‘public entities/bodies.’ At the least, there is no attempt to re-name them as ‘special municipalities’- the term often used in general discourse on the new dependency governance arrangements in the BES islands.
All things considered, the inalienable right to self-determination must lead to a transformational process of decolonisation and democracy – or it can be replaced with a distorted process resulting in the cruel hoax of colonial reform perpetuating the inequality that the process was supposed to replace. This was the case with respect to the BES Islands in the Caribbean.
The British, French and U.S. all have their versions of asymmetrical dependency governance in the Caribbean and/or the Pacific. Upon examination of the oeuvre of research, the present SGA can only conclude that any projection of Bonaire as a model of democratic governance is illusory at best. Instead, what has been created is yet another form of 21st Century colonialocracy - deficient by all measures of democratic governance.
[1] In comparison, the vote for the
candidates to the Island Council was or 64.14 per cent or some fourteen per cent higher
than that for the “Electoral College.
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