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In today's Standard newspaper, I argue that;
1. Once a judge has all the facts, all the issues, and the applicable law, there is only one legitimate direction; forward, through reason, to a conclusion that those inputs can honestly support. A judge who arrives somewhere else must explain how he got there, and the record must be capable of providing that explanation.
2. Decisional independence doesn't mean applying the law mechanically. It means applying the correct legal reasoning for the correct output.
3. Decisional independence is the freedom to reason. It is not the freedom to abandon reason.
4. Appeal corrects the error for the litigant but does nothing to hold the judge accountable for producing the wrong decision in the first place.
@NelsonHavi
@ehdande
@ahmednasirlaw
@joshuamalidzo
@Ndonglaw043
@StandardKenya

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