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circumstances. It is essential that this court is independent of political forces, so
that all parties in the country can look upon it as impartial and trust its
decisions to be unbiased. The Ethiopian federal system differs from other
federal systems by not having an independent Constitutional Court. Instead,
the constitutional issues are left to a political organ, the House of the
Federation, and the legal-political Council of Constitutional Enquiry (Art.62).
Any constitutional disputes arising in the court system has to be handled by the
Council of Constitutional Enquiry, an organ under the HF established in 1996
(Art.82, see also Abbink 1997:168). The council is composed of both political
and legal figures: the president and the vice-president
of the Supreme Court;
three members of the HF; and six legal experts selected by the HPR. The
council shall submit its recommendations to the HF, which will determine the
final outcome of the issue (Art.83).
This might indicate that the Ethiopian constitution makers do not believe
that arguments between the federal and regional level are possible to solve on a
legal basis, but that there have to be some political deliberations about them.
Nevertheless, it means in practice that the constitutional interpretation is
controlled by the party in power. Although the judiciary in general is
independent, the judges in the court system, including
those who are a part of
the Council of Constitutional Enquiry, are appointed by the HPR on the
proposal of the Prime Minister (Art. 81, see also Mattei 1995:124). The
absence of an independent constitutional court has lead observers to claim that
the Ethiopian system lacks the essential limits to government which a
commitment to the principle of constitutionalism should imply (Vestal
1996:35). But if we compare the Ethiopian model with the Russian federation,
for instance, it seems that the Ethiopian system’s lack of checks on the
executive is relatively moderate. In the Russian constitution,
the president is
given the power of judicial review and of arbitration between federal and local
bodies or between constituent members of the federation (Smith 2000:349).
This clearly conflicts with the basic federal principle that central authorities do
not have the right to unilaterally redefine the powers of the constituent units.
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