Tünde Handó

Tünde Handó
President of the OBH
Personal details
Born (1962-05-01) 1 May 1962
Salgótarján, Hungary
Spouse(s) József Szájer (1983–present)
Children Fanni
Alma mater Eötvös Loránd University

Tünde Handó (Salgótarján, 1 May 1962 – ) Hungarian jurist, judge, President of the OBH (National Judiciary Office) since 2011.

Early career

She graduated on Eötvös Loránd University Faculty of Law in 1986 and she had been the member of Bibó István College from 1983 to 1986. She got married to Szájer József – vice-president of Fidesz and Member of the European Parliament - in 1983. Their child Fanni was born in 1987.

She was a court drafter of the Metropolitan Labor Court then she became a court secretary. Later she was working as appointed judge since 1 May 1991 and then she became the President of the Metropolitan Labor Court since 15 April 1999. She has been acting also as lecturer teacher of the labor department of ELTE Faculty of Law since January 1999. She is an honorary county court judge since 15 July 2003. She is the member of the exam-committee of the Metropolitan Court and the Law Exam Commission since 1999. She is the Vice-president of the National Association of Labor Judges since 2000 and member of the Hungarian Labor Law Society since 2008. She became the Chairperson of the Association of European Labor Judges in 2008.

President of the National Judiciary Office (OBH)

Being appointed to this position she had to face with political critics because of her husband and her connections to Fidesz-politicians. Her husband, Szájer József is one of the key-member of the public-law transformation led by the second Viktor Orbán administration. MSZP member of the committee said that the nomination process is a “shameful farce” in which the constitutional committee supported the nomination of the wife of József Szájer.[1]

Relocation of BKV-case

“Orbáns’ court started to operate” in January 2012.[2] Tünde Handó appointed Sándor Fazekas to the President of the Metropolitan Tribunal on 5 January. The BKV-case indictment was lodged to the Metropolitan Tribunal on 11 January 2012 according to the court registry seal, where Fazekas immediately started to use the new act and suggested the relocation of the case at Handó on 17 January (couple of days later of his appointment).[3]

Not much later, the Metropolitan Tribunal announced the initiation to relocate the BKV-case.[4]

According to the data published on OBH website, Tünde Handó issued that presidential recommendation on 20 February 2012, which collects the criteria to be considered at the relocation processes. Despite of this Tünde Handó already decided on the relocation of BKV-case on 16 February without any criteria system and the chance to appeal.[5]

Tünde Handó as President of OBH appointed the Kecskemét Tribunal to hear the case at first instance where the trial began before the summer holiday and according to the court’s report it should end in 18–24 months. Therefore the decision of first instance would be announced in the final campaign sprint of the next ordinary national elections and/or the municipality election. This is not the only case when a trial at Kecskemét Tribunal ends in a period when the timing serves the best interest of Fidesz. Prior to this, in the case of János Zuschlag this tribunal delivered the decision of first instance just in March 2010 at the height of the national parliamentary elections campaign [6] After Zuschlag, Miklós Hagyó’s case was also landed at Kecskemét Tribunal.

Answering to that journalist question of “what are you doing in order to avoid even the pretense of political prejudice in Miklós Hagyó-case” the Kecskemét Tribunal replied the followings in a news conference: “We do not do anything. Nothing in administrational way. Neither the chairman of the tribunal nor any of its leaders may horn in the decision of the appointed judge. (…) In administrational way the only we can and have to do is to provide to deliver a decision in a reasonable time. The judge is totally independent, separate and delivers the decision only on the base of his or her conscience, conviction and the law.” This is to note that Szabolcs Sárközi’s – spokesman of the tribunal – father is a Fidesz-politician in Kecskemét.[7]

According to the official reasoning the reason of the relocation was the condition of the Metropolitan Tribunal as it was so overloaded that it could not have judged this case – a socialist politician is involved – in due time. This reasoning however became questionable when it was found that the ratio of the special cases at Metropolitan Tribunal is 60% while at Kecskemét Tribunal is 56% so Tünde Handó won only a couple of percent with her decision.[8][9]

Many criticisms took place against Handó and the OBH regulation because of the right to appoint a judge.[10]

Miklós Hagyó and accused associates turned to the Constitutional Court and the European Court of Human Rights against the decision of Tünde Handó. Due to their defenses’ standpoint constitutional fundamental rights were infringed by relocating the case. Defense believes that the right to legal judge infringed since the relocation happened without excluding arbitrary and without objectivity and transparency. Due to their standpoint also the obligation of impartiality was infringed since the relocation was signed by the President of OBH also wife of József Szájer and the appointed court had already delivered a serious decision in Zuschlag-case in similar political context. Furthermore, the right to legal remedy was also infringed since the law failed to provide effective legal remedy against the decision on appointing another judge – as the brief contains. Although the Constitutional Court considered the possibility of the relocation of the cases as being against the Fundamental Law, the governmental 2/3 incorporated it to the articles of the Fundamental Law. This was also terminated by the Constitutional Court – with the separate opinion of Mária Szívós [11]– it’s true that now they judged it unconstitutional upon formal reasons and did not inspect it in the merits. The only problem was then that definitive regulations are called provisional stipulations. Despite of this the case still remains in Kecskemét.[12]

The Hungarian Helsinki Committee and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union are extremely concerned about the regulation which enables the President of OHB to appoint a judge and court against the law in order to hear the case and these organizations called the president not to grant such requests in the future [13]

Constitutional Court hearing

The Constitutional Court heard Tünde Handó on 23 April 2013, during the judging of the constitutional complaint lodged in BKV-case. President of OBH said in a news conference that she asked for a hearing at Const.Court in order to clarify the misunderstandings and errors. Miklós Hagyó wanted to be there at the hearing.[14] Defense requested the publicity of the hearing in vain.[15]

She was heard behind closed doors, without public against which the Eötvös Károly Institute, the Hungarian Helsinki Committee and the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union were protesting.[16] They believe that the fact that the Const.Court heard the President of OBH in closed session infringed the right to fair trial, the right to know publicly the decision process of the public authority and the right to free access to information of public interest. The Const.Court ignoring the protestations encrypted the record of the hearing to 10 years.[17] On 2 December 2013 after 224 days passed the Constitutional Court established again that the relocation of cases is against the Fundamental Law and also breaches international conventions.[18] According to the standpoint of the Const.Court they worked on this case as they wanted to subject the consequences other pending proceedings too. OBH interpreted the decision just on the contrary meaning that the decision shall not affect pending cases.[19] Handó’s OBH declared not to interfere with the judiciary's business: It is the acting judge who can decide the effect of the Const.Court’s decision on the pending case. Besides, Handó defended the independence of the judiciary [20]

Kecskemét Tribunal established its incompetence in its decision of 16 December 2013 and so it relocated the BKV-case to the Metropolitan Tribunal[21]

Anyway, Miklós Hagyó had already won a lawsuit in Strasbourg when Handó was heard by the Const.Court. According to the decision of the European Court of Human Rights the Hungarian authorities infringed many laws by keeping him in such conditions.[22] Mária Szívós as Chairperson of the counsel of the Metropolitan Court confirmed the pre-trial detention of Miklós Hagyó three times, automatically, without critic on the basis of a police report which never existed.[23] Furthermore, Szívós ordered more severe coercive measures against Miklós Hagyó’s accused associates (e.g. Ottó L., Éva H. and Miklós R.).

“Handó’s mandate commenced on 1st January 2012 and lasts for nine years; she promised a more transparent and efficient judiciary operation for her term.”

References

  1. ""shameful farce": the constitutional committee supported the nomination of the wife of József Szájer". Népszabadság online. 12 December 2011.
  2. "Orbánék bírósága megkezdte működését". 168Óra online. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  3. "Hagyó is interested in Handó’s replies but he is also excluded from the hearing". stop.hu. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  4. "This is not the first case". Hagyó Dosszié. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  5. "Relocation of BKV-case was urgent". Népszava online. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  6. "Relocation of BKV-case was urgent". Népszava online. Retrieved 7 May 2013.
  7. "Another Fidesz-relative in the proceeding". Népszava online. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  8. "Kecskemét exposure". Hagyó Dosszie. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  9. "Handó relocated Hagyó’s case to Kecskemét". HVG. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  10. "BKV-ügy – a törvényes bírósághoz való jog hatálya alól is kiemelve?" (PDF). Jogifórum.hu. Éva Kádár.
  11. "Hagyó remains in Kecskemét unconstitutionally?". Népszava online. Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  12. "Constitutional Court’s procedure in connection with the nomination of Kecskemét Tribunal (documentary)". official website of Miklós Hagyó.
  13. "Bíróságot kijelölni veszélyes". TASZ.hu.
  14. "Hagyó-ügy: az Ab elé áll Handó". Népszava online. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  15. "András Kádár’s reply to the public hearing of the Const.Court (official document)". official website of Miklós Hagyó. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  16. "Jogvédők: Handó alkotmánybírósági meghallgatását nyilvánossá kellene tenni". Népszabadság online. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  17. "Public authority decision-making process infringes publicty? – Handó’s hearing at the Const.Court is not public – Law protectors protest". Jogi Fórum/MTI. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  18. "Súlyosan sérült a tisztességes eljárás". Népszava.
  19. "Súlyosan sérült a tisztességes eljárás". Népszava.
  20. "Az Országos Bírósági Hivatal szakmai állásfoglalása az ügyáthelyezéssel kapcsolatban". birosag.hu.
  21. "Visszahelyezték a Hagyó pert a fővárosba". Népszava.
  22. "Hagyó won lawsuit in Strasbourg". Népszava online. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  23. "A BKV-ügy nyertesei: Szívós Mária alkotmánybíró". Hagyó Dosszié. Retrieved 27 August 2012.

Sources

- The Guardian: Meet Tünde Handó

- Handó Tünde - Hungarian Wikipedia


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