FACTOID #151: The five countries with the highest coffee consumption are also the five countries whose citizens trust one another the most. Coincidence? Probably.
A bar association is a body of lawyers who, in some jurisdictions, are responsible for the regulation of the legal profession. In the law, the bar is also known as the community of persons engaged in the practice of law ("members of the bar").
In the United States, some state bar associations are operated by their respective state governments which make membership in their state's bar association a requirement to practice before that state's courts; such states are said to have a "mandatory" or "integrated bar". Membership in such associations is synonymous to being admitted to the bar or being licensed to practice law in that state or being admitted to practice before the courts of that state. In some places membership in a bar association is voluntary and in addition to any licensing that may be required by the state or the court system. Such associations often advocate for law reform, they may discipline the profession and they may provide information, referral or Canada and other Commonwealth countries one is called to the bar after undertaking a post law school training in a provincial law society program and undergoing an apprenticeship or taking articles as it is called. In these countries legal communities are called provincial law societies, except for Quebec where they are called the Barreau du Quebec.
Judges are not members of the bar. Rather, they sit "on the bench", and the cases which come before them are "at bar" or "at bench". These terms evolved from the EnglishInns of Court, where a bar separated the seats of the benchers or readers from the body of the hall, which was occupied by students. When one officially becomes a lawyer, he or she crosses this symbolic physical barrier and is "admitted to the bar". In modern courtrooms, a railing may still be in place to enclose the space which is occupied by legal counsel as well as the criminaldefendants and civillitigants who have business pending before the court.
The name comes from the historic right of lawyers in London to pass the Temple Bar into Westminster without paying the usual toll.
Abas who defended justice and suffered for it in 1988, spoke up finally, last month, lending his voice and weight to the chorus calling for an investigation into the country's worst ever judicial scandal.
In an effort to protect the judiciary from the attacks, Abas wrote to the king, a constitutional figurehead, complaining that the prime minister was browbeating the judges.
Abas said if the country is to be governed democratically, legislations introduced in 1988 should be reversed and power of judicial review of government decisions, as accepted and established in Britain and India, restored.