The next requirement
relates to the relationship between the restriction on the exercise of freedom
of expression by section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and
Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] and the objective of protecting public order or
preserving public safety. Once it is found that the primary purpose of interference
by the State with ...
The next requirement
relates to the relationship between the restriction on the exercise of freedom
of expression by section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and
Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] and the objective of protecting public order or
preserving public safety.
Once it is found that the primary purpose of interference
by the State with the exercise of freedom of expression was to protect a public
interest listed in section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution, the next question
for determination is whether the provisions of the law put in place were
carefully designed to achieve that objective only.
The question for determination is whether or not the
restriction imposed by section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code to the exercise
of freedom of expression is rationally connected with the objective of
protecting public order or public safety. This precedent rule of legitimacy
requires that a provision of law prohibiting conduct in the exercise of freedom
of expression to protect a public interest must be a response to the effects of
direct and proximate harm or likelihood of harm to the public interest.
On the contention that the means used by section 31(a)(iii)
of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] to restrict
the exercise of freedom of expression are not proportionate to the objective
pursued, counsel for the applicants was on firmer ground.
It is easy for Government to place a restriction of the
exercise of a fundamental right within the requirement for adoption of a
legitimate objective. It is for the court to ensure that the law was conceived
and expressed solely to achieve that objective. The law should not, in its
design, have the effect of overreaching and restricting expression which is not
necessary for the achievement of the objective concerned. The court applies the
principle of proportionality to test the relationship between the restriction
to the exercise of the right to freedom of expression and the objective
pursued. The question is whether the restriction is necessary and proportionate
to the objective pursued. Any restriction to the exercise of the right to
freedom of expression claiming to be for the protection of any of the public
interests listed in section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution must meet strict
requirements indicating its necessity and proportionality.
This part of the test presents a high standard to be
overcome by the State seeking to justify the restriction: See Thorgeirson v
Iceland (1992) 14 EHRR 843…,. It was held in that case that the necessity for
any restriction must be 'convincingly established.'
The court must pay particular attention to the principles
characterising a democratic society and the fundamental role which freedom of
expression plays in such society. In order to permit the citizen to keep a
critical control of the exercise of public power, particularly strict limits
must be imposed on interferences with the publication or communication of ideas
and information which refer to activities of public institutions.
The question to be determined in the application of the
proportionality test is whether the means used by Government to restrict the
exercise of freedom of expression are those which are suitable for the
achievement of the legitimate objective pursued. The principle of
proportionality is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution. It forms an
implicit standard gleaned from words such as 'to the extent that the law in
question makes provision in the interests of…,' in section 20(2)(a) of the
Constitution and the general prioritisation of personal liberty over
Governmental regulation.
Protection denotes provision of relief from an actual or
potential burden or harm. For the provision to constitute protection of a
public interest listed in section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution, the
restriction imposed on the exercise of freedom of expression must form a
barrier between the proscribed acts and the public interest thereby breaking
the chain of causation of direct and proximate actual or likely harm on the
public interest.
There cannot be a pressing social need for the imposition
of a restriction on the exercise of freedom of expression for the purpose of
protecting a public interest when that interest is not under threat of direct
and proximate harm from the exercise of freedom of expression. The Constitution
forbids the imposition of a restriction on the exercise of freedom of
expression when it poses no danger of direct, obvious, serious, and proximate
harm to a public interest listed in section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution.
In Rangarajan v Ram [1990] LRC 412…, SHETTY J said:
“There does indeed have to be a compromise between the
interest of freedom of expression and social interest. But we cannot simply
balance the two interests as if they were of equal weight. Our commitment to
freedom of expression demands that it cannot be suppressed unless the
situations created by allowing the freedom are pressing and the community
interest is endangered. The anticipated danger should not be remote, conjectural,
or far-fetched. It should have a proximate and direct nexus with the
expression. The expression of thought
should be intrinsically dangerous to the public interests. In other words, the
expression should be inseparably locked up with the action contemplated like
the equivalent of a 'spark in a powder keg.'”
Fundamental human rights are personal rights.
Freedom of expression belongs to the individual. Any
restriction must be based on the concept of personal responsibility constituted
from personal conduct accompanied by a subjective state of mind. Where it has been necessary to restrict the
exercise of freedom of expression by means of criminal law, the individual must
be the unit of analysis in the determination of the question whether the law is
constitutionally valid or not.
The principle that criminal liability should be based on
personal responsibility is the justification for the requirement that there
ought to have been in existence before the imposition of restrictions on the
exercise of freedom of expression a causal link between the prohibited acts,
the accompanying state of mind of the speaker, writer or publisher or actor and
actual or potential harm to the public interest the protection of which is the
object pursued. The prohibited acts and their actual or potential harmful
effects on the public interest must be traceable to the speaker, writer,
publisher or actor as the source. If that is not the case, they cannot be the
basis for restricting the exercise of freedom of expression. The rule on the
need for a causal link between the prohibited conduct and the injury to be
prevented must be shown to have been satisfied by any permissible legislative
limitation to the exercise of freedom of expression. In other words, the sole motive of the State
should be to ascertain that the protected interests of the community are
respected by the individual or that a guarantee exists that they will be
respected. The purpose must be to ensure that people are able to make use of
their right to freedom of expression to full effect without damaging public
interest.
Not every case of actual or potential harm on the public
interests listed in section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution justifies the
imposition of restrictions on the exercise of freedom of expression. If that
were to be the case the realm of freedom of expression, as protected by the
Constitution, would eventually shrink to zero. The exercise of the right to
freedom of expression is not protected because it is harmless. It is protected
despite the harm it may cause.
It also does not mean that every breach of the restrictive
provision deserves the exercise of the herculean powers of the sword of
prosecution. In fact, a restriction is unlikely to be considered proportionate
where a less restrictive, but equally effective, alternative exists. At times,
invoking the adage that the best remedy for a bad speech is another speech may
be all that is required to refute the false allegations and disclose the truth.
Government has sufficient resources for doing so. Officials within these
institutions who are responsible for public relations possess the best tools
for responding to false statements about performance of their functions. That
would relate to their ability to obtain the relevant information concerning
their performance and in terms of their ability to draw the attention of the
media and thus make their response heard. See Castells v Spain (1992) 14 EHRR
445…,.
As MR JUSTICE BRANDEIS of the U.S. Supreme Court in Whitney
v California 274 US 357 (1927)…, said:
“To courageous, self-reliant men, with confidence in the
power of free and fearless reasoning applied through the processes of popular Government,
no danger flowing from speech can be deemed clear and present, unless the
incidence of the evil apprehended is so imminent that it may befall before
there is opportunity for full discussion. If there be time to expose, through
discussion, the falsehood and fallacies to avert the evil by the process of
education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.”
By guaranteeing freedom to impart and receive ideas and
information on any subject, section 20(1) of the Constitution writes into the Constitution,
as a fundamental principle, that competitive persuasion is one of the means by
which a public institution can effectively protect a public interest against
the publication or communication of false statements about its activities
without having the exercise of the right to freedom of expression curtailed by
means of criminal law. The restriction becomes unnecessary.
It must be established as a fact on the examination of the
provisions of the law that the concepts by which the restriction of the
exercise of freedom of expression is imposed define the proscribed conduct with
adequate precision. The causal connection between the legislative purpose and
the means used to achieve it must be clear and convincing. Only acts in the
exercise of freedom of expression, the prohibition of which is necessary for
the achievement of the objective, should have been proscribed. The means by
which the restriction to the exercise of freedom of expression is imposed must
be narrowly drawn and specifically tailored to achieve the objective pursued by
the legislation. The question is not whether the means the Legislature employs
to accomplish the end pursued are the wisest or the best.
In Superintendent Central Prison Fatehgarh v Ram Manohar
Lohia 1960 SCR (2) 821, the Supreme Court of India held that for a restriction
imposed by a law on the exercise of freedom of expression for the purpose of
protecting public order to be rationally connected to the objective served
there must be a proximate connection between the two. SUBBA RAO J observed
that:
“…,. The limitation imposed in the interests of public
order to be a reasonable restriction, should be one which has a proximate
connection or nexus with public order, but not one far-fetched, hypothetical or
problematical or too remote in the chain of its relation with public order.”
In R v Oakes (1986) 19 CRR 308…, the Supreme Court of
Canada held that the rational connection criterion entailed the establishment
of the fact that 'measures adopted have been carefully designed by the
legislature to achieve the objective in question. They must not be arbitrary,
unfair or based on irrational consideration. In short, they must be rationally
connected to the objective.' See also R v Edwards Books & Art Ltd (1986) 28
C.R.R I…,.
The principle was also stated by the US Supreme Court in
Aptheker v Secretary of State 378 US 500 (1964) in these words:
“A Governmental purpose to control or prevent activities
constitutionally subject to State regulation may not be achieved by means which
sweep unnecessarily broadly and thereby invade the area of constitutionally
protected freedoms.
Even though a Governmental purpose is legitimate and
substantial that purpose cannot be pursued by means that broadly stifle
fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved. The breadth of legislative abridgment must be
reviewed in the light of less drastic means for achieving the same purpose. The
Constitution requires that the powers of Government must be so exercised as
not, in attaining a permissible end, unduly to infringe a constitutionally
protected freedom….,. Precision must be the touchstone of legislation affecting
the liberty guaranteed in the fifth Amendment.”
A restriction which is not rationally connected with the
objective pursued is an unreasonable, unnecessary, and arbitrary interference
with the exercise of freedom of expression.
As a means of protecting the interests of public order and
public safety by the State, section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law
(Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] is problematic. It is not narrowly
drawn and carefully tailored to achieve the objective pursued. Whilst placing
substantial restriction on the basic right to freedom of expression, the
effectiveness of the impugned statute in achieving the legislative purpose is,
in practice, very uncertain.
Section 31(a) (iii) of the Criminal Code must be construed
taking into account the context of the company it keeps. It is indeed a
principle of statutory interpretation that the true meaning of the words used
and the intention of the legislature in any statute can be properly understood
if the statute is considered as a whole. Every part of a section must be
considered as far as it is relevant to do so in order to get the true meaning
and intent of any particular portion of the enactment. It is also important to
bear in mind that as the statute purports to implement derogation from the
principle of a guaranteed fundamental right it must be strictly construed.
It has already been found that section 31(a) of the
Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] prohibits publication
or communication of a false statement when it is accompanied by the subjective
state of mind to secure the results specified in subparagraph(s) (i), (ii)
(iii) and (iv). The prohibited consequences show the interest protected;
(a) Subparagraph (i) protects public safety or public
order.
(b) Subparagraph (ii) protects the defence and economic
interests of Zimbabwe.
(c) It must follow that subparagraph (iii) protects public
confidence in the security service institutions referred to in the provision.
Section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code makes no reference
to public peace and tranquillity or public safety except by inference drawn
from the reference to security service institutions in the provision.
Public order, public safety, defence, and economic
interests of Zimbabwe are interests specifically listed by section 20(2)(a) of
the Constitution for the protection of which imposition of a restriction on the
exercise of freedom of expression may be justified. Public confidence in a
security service institution is not one of those interests. A restriction in
the interest of public confidence in a security service institution is not one
of the restrictions permitted by section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution. As an
end in itself, protection of public confidence in a security service
institution cannot justify the imposition of a restriction on the exercise of
freedom of expression under section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution. Its
protection can only be as part of the means of securing the maintenance of public
order or preservation of public safety.
If public confidence is viewed in the light of the role it
plays in influencing the efficient and effective performance of the functions
of maintaining public order and preserving public safety, the conduct prohibited
by section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter
9:23] is covered by sections 31(a)(i) or
(ii) of the Criminal Code. Section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code would be an
unnecessary enlargement of the provisions of the preceding subparagraphs.
Section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and
Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] prohibits publication or communication of a false
statement on any subject matter accompanied by the requisite state of mind. It
does so without regard to the question whether the fact about which the lie is
published or communicated relates to an important aspect of the performance by
a security service institution of its functions. For the protection of public
confidence in a security service institution to have any connection with the
legitimate aim of protecting the interests of public order and public safety,
the false statement, the publication or communication which is prohibited must
relate to the performance by the security service institution of its functions
as defined by law.
The matter to which the false statement relates does not
have to be a matter within the jurisdiction of a security service institution
referred to in section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code. The prohibition is not
even limited to apply only to a publication or communication which reaches a
significant number of people. A conversation between two people in a private
home would be covered.
A statement, the publication or communication of which is
suppressed because its content is intended to undermine public confidence in a
security service institution may not also undermine the ability of the security
service institution to efficiently and effectively secure the maintenance of
public order and preservation of public safety. There are many activities by
security service institutions on which false statements may be published or
communicated to others to undermine public confidence in them which are
unrelated to their efficient performance of the functions of maintaining public
order or preserving public safety. The legislative purpose of protecting public
order or public safety from the false statements, the publication or
communication of which is prohibited by section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code
was not necessarily achieved by the method used in the statute. The
effectiveness of the prohibition for achieving the proposed legislative
objective is open to serious doubt.
It would be actual or likely harm to the public interest in
the ability of the security service institution to efficiently and effectively
perform the function of maintaining public order and preserving public safety
which would justify the imposition of the restriction on the exercise of
freedom of expression. Section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Law (Codification and
Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] makes no reference to the functioning of the
security service institution as an interest to be protected.
There is the problem of the use of the words 'wholly' or 'materially'
false. The word 'wholly' suggests an intention to exclude a statement which is
a 'half-truth' because it is always also a 'half-lie.' The use of words 'materially
false' in the alternative undermines that conception. For example, a statement
that police caused crime suspects to walk for 50km may be a true statement. The
half-lie would be in not revealing that they did so because of lack of
transport but suggesting instead that they were doing so to torture the
suspects. The statement is not wholly true because the omission of the
information on the non-availability of transport makes it a half-lie. A person
may have published or communicated the statement with the intention of
undermining public confidence in the police. To say a statement is 'materially
false' is to say it is not 'wholly false.'
False news that is harmless to the effectiveness of a
security service institution in maintaining public order or preserving public
safety would be covered by the offence as long as it is accompanied by an
intention to undermine public confidence in the security service institution.
The point is not that a requirement of actual harm to public confidence in a
security service institution is necessary. It is that protecting public
confidence in a security service institution in the manner it does section
31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code has the effect of shielding the public interest
from every possibility of harm. That includes harm the occurrence of which is a
remote possibility.
A remote possibility of harm to the maintenance of public
order or preservation of public safety cannot be a reasonable basis for the
legislative imposition of a restriction on the exercise of freedom of
expression. When the enforcement of the
provisions of a criminal law can lead to conviction and punishment of a person
even in situations in which the harm intended to be prevented is a remote
possibility the reason for the law is lost. In Gosh v Joseph AIR 1963 SC 812…,
the Supreme Court of India held that:
“…, the words 'in the interests of…,'…, cannot be
interpreted to mean that even if the connection between the restriction and the
public order is remote and indirect the restriction can be said to be in the
interests of public order. A restriction can be said to be in the interests of
public order only if the connection between the restriction and the public
order is proximate and direct. Indirect or far-fetched or unreal connection
between the restriction and public order would not fall within the purview of
the expression 'in the interests of public order.'
The danger of undermining public confidence in the security
service institution by a false statement does not have to be significant. The
prohibition applies to cases where the harm caused by a false statement to
public confidence in a security service institution is of a trivial nature. The
clear principle is that prohibition of the exercise of freedom of expression is
a measure so stringent that it would be inappropriate as a means for averting a
relatively trivial harm to society. Where the evil apprehended is not relatively
serious the fact that the exercise of freedom of expression is likely to
undermine public confidence in a security service institution is not enough to
justify its suppression. See Whitney v California 274 US 357 (1927)…,.
The provision permits the State to restrict constitutional
rights in circumstances that may not justify the action. As the offence relates
to expression, state of mind, and effects on attitudes of people it was
imperative that it be narrowly drawn and specifically tailored to achieve the
objective so as not to inhibit expression which does not require that the
ultimate sanction of the criminal law be brought to bear. Protecting public confidence in a security
service institution may give rise to a situation where the law is invoked to
prevent the publication or communication of a false statement because it upsets
people.
Where public confidence is temporarily lost security
service institutions may be able to maintain public order and preserve public
safety by use of the coercive force of the State. Without specific reference to
maintenance of public order or public safety in the terms of the impugned
provision there would be no obvious obligation on the State to prove that the
proscribed conduct posed any real danger to the public interest concerned.
Nothing in the language of the statute limits its applicability to situations
where the prohibited acts directly and proximately cause harm to the
maintenance of public order or preservation of public safety.
The concept of 'undermining' requires that there be some
sort of actual or likelihood of concrete change of attitude in the audience
from reposition of confidence in the security service institution to a
withdrawal of such confidence. It is, however, not a requirement of the offence
that the false statement be of the nature from which such consequence would
flow. It is what the person thinks the statement will do for him or her when it
reaches the audience which matters.
A person who publishes or communicates a false statement without
an intention to also undermine public order is not necessarily outside the
constitutional guarantee although he or she may be within the statutory
prohibition. Whilst it does not specify any subject matter of a false statement
published or communicated with the requisite state of mind, section 31(a)(iii) of
the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] fails to require
that the subject matter then conveyed must be shown to have a direct and
proximate deleterious effect on the public interest the protection of which is
the objective pursued.
In Hector v Attorney General of Antigua and Barbuda &
Others 1991 LRC 237, the appellant was the editor of a newspaper published in
Antigua known as the 'Outlet.' He was charged in respect of an article
published in the 'Outlet' in May 1985. The charge alleged that the article
complained of was a false statement which was likely to undermine public
confidence in the conduct of public affairs in contravention of section 33B of
the Public Order Act 1972 as amended by the Public Order (Amendment) Act 1976. Section
33B provided:
“Notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, any
person who -
(a) In any public place or at any public meeting makes any
false statement; or
(b) Prints or distributes any false statement which is
likely to cause fear or alarm in or to the public or to disturb the public
peace or to undermine public confidence in the conduct of public affairs;
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on
summary conviction to a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars or to a term of
imprisonment not exceeding six months.”
The appellant challenged the validity of the prosecution on
the ground that the specific provisions of section 33B of the Public Order Act
1972 as amended by the Public Order (Amendment) Act 1976, under which the
charge was laid on him, violated section 12(1) of the Constitution of Antigua
and Barbuda. Section 12(1) of the Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda
guarantees to every person the right to freedom of expression in terms and to
the scope similar to that guaranteed by section 20(1) of our Constitution. Section 12(4) of the Constitution of Antigua
and Barbuda provides that:
“Nothing contained in or done under the authority of any
law shall be held to be inconsistent with or in contravention of this section
to the extent that the law in question makes provision -
(a) That is reasonably required -
(i) In the interests of defence, public safety, public
order, public morality or public health.”
In considering the question whether section 33B of the
Public Order Act 1972 as amended by the Public Order (Amendment) Act 1976 was
justified under section 12(4) of the Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda, LORD
BRIDGE of HARWICH, writing for the unanimous bench of the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council, addressed the constitutionality of legislation which applied
to situations in which harm to public order was a remote possibility. His
Lordship…, said:
“If…., a particular false statement, although likely to
undermine public confidence in the conduct of public affairs, is not likely to
disturb public order, a law which makes it a criminal offence cannot be
reasonably required in the interests of public order by reference to the remote
and improbable consequence that it may possibly do so.”
Section 20(2)(a) of the Constitution, having allowed the
imposition of restrictions on the exercise of freedom of expression only in
cases where danger to the public interests listed therein is involved, an
enactment which is capable of being construed and applied to cases where no
such danger could arise cannot be held to be constitutional and valid to any
extent. As section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code would apply where the false
statement published or communicated to others would cause no harm or be
unlikely to cause harm to a public interest listed in section 20(2)(a) of the
Constitution it must be held to be constitutionally invalid.
In other words, the restriction must be exclusively, not
just tangentially, directed towards the legitimate aim....,.
Section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code is particularly
invasive because of the level of the maximum penalty by which it has chosen to
effect its end.
A penalty of imprisonment up to twenty years for publishing
or communicating a false statement with the intention or realising that there
is a real risk or possibility of undermining public confidence in a security
service institution is draconian.
In the 'Commentary on the Criminal Law (Codification and
Reform) Act 2004', published by the Legal Resources Foundation, PROFESSOR G. FELTOE…,
expresses the view that the penalty 'can only be described as savage.' It is
also disproportionate to the harm against which the public interest in the
ability of the institution to efficiently and effectively perform its functions
is protected.
The legislature, having constitutional powers to set out
punishments and the severity of those punishments when laying down the
constitutive elements of a particular criminal offence, has a duty to set the
maximum limits on the punishments for the particular criminal offence. The
constitutional principles of justice and a State governed by the rule of law
presuppose that every penalty imposable in this sphere must be proportionate to
the legitimate aim pursued and the seriousness of the offence. The maximum
penalty of imprisonment to which a person convicted of the offence is made
liable does not meet this test.
The establishment is not permitted of punishments, the
severity of which are obviously inappropriate for the criminal offence and the
purposes of the punishment for which maximus penalties are ordinarily
fixed. No relevant and sufficient
reasons were advanced by the State for the decision to fix the maximum penalty
of imprisonment at twenty years. It is very hard to see in the circumstances
the justification for the use of such a maximum sentence on the principle of
general deterrence of commission of similar offences.
The only inference that can be drawn from the maximum
penalty of imprisonment to which the offender may be subjected is that the
punishment is intended to have a chilling effect on the exercise of freedom of
expression as opposed to merely deterring the occurrence of the prohibited
acts. This is particularly the case when regard is had to the fact that the
cases to which section 31(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code applies would not
involve actual violence or threats of violence. It is an offence which punishes
a person for conduct committed with intent to produce a specific result or when
realizing that there is a real risk or possibility of the result occurring
quite often regardless of whether the result
materializes or not.
By its nature, the offence is committed in a peaceful
environment and does not usually give rise to actual disturbance of public
order. In this case, the ability of the law enforcement agency to maintain
peace and tranquillity in the community remained what it was before the two
articles were published in the newspaper. The security service institutions
continued with the performance of the functions of maintaining public order and
preserving public safety.
The factor of seriousness of the offence could not have
caused Parliament to set the maximum penalty of imprisonment at twenty years.
It is equally difficult to imagine the worst offence and worst offender
deserving of the imposition of the maximum penalty of imprisonment of twenty
years. The proportionality requirement takes into account the fact that a
threat of criminal prosecution, conviction, and punishment for publishing or
communicating falsehood to undermine public confidence in a security service
institution must inevitably have an inhibiting effect on the exercise of
freedom of expression.
The principle is concerned to prevent inhibition which
extends beyond the subject matter of the law….,.
Taking into account the fact that freedom of expression is
peculiarly more vulnerable to the 'chilling effects' of criminal sanctions than
any other fundamental right, it has been stated by the UN Special Rapporteur on
freedom of opinion and expression that penal sanctions, particularly
imprisonment, should never be applied to offences of publishing false news. The
higher the level of the maximum penalty of imprisonment the greater the
chilling effect on freedom of expression.
The United Nations Human Rights Commission commented on the
effect of the use of sentences of imprisonment for offences of publishing or
communicating false news. In 2000, the UN Special Rapporteur made a statement
on the unacceptability of imprisonment under false news provisions saying:
“In the case of offences such as publishing or broadcasting
'false' or 'alarmist' information, prison terms are both reprehensible and out
of proportion to the harm suffered by the victim. In all such cases,
imprisonment as punishment for the peaceful expression of an opinion
constitutes a serious violation of human rights.”
Provisions of a law which fixes a maximum level of
punishment disproportionate to the objective pursued have the effect of setting
a court up as an inadvertent censor of freedom of expression contrary to its
constitutional function of safeguarding the enjoyment of fundamental human
rights.
Experience has shown that it is difficult to excise false
statements on matters of public concern such as the performance of law
enforcement agents without significantly damaging democratic
self-governance. The United Nations
Human Rights Commission has even gone to the extent of recommending the
scrapping of false news provisions from statute books because they 'unduly
limit the exercise of freedom of opinion and expression.' What all this means
is that such laws are not deemed necessary in a democratic society. What is
clear is that because of the severity of the deleterious effects on the
exercise of freedom of expression of the level of the maximum penalty of
imprisonment the law is not justified by the objective it is intended to serve.
The requirement that there must be a reasonable relationship of proportionality
between the means employed and the aim sought to be realised by the measure
applied by the State in restricting the exercise of freedom of expression was
not met.
It has not been shown that section 31(a) (iii) of the
Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] was not in
contravention of section 20(1) of the former Constitution.
Section 24(5) of the former Constitution applies.
The Minister of Justice, Legal Affairs and
Parliamentary Affairs is hereby called upon to appear, if he so wishes, before
the Constitutional Court on 20 November 2013, at 9.30am, to show cause why section 31
(a)(iii) of the Criminal Code should not have been declared to be in
contravention of section 20(1) of the former Constitution.