MAFUSIRE J: The above
four cases came up separately on automatic review in terms of s 57 of the
Magistrates' Court Act, [Cap 7:10]. Except
for Case 3 (S v Tafadzwa Ruzvidzo), all of them were cases of rape by juvenile
male offenders upon female minors or infants. Case 3 was one of aggravated
indecent assault. I decided to deal with all of them in one judgment. The
essential element is the same. It is about the constitutionality of corporal
punishment.
All accused persons were
first offenders. In Case 1 (S v Walter Mufema) the accused was 16 years
old. His victim was 4. The accused pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to 3
strokes with a rattan cane.
In Case 2 (S v
Callington Chavhunduka) the accused was 16 years old. The complainant was
13. He was charged with rape, in contravention of s 65 of the Criminal Law
(Codification and Reform) Act, Cap 9:23,
(“the
Code”). He denied the charge. A full trial ensued. The court found no
evidence of rape. Sexual intercourse had been consensual. So the accused was found
guilty of contravention of s 70 of the Code, i.e. having sexual intercourse
with a young person. He was sentenced to 4 strokes.
In Case 3 the accused was
14 years old. His victim was 3. He indecently assaulted the complainant by
inserting a stick into her vagina. She was injured. He denied the charge.
Nonetheless he was convicted of aggravated indecent assault as defined in s
66(1)(a) of the Code. The sentence was 4 strokes.
In Case 4 (S v
Claudios Baundi) the accused was 15 years old. The complainant was 4. The
accused pleaded guilty. He was sentenced to 3 strokes.
In Case 1 the sentence was
passed in January 2014. In all others sentencing was in December 2014. There is
no telling from the record whether or not the sentences have already been
carried into execution. But in all likelihood they have. Section 110 of the
Prison Regulations, 1956, requires that a sentence
of corporal punishment be carried out as soon as possible after it has been
awarded. This, of course, is after all the formalities, like confirmation or
appeals, have been exhausted.
In this country corporal
punishment of male juveniles is sanctioned by s 353 of the Criminal Procedure
and Evidence Act, Cap 9:07 (“the
CP & E Act”). It reads:
“353 Corporal Punishment of male juveniles
(1)
Where
a male person under the age of eighteen years is convicted of any offence the
court which imposes sentence upon him may-
(a)
in
lieu of any other punishment; or
(b)
in
addition to a wholly suspended sentence of a fine or imprisonment; or
(c)
in
addition to making an order in terms of subsection (1) of section three hundred and fifty-one;
sentence him to receive moderate
corporal punishment, not exceeding six strokes.”
Section 101 of the
Prisons Act, [Cap 7:17], defines
corporal punishment as a “… moderate correction of whipping referred
to in section 353 of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act ..”
Sub-sections (2) to (6) of
the CP & E Act regulate the manner in which the corporal punishment is to
be administered. In brief, it is to be administered in private. The parent or
guardian of the juvenile offender may be present. It can only be administered
after a medical doctor has certified that the juvenile offender is fit to
receive it.
The Prisons Act and the
Regulations aforesaid prescribe, among other things, the manner how, the place
where, and the persons by whom, corporal punishment is to be administered. Firstly, in addition to the parents or
guardian of the juvenile offender that may be present in terms of the CP &
E Act, the Prisons Act adds two more persons. Section 103 provides that no corporal
punishment shall be carried out in the absence of the medical officer who
certified the juvenile offender to be fit to receive it, and of the officer in
charge of the prison. With regards the officer in charge of the prison, the
Prison Regulations, in s 111(1), empower him to delegate this function to a
senior or junior officer.
The Prison Regulations
prescribe the type of instrument by which corporal punishment shall be
administered. It is a rattan cane. No doubt, given the time of their promulgation,
the Regulations still refer to the measurements of this instrument in feet and
inches. They say for prisoners under the age of nineteen years, the rattan cane
should be three feet long and not more than three-eighths (3/8)
of an inch in diameter. (For prisoners nineteen years old and above, the
measurements are four feet and not more than half (½) an inch respectively).
Then s 109(2) of the
Prison Regulations reads:
“(2) The manner in which corporal punishment
shall be inflicted ….. shall be as follows-
(a)
a
blanket or similar form of protection shall be placed across the small of the
prisoner's back above the buttocks;
(b)
a
small square of thin calico shall be dipped in water, wrung out and tied over
the prisoner's buttocks;
(c)
strokes
shall be administered from one side upon the buttocks of the prisoner and on no
account on the back.”
Elaborating on the manner
of execution of corporal punishment, the Supreme Court painted the following
graphic description in S v Ncube, a case that held that corporal
punishment on adults was unconstitutional:
“Once the prisoner is certified fit
to receive the whipping, he is stripped naked. He is blindfolded with a hood
and placed face down upon a bench in a prone position. His hands and legs are
strapped to the bench, which is then raised to an angle of 45 degrees. (A)
calico square is tied over his buttocks and the kidney protector secured above
his buttocks at waist level. The prisoner's body is then strapped to the bench.
The cane is immersed in water to prevent splitting. The strokes are
administered to one side across the whole of the buttocks.”
On 31 December 2014,
MUREMBA J, in a criminal review judgment in S
v Willard Chokurumba, with which MAWADZE J
concurred, declared, among other things, that s 353 of the CP & E Act was
misaligned with the new Constitution of Zimbabwe. She came to this conclusion
by comparing the wording on corporal punishment in the old Constitution with
that of the new Constitution. Section 15 of the old Constitution of 1979
provided as follows:
“15 Protection from inhuman and degrading
treatment
(1)
No
person shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading punishment or
other such treatment.
(2)
……………………………………………
(3)
No moderate
corporal punishment inflicted-
(a)
in
appropriate circumstances upon a person under the age of eighteen years by his
parent or guardian or by someone in loco
parentis or in whom are vested any of the powers of his parent or guardian;
or
(b)
in execution of
the judgment or order of a court, upon a male person under the age of eighteen
years as a penalty for breach of any law;
shall be held to be in contravention of
subsection (1) on the ground that it is inhuman or degrading.” (emphasis
added)
On the other hand, the
new Zimbabwe Constitution that came into effect in 2013 and which replaced the
old one, made no specific mention
of corporal punishment. But on inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment it
provides as follows in s 53:
“53 Freedom
from torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
No person may be subjected to
physical or psychological torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment.”
In
the review judgment aforesaid MUREMBA J noted that s 86 of the new Constitution
outlaws any law that purports to limit any fundamental rights and freedoms
enshrined in that Constitution. Expressly mentioned in subsection (3),
paragraphs (a) and (b), are the right to human dignity and the right not to be
tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
The
learned judge also noted the provisions of s 52 and s 56 of the new
Constitution. Section 52(a) guarantees the right of every person to bodily and
psychological integrity. This includes the right to freedom from all forms of
violence from public or private sources. Section 56 guarantees equality and
equal treatment of all persons before the law. Discrimination on the grounds
of, inter alia, sex, gender or age is
outlawed.
On
the basis of the change in the wording in the new Constitution, and having
regard to several regional and international conventions that have regarded
corporal punishment of juveniles as violence against children and a violation
of their human dignity, physical integrity and self-esteem, MUREMBA J concluded
as follows:
“This elaboration of the children's
rights in conformity with the regional and international conventions that
Zimbabwe has ratified demonstrates that the new Constitution does not allow …
the imposition of corporal punishment anymore. Clearly s 353(1) of the Criminal
Procedure and Evidence Act [Cap 9:07]
is now a law which is inconsistent or ultra
vires the Constitution. …… What it means under the circumstances is that
whilst the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [Cap 9:07] remains in force its section 353(1) is now an invalid
law. ……….. [T]he courts have a duty to uphold the Constitution and to promote,
respect and protect the rights and freedoms enshrined therein. I thus declare s
353(1) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [Cap 9:07] to be constitutionally invalid.”
In my view, and with due
respect, my learned sister judge hit the bull's eye. I agree entirely with those
findings and those conclusions. There can be no question that corporal
punishment of juveniles has become unlawful in this country. The old
Constitution made this country an outpost of tyranny and cruelty against
children. Our stance on corporal punishment stuck up like a sore thumb. All
around us, and in virtually all over the progressive world, corporal
punishment, whether of adults or of juveniles, had been abolished. That the
Prisons Act defines corporal punishment as “… moderate correction of whipping
…”, or that the Regulations seem to go to some length to mollify or mitigate
the manner of its execution cannot, in my view, make it any less brutal. It is
like applying lipstick on a bullfrog, or blowing incense on a skunk.
In fact, our old Constitution,
in expressly sanctioning corporal punishment as it did, was not always like
that before. Subsection (3) of s 15 that expressly said, inter alia, corporal punishment inflicted upon a male person in
execution of a judgment or order of a court was not inhuman or degrading
treatment was a 1990 amendment. The subsection was inserted by Act No. 30 of 1990
as the eleventh amendment to the Lancaster House Constitution.
In my view, by amending
the Constitution in 1990 to make corporal punishment lawful, the Legislature
was being reactive and retrogressive. In June 1989 the then Supreme Court,
sitting as a Constitutional Court in the case of S v Juvenile, by a majority of three
judges to two, had held that corporal punishment inflicted upon male juvenile
offenders in terms of the CP & E Act was ultra vires s 15(1) of the Constitution. Given the weight of
authority, both in this jurisdiction and elsewhere in the progressive world, except
South Africa at that time, and given the provisions of the various
international conventions on children's rights, such a conclusion by the then
Constitutional Court was inevitable. The Ncube
case, supra, had been decided two years
earlier. The Supreme Court had, by a unanimous decision, adjudged corporal
punishment on adults as being unconstitutional, barbaric, inherently brutal and
cruel. The court said it stripped the victim of all dignity and self-respect,
treating humans as non-humans.
In the Juvenile case, noting that the only
significant difference between the whipping of an adult and that of a juvenile
in the execution of the sentence of corporal punishment, was in the size of the
rattan cane to be used, the Constitutional Court said that the strictures
applied to corporal punishment of adults would apply a fortiori to such punishment when meted out on juveniles. The
court registered its abhorrence of this type punishment in the most powerful
diction and colourful nomenclature. For
example, GUBBAY JA, who had delivered the court's judgment in the Ncube case said:
“…. [J]udicial whipping in any form
must inevitably tend to brutalise and debase both the punished and the punisher
alike. It causes the latter, and through him society, to stoop to the level of
the offender. It marks a total lack of respect for a fellow human, be he adult
or juvenile. It treats members of the human race as non-humans. By its very
nature it is extremely humiliating to the recipient.
“…. [J]udicial whipping, no matter
the nature of the instrument used and the manner of execution, is a punishment
inherently brutal and cruel; for its infliction is attended by acute physical
pain. …. Irrespective of any precautionary conditions which may be imposed, it
is a procedure subject to ready abuse in the hands of a sadistic or overzealous
official appointed to administer it. It is within his power to determine the
force of the beating.
“In short, whipping, which invades
the integrity of the human body, is an antiquated and inhuman punishment which
blocks the way to understanding the pathology of crime. It has been abolished
in very many countries of the world as being incompatible with contemporary
concepts of humanity, decency and fundamental fairness. The main categories of
exception appear to be some former British colonies and some States where shari'a (Islamic law) is practised.”
In the same judgment,
KHOSA JA, on the side of the majority, said:
“Speaking for myself, I think any
law which compels a person, against his will, to expose his posterior to the
gaze of total strangers while blindfolded and strapped to a wooden bench
degrades and debases that person, and if this is done for the sole purpose of
subjecting him to whipping, then it also dehumanises him.
“Even if corporal punishment were
to be administered without the victim taking his clothes off, the mere idea of
inflicting physical pain as a form of punishment corresponds, in my view with
torture and the lex talionis – an eye
for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a life for a life – all of which have been
condemned because they represent an inhuman approach to punishment; ….”
Not only is this court
bound by the decisions of the Supreme Court and the Constitutional Court, but
also the manner those courts have expressed themselves on the subject is, in my
view, and with due respect, the mark of leadership in the development of jurisprudence.
Therefore, if the new
Constitution has dropped the amendment to the old Constitution that permitted
the meting out of corporal punishment upon male juveniles, and if the
Constitution has gone on to strengthen certain provisions of the Bill of
Rights, for instance, by promulgating s 86(3)(c) that says that no law may
permit the right to be tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment; s 52(a) that guarantees the freedom from all forms of
violence from public or private sources; and s 56 that guarantees fair
treatment of all persons and outlaws discrimination on the grounds of, inter alia, sex, gender or age, there
can be no doubt that s 353 of the CP & E Act, has become anachronistic.
In the circumstances, in
the four cases above, like MUREMBA J did before me, I cannot certify the
sentences of canning to be in accordance with real and substantive justice.
Given the average ages of the accused persons and those of their victims, and
given that community service is wholly inappropriate in rape cases and, in my
view, cases of aggravated indecent assault such as was the situation in Case 3
above, I consider that sentences of imprisonment of three to five years wholly
suspended would have been appropriate.
Section 167(3) of the new
Constitution provides that it is the Constitutional Court that makes the final
decision whether, among other things, an Act of Parliament is unconstitutional.
It is that court that must confirm any order of constitutional invalidity made
by another court before that order has any force.
That an order concerning
the constitutional invalidity of any law made by any other court has no force
unless confirmed by the Constitutional Court is repeated in s 175(1) of the
Constitution. Subsection (4) says that if a constitutional matter arises in any
proceedings before any court, the person presiding over that court may refer
the matter to the Constitutional Court. I consider that this provision also
applies to criminal reviews by this court in terms of s 57 of the Magistrate's
Court Act, [Cap 7:10]. In terms of
subsection (5) of s 175 of the Constitution, an Act of Parliament or rules of
court must provide for the reference to the Constitutional Court of an order
concerning the constitutional invalidity made by any court other than the
Constitutional Court.
There is not yet any Act
of Parliament or rules of court providing for the reference of matters to the
Constitutional Court. In her review judgment aforesaid MUREMBA J employed the
provisions of subsection (3) of s 175 of the Constitution. They say that any
person with a sufficient interest may appeal or apply directly to the Constitutional
Court to confirm or vary an order concerning constitutional validity by a
court. The learned judge held the view that it is the Prosecutor-General who
should apply to the Constitutional Court to have the declaration of
constitutional invalidity of s 353(1) of the CP & E Act confirmed. Thus,
she directed that her review judgment be brought to the attention of the
Prosecutor-General.
I believe that the course
adopted by the learned judge was correct. But I also believe that in terms of
subsection (4) of s 175 this court may directly cause the reference of the
matter to the Constitutional Court without imploring the Prosecutor-General to appeal
or apply.
In the premises, this
declaration of constitutional invalidity of s 353(1) of the Criminal Procedure
and Evidence Act, [Cap 9:07) is
hereby referred to the Constitutional Court in terms of s 175 of the
Constitution. The registrar of this court is hereby requested to prepare the
necessary referral papers and ensure that this judgment is placed before the
Constitutional Court.
27 April 2015
HONOURABLE TSANGA J: I agree ………Signed on Original……