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PACIFIC HUMAN
RIGHTS LAW DIGEST -
VOLUME 2
Under the editorial sponsorship
of the
Pacific Regional Rights
Resource Team (RRRT)
Editorial Committee
Co-Editors:
P Imrana Jalal
(RRRT Human Rights Adviser &
former Fiji Human Rights Commissioner)
&
Joni Madraiwiwi
(former Judge of the High Court of Fiji &
former Fiji Human Rights Commissioner)
Editorial Committee
Members:
Hannah Harborow, Luisa Katubadrau &
Mary-Ann Vine of RRRT
& Tevita Seruilumi of the Fiji Women's Crisis Centre
© Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC), 2008
All rights for commercial / for profit reproduction or translation, in
any form, reserved. SPC authorises the partial reproduction or
translation of this material for scientific, educational or research
purposes, provided that SPC and the source document are properly
acknowledged. Permission to reproduce the document and/or translate in
whole, in any form, whether for commercial / for profit or non- profit
purposes, must be requested in writing. Original SPC artwork may not be
altered or separately published without permission.
ISSN 1817-6003
Pacific Regional Rights Resource Team (RRRT)
Level 2, Pacific House
Private Mail Bag, Suva, Fiji
Tel: (+679) 330 5582 Fax: (+679) 330 6582
Email: RRRTRegistry(at)spc.int Website: www.rrrt.org
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
USING THE DIGEST
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
EDITORIAL REVIEW
PART I: PACIFIC ISLAND CASES
REFERRING TO CONSTITUTIONAL BILLS OF
RIGHTS, HUMAN RIGHTS CONVENTIONS, STANDARDS & PRINCIPLES
PART II: INTERNATIONAL CASES
REFERRING TO CONSTITUTIONAL BILLS OF
RIGHTS, HUMAN RIGHTS CONVENTIONS, STANDARDS & PRINCIPLES
PART III: INTERNATIONAL HIV HUMAN
RIGHTS CASES
INDEX BY COUNTRY
INDEX BY NAME
Apparel
Export Promotion Council v Chopra (India, 1999)
Ali v The State (Fiji, 2005)
Attorney General v Mbwe
(Kiribati, 2006)
Australasian
Conference Association Ltd v Sela & Ors (Fiji,
2007)
Ayamiseba
v Attorney General (Immigration) (Vanuatu, 2006)
Devi v The State (Fiji, 2003)
Diau v
Botswana Building Society (Botswana, 2003)
Efi v Attorney General
(Samoa, 2000)
Fa'aoso v Paongo &
Ors (Tonga, 2006)
Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Fiji Law Society (Fiji, 2007)
Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Police & Attorney General (Fiji,
2005)
Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Suva City Council (Fiji, 2006)
Fijian
Teachers' Association & Fiji Public Service Association
v Public Service Commission & Interim Attorney General (Fiji,
2007) Funaki
& Anor v Police (Tonga, 2006)
Grant &
Anor v
The Principal, John A Cumberland Primary School & Ors (Cayman,
2001)
Heffernan v
Bainimarama, RFMF & AG (Fiji, 2007)
Hoffmann v
South African Airways (South Africa, 2000)
In re Eroni Delai (Fiji, 2000)
In re Lorna Gleeson (Nauru,
2006)
In re Nikhil Naidu (Fiji,
1987)
In re Thesai Maip (PNG, 1991)
In re Yongo Mondo (PNG, 1989)
Interim
Attorney General v Draunidalo (Fiji, 2007)
Katea v Niutao
Kaupule & Satupa (Tuvalu, 2006)
Kelly v R (Solomon Islands, 2006)
Khera
v Fiji Islands Revenue and Customs Authority (Fiji, 2006)
Khera &
Ors v Fiji Independent Commission Against Corruption
(Fiji, 2007)
Khumalo & Ors v
Holomisa (South Africa, 2002)
Kirisome
& Ors v Attorney General & Commissioner of
Police (Samoa, 2002)
Leung
v Interim Attorney General (Immigration) (Fiji, 2007)
Loumia v DPP (Solomon Islands,
1986)
Magiten v Beggie
& Wahiginim (PNG, 2005)
Mariango v Nalau (Vanuatu,
2007)
Minister
for Provincial Government v
Guadalcanal Provincial Assembly (Solomon Islands, 1997)
MX v ZY (India, 1997)
Nabuaka v The Republic
(Kiribati, 2006)
Nai & Ors v Cava (Fiji,
2008)
Nanditume v
Minister of Defence (Namibia, 2000)
Northern
Regional Health Authority v Human Rights Commission (NZ, 1998)
Odafe &
Ors v Attorney General & Ors (Nigeria, 2003)
Office
of The Public Solicitor v Kalsakau (Vanuatu, 2005)
Perreira v The
Buccleuch Montessori Pre-School and Primary (Pty) Ltd
& Ors (South Africa, 2003)
Prisoners A-XX
Inclusive v State of New South Wales (Australia, 1995)
Public
Prosecutor v Emelee & Ors (Vanuatu, 2005)
Puloka
& Ors v The Kingdom of Tonga (Tonga, 2006)
PW
v South Africa Department of Correctional Services (South Africa,
2003)
Qicatabua v
Republic of Fiji Military Forces & Ors
(Fiji, 2006)
R v Fungavai (Tonga, 2006)
R v K (Solomon Islands, 2006)
R v Lo Chi Keung; HKSAR v
Vasquez Tarazona Jesus Juan (Hong Kong, 1996; 2001)
R v Secretary of State
for the Home Department ex parte Glen Fielding
(United Kingdom, 1999)
R v Su'u & Ors (Solomon
Islands, 2007)
R v Vola (Tonga, 2005)
Railumu
& Ors v RFMF & Attorney General (Fiji, 2002)
Raramu v Yowe
Village Court (PNG, 1993)
Rhea v Caine (Fiji, 2006)
Singh v Ponijese, Attorney
General & Ors (Fiji, 2007)
Sipo v Meli (PNG, 1980)
Social Welfare v
Marshall & Ors (Fiji, 2008)
State v Boila and Nainoka (Fiji, 2004)
State v Sorpapelu (Fiji, 2006)
Taione v Kingdom of
Tonga (Tonga, 2004)
Takiveikata v The State
(Fiji, 2007)
Tanavalu & Ors
v Tanavalu &
Solomon Islands National Provident Fund (Solomon Islands, 1998)
Teikamata v R (Solomon Islands,
2007)
Teonea v Pule O Kaupule &
Nanumaga Falekaupule (Tuvalu, 2005)
The State v Aigal
& Kauna (PNG, 1990)
The State v Kule (PNG, 1991)
The State v Silatolu
(Fiji, 2002)
Toakarawa v The
Republic (Kiribati, 2006)
Ulufa'alu v
Attorney General & Malaita Eagle Force &
Ors (Solomon Islands, 2001)
Yaya v Attorney General
& Director of Public Prosecutions
(Fiji, 2007)
Yuen v The State (Fiji, 2004)
INTRODUCTION
This is the second volume of the Pacific
Human Rights Law Digest (PHRLD) produced by the Pacific
Regional Rights Resource Team (RRRT).
RRRT has been working with and training human rights non-governmental
organisations
(NGOs), law students, lawyers, magistrates and judges in the Pacific
region for over 10 years. Since 1998, a significant part of that
training has included an annual three-week
human rights course for graduating law students from the University of
the South Pacific's
Professional Diploma in Legal Practice (PDLP) class. Much of this
training has focused on
encouraging the use of conventions, international standards and
constitutional bills of rights
in the courts, and in fact has contributed to increased reliance on,
and use of, these instruments
by magistrates, judges and lawyers across the region.
The overall purpose of this Pacific
Human Rights Law Digest is to disseminate for use by
Pacific law students, lawyers, magistrates, judges and human rights
advocates a collection
of recent analysed human rights case law that can be used in the courts
as precedents and as
tools for policy initiatives. RRRT is mindful of the fact that the vast
majority of the law
fraternity in Fiji and the Pacific does not have access to the Internet
and the useful website
of the University of the South Pacific School of Law's Pacific Islands
Legal Information
Institute (www.paclii.org), which contains a large number of regional
judgments.
The digest might also be of interest to those outside the Pacific who
are interested in the
development of human rights in our region.
The digest is not just for lawyers but for human rights activists and
stakeholders who are
increasingly engaging in the law as a potential arena of change. It is
therefore not a simple
compilation or compendium of cases with headnotes as in law reports,
but an analysed
summary of judgments pointing out the significant human rights issues.
RRRT has a vast
network of local level human rights community paralegals and defenders,
numbering about
300 in eight Pacific countries, who are using the law as a tool for
change in governance and
human rights.
A new legal precedent not only creates a standard for the courts, it
also provides an
opportunity for human rights stakeholders to use it to create new
policy or practice whether
at micro (community), meso (institutional) or macro (policy) levels.
RRRT's ultimate objective is to help build a human rights culture which
enhances the rule
of law and democracy in the Pacific. Promoting the use of human rights
standards in law,
practice and policy is part of RRRT's broad long-term strategy for
achieving that goal.
The vast majority of judgments in Pacific Island countries are not
published in volumes.
The full text of the cases included in this digest can either be found
on RRRT's website
(www.rrrt.org) or on www.paclii.org. Some Fiji cases can also be found
on the website of
the Fiji Human Rights Commission (www.humanrights.org.fj).
ABOUT RRRT
The Pacific Regional Rights Resource Team (RRRT) provides human rights
training, technical support, and policy and advocacy services. RRRT is
a programme of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC), an
international organisation that provides technical assistance, policy
advice, training and research services to 22 Pacific Island countries
and territories.
Initially established in 1995 as a gender and legal literacy programme
funded by the UK Department for International Development (UK DFID),
RRRT has since expanded its programme in response to elevated human
rights needs in the Pacific. It now supports and works with the largest
pool of human rights defenders in the region.
RRRT is unique in that its programme base continues to have a gender
and a rights-based approach as its foundation. In 1998, RRRT was
awarded the prestigious UNICEF Maurice Pate Award for its cutting-edge
work in gender and human rights and in 2005, was chosen by the Office
of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (Asia Pacific
Office) as one of 14 'best practice' rights-based projects in the
region.
RRRT has programmes in Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Nauru, Samoa,
Solomon Islands, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu. With partners including
governments and regional and civil society organisations, it has been
described as a 'cutting-edge programme' in human rights capacity
building due to its approach of tackling both systemic a socio-economic
issues through interventions at the micro, meso and macro levels.
Its goal is 'to
strengthen the capacity of the Pacific region to promote principles of
human rights and good governance in order to achieve democracy based on
social justice'. It seeks to achieve this goal through a
combination of training, mentoring, linking and support to community
organisations; through its networks of legal rights training officers,
community paralegals and civil society partners; and, at the regional
level, through training lawyers, magistrates, judges and policymakers
to adopt and apply human rights principles and good governance
practices in their work.
RRRT is primarily funded by the New Zealand Agency for International
Development (NZAID) and the Australian Agency for International
Development (AusAID).
USING THE
DIGEST
Volume I of the Pacific
Human Rights Law Digest (PHRLD) focused on the application
and/or discussion of human rights conventions by Pacific Island courts.
Volume 2 has a broader focus. It includes a variety of cases discussing
not only United Nations human rights conventions and standards but also
interesting cases decided by Pacific Island courts that refer to bills
of rights in Pacific Island constitutions.
This digest is divided into three parts:
Part I
contains recent (and some older cases) from various Pacific Island
countries (PICs) that not only apply rights contained in the bills of
rights of PIC constitutions, but also new cases referring to UN human
rights conventions. If a convention or international human rights
principle was even raised by the lawyers and dismissed in passing by
the court, that judgment is included. However, the digest does not
purport to contain every single case involving a human rights
convention in PICs covered by the RRRT project.
Also reported in Part I are some older decisions that we came across
recently or that were sent to us by judges, magistrates and lawyers.
Included in this category are decisions on conflicts between custom and
constitutional rights. We have chosen to include cases that mention
significant civil and political or economic and social rights issues
such as freedom of movement or religion, and cases that demonstrate the
tensions between customary and formal law.
We have chosen not to include the vast number of judgments that discuss
mainstream due process cases such as admissibility of evidence, fair
trial, Judges Rules and the like, since such cases are fairly
commonplace. Cases in this category are only included if they are of
particular significance.
Part II
contains some significant international human rights judgments that
discuss various fundamental rights and freedoms in bills of rights or
human rights conventions.
Part III
contains some interesting and innovative cases from the common law
world that discuss the difficult and controversial issue of HIV/AIDS.
We are grateful to UNAIDS for allowing us to extract cases, which we
thought might be of immediate importance to PIC governments and courts,
from its excellent and useful booklet of HIV cases authored by the
Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, Courting rights: Case studies in
litigating the human rights of people living with HIV, to enable wider
dissemination in the PICs of its best practice collection.
Within the three parts, the cases are arranged in either subject or
alphabetical order with the subject matter as headings. Some have more
than one subject heading. Each summary contains a brief set of facts,
the human rights issue on which the editors wish to focus, the decision
and a commentary on the case.
Within the summaries the laws and conventions used are listed.
Significant cases are mentioned, but not all the cases mentioned in the
full text of the judgment are included in the text of the summary –
only those cases that have some bearing on the human rights issue being
discussed.
The digest is modelled on the highly regarded Interights Commonwealth Human Rights Law
Digest, which RRRT greatly admires and consistently uses
in training.
RRRT acknowledges Interights for giving us the inspiration to produce a
digest specifically focusing on the Pacific region.
This digest is accompanied by the RRRT publication The Big Seven: Human Rights
Conventions & Judicial Declarations – a
compilation of core human rights instruments and judicial declarations.
The Big Seven
is a handy reference tool to complement the digest.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
RRRT would like to thank all law students, lawyers, judges and
magistrates who made unpublished judgments available to us. We would
also like to thank Mary Motofaga of Fiji, a former student of the
University of the South Pacific School of Law, who assisted during the
initial stages of this digest.
EDITORIAL
REVIEW
This is the second volume of the Pacific
Human Rights Law Digest. We had promised to publish a
volume every two years bringing you all the relevant human rights case
law from the region as well as landmark cases from beyond. We are one
year late due to the difficulty in collecting cases in the Pacific.
However, this is a more comprehensive volume of interesting summaries
of case law. The cases are available from www.paclii.org or from RRRT
on request.
Apart from these cases, many human rights cases are available from
United Nations individual complaint procedures to various human rights
committees/treaty bodies (Human Rights Committee (ICCPR), Committee on
the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), Committee on
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) and Committee against
Torture (CAT)). For example, cases can be found on the UN website for
CEDAW (http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/) under 'Decisions/Views'.
COMMENTARY
PART I
This part of the digest contains Pacific Island cases in which the
courts are either interpreting human rights standards in their
constitutions or legislation, applying international standards in
ratified and unratified human rights conventions or considering how
domestic and external frameworks affect each other.
Application and
interpretation
One of the most controversial and divisive areas of human rights is the
extent to which they can be applied horizontally, that is, between
citizens. Although the cases discussed in this section are not grouped
under this heading in the main text, they are discussed separately here
for different reasons. The orthodox school of thought is that rights
are only enforceable vertically, between the state and citizen. This
means for instance, that rights cannot be enforceable between citizen
and citizen, or against private corporations. The anti- discrimination
provisions of the bills of rights in most PICs appear to cover the
public sector and not the private sector, consequently limiting their
application to the relationship between state and citizen. Courts have
generally opted for a vertical application. In Loumia v DPP, the
majority of the Court of Appeal in the Solomon Islands held that human
rights concerned the relationship between the state and the individual
exclusively; therefore rights were only enforceable vertically. The
underlying rationale for this decision was to preclude the infringement
of fundamental freedoms and the incorporation of custom law as part of
the Solomon Islands law, both being inconsistent with the country's
constitution. However, the Constitution of Fiji together with the Fiji
Human Rights Commission Act 1999 appear to allow for the horizontal
enforceability of rights, although this interpretation is yet to be
properly tested. Compare these cases with the South African case of Khumalo & Ors v Holomisa
in Part II of this digest, where the court ruled that the right to free
speech could be enforced against a private newspaper company.
Assembly
The right to assembly is a fundamental aspect of a democracy recognised
in the ICCPR in article 21. Does it assume even greater importance in a
state in which the avenues of protest are even more strictly limited?
In Funaki &
Anor v Police, the court ruled that the police rightfully
brought a peaceful pro-democratic protest march to an end in
circumstances arising out of a stand-off. It could be argued that the
conduct of Tongan Police in preventing the protest march might be
acceptable behaviour in a functioning democracy. However, in a state
where the monarch has near absolute powers, the duty of the court to
protect this right assumes greater importance. In such states, civil
disobedience might be the only form of dissent possible.
Children/International
standards
Although we have grouped these cases under the rubric of children, all
considered the application of international standards to domestic law,
and the interplay between domestic law and human rights international
law. Two cases from Fiji focus on whether childcare responsibilities,
given the ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child
(CRC) and the domestic bail legislation, might allow the court to
release parents on bail pending trial. In both Devi v The State
and Yuen v The State,
the courts applied the best interests of the child principle in the CRC
to give weight to the Bail Act relating to the care of dependants,
releasing the accused persons. However, they were mindful that the
principle could not be applied arbitrarily as the act itself cited a
number of factors to be considered.
In Nauru and Fiji, in In
re Lorna Gleeson and Rhea
v Caine respectively, the courts had to consider the
effect of the CRC on mandatory citizenship and residency requirements
in domestic legislation for applicants for adoption. In both, the
courts ruled that the CRC could be relied upon to influence the meaning
of citizenship and residency. It would appear that in both, the courts
exceeded the boundaries of the application of the CRC to give residency
and citizenship requirements an extreme meaning. By contrast, in Social Welfare v Marshall
& Ors, the High Court of Fiji decided that
residency requirements were mandatory conditions which could not be
given an alternative meaning. A convention could not amend a clear and
unequivocal provision of domestic legislation.
One might support fully the relevance of international law to domestic
courts where relevant: a human rights convention can be used to fill a
lacuna, to resolve an ambiguity or to favour the person seeking the
protection of human rights where there is room for interpretation. It
cannot be used to directly contradict a clear, mandatory provision in
domestic legislation, especially one designed to protect the rights of
children. The cases illustrate some of the interesting contradictions
between the rights of adult individuals versus the rights of children.
In our respectful view, the interpretation of residency requirements in
Social Welfare v
Marshall & Ors is to be preferred.
In inter-country proceedings, the local court cannot override a
decision on residence made by another court abroad, especially in light
of commitments under the Hague Convention. So the court held in Nai & Ors v Cava.
It was also the first application of the unratified Hague Convention in
Fiji. The court interpreted s 43(2) of the Constitution of Fiji to mean
that it had an obligation to apply international human rights
standards, even when counsel did not make submissions citing
international conventions.
The case of Fa'aoso v
Paongo & Ors signifies a clear departure from the
traditional reluctance of Tongan courts to apply international human
rights standards. The court adopted a Teoh1 approach,
stating that ratification by Tonga of the CRC could be relied on to
reinforce the award of damages against the state in a case involving
the savage beating of a 12-year- old by the police. This case appears
to be the first application of the CRC in Tonga, but not the first
application of a human rights convention. In 2005, Webster CJ had
applied the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) in R v Vola
(see later in this digest) for the first time in
Tonga.
Several cases in this digest arose out of the civil and political
upheavals in Solomon Islands, emanating from the illegal removal of
Prime Minister Ulufa'alu in June 2000 by civilian militia forces
battling for land and other resources. Two groups were pitted against
each other. The use of child soldiers was a feature of both groups. In
Kelly v R,
the court said there was a distinction between recruitment
to the armed forces of the state and civilian militia groups; the
latter did not have the protection of international human rights
standards. This was a perplexing distinction given the tragic reality
that child soldiers are largely recruited by guerilla or rebel groups
rather than by national military forces. The court held that the
ratification of the CRC had not been domesticated and that it was
unnecessary to have recourse to it given that the constitution provided
adequate safeguards. However, in the sentencing case involving the same
child soldier, the court said that the CRC prohibited life sentencing
of a child below the age of 18.
In the State v Sorpapelu,
although the court said that the law must
protect those classified as children by Fiji law, as well as in the
CRC, it proceeded to reduce a child abuser's sentence, partially on the
basis that the traditional apology was relevant to the length of
sentence. It clearly gave greater weight to the mitigation advanced on
behalf of the adult for the abuse suffered by his victim.
Cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment
Whether prison conditions in Fiji could be classified as imposing
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment according to international
standards, giving rise to bail, occupied the court in the State v Boila
& Nainoka. Breaches of s 25 of the Constitution of
Fiji could
never be justified on the basis that Fiji was an underdeveloped
country, or that the people of Fiji, because of their poor and simple
backgrounds, were accustomed to being treated with inhumanity or
disrespect. However, the court said the conditions were not so severely
humiliating that they sapped the inherent dignity of the person.
Custom
The tensions between customary law and formal constitutional
protections continue to be a source of conflict in all Pacific
communities. The cases reported in this section tacitly acknowledge the
contradiction between the traditional Pacific Islands and the 'modern
way of life'. Many of those conflicts manifest themselves in tensions
between the rights of women to equality (as well as the rights of
children to more autonomy and recognition) versus what is perceived by
many to be their traditional status. This ambivalence resonates
throughout the Pacific and sometimes has political repercussions,
reflecting the sensitivities that are involved and the caution about
concepts such as human rights.
In Papua New Guinea (PNG) and the Solomon Islands in particular, some
communities condone the practice of revenge killings in particular
circumstances. While the constitutions of many PICs recognise customary
law, there is a clear demarcation in terms of serious criminal
offences. The courts have held that the recognition of such practices
must be consistent with the constitution and laws of the state. In
Loumia v DPP,
the court refused to accept the use of customary
obligations/practice as a mitigating factor for murder. In both the
Loumia and Ulufa'alu cases,
the Solomon Islands courts held that the
bill of rights concerned the relationship between the state and the
individual exclusively, thus rights were only enforceable vertically,
not horizontally.
In Magiten v Beggie
& Wahiginim, the PNG court accepted that a
breach of custom law could be a proper cause of action, but it must be
properly pleaded. It must clearly state what the custom was and who
applied it, and also provide details of its requirements in clear,
precise and adequate terms.
Custom is accepted as an exception to the principle of
non-discrimination on the grounds of sex by courts in some
jurisdictions. In Tanavalu
& Ors v Tanavalu & Solomon
Islands National Provident Fund, the court took the view
that the
Constitution of the Solomon Islands permitted the use of custom law
even if it discriminated against women. In that case, pension funds
were paid to the father of the deceased, rather than to the deceased's
widow. The father then distributed the funds at his discretion, giving
nothing to the widow. The court ruled that this was in accordance with
the relevant custom, where inheritance was by patrilineal succession.
In contrast, in two cases in PNG, In
re Thesia Maip and In
re Yongo
Mondo, the courts ruled that breaches of custom could not
be used to
justify the imprisonment of women.
Although not a main issue in the case, Australasian Conference
Association Ltd v Sela & Ors addressed some of the
tensions
between customary and formal land law. In a very few situations, the
long-held possession of land granted by custom chiefs could be upheld
despite modern property rights under formal written property law. This
decision is being appealed.
Customary or traditional reconciliation continues to be a mitigating
factor in sexual offence (and domestic violence) cases around the
Pacific. The practices of bulubulu
(Fiji) and ifoga
(Samoa) are
examples of the genre. Such practices discriminate against women
because the overwhelming majority of offenders are males. The victim's
opinion is not relevant and the protocol is more of an engagement
between the heads of the families affected to preserve social relations
in the community or the village. The remorse of the perpetrator usually
plays little or no part in the process. In Nabuaka v The Republic
(Kiribati), the court ruled that traditional reconciliation under
custom could not be a mitigating factor in rape sentencing,
particularly when it was accompanied by violence.
The role of witchcraft in sexual politics is a reflection of male
dominance in certain communities in Papua New Guinea. It is used as a
means to ensure elderly women are kept
in submissive roles. The practice both discriminates, and is an
implicit threat against elderly women. The allegation of witchcraft is
difficult to disprove and engenders strong community feelings. Although
The State v Aigal
& Kauna was primarily an argument about the
technical elements of a nolle
prosequi, the court ordered the cessation
of a prosecution in a case involving the alleged execution of a woman
and the alleged detention and torture of seven others suspected of
practicing witchcraft. In this instance, the court considered their
human rights had been violated.
In The State v Kule,
the customary practice of giving a daughter to the
murder victim's family was held not to be a mitigating factor for
murder. It violated constitutional prohibitions on slavery. The
Convention on the Abolition of Slavery and Slave Trade was applied, as
well as the constitution, to reach that conclusion. The handing over of
the child was an institution or practice similar to slavery and
therefore prohibited by the Constitution of PNG, even if the evidence
showed that such a custom was a common practice. Whilst compliance with
customary obligations was a matter to be taken into account, the
particular custom had to be proven by evidence and consistent with
human rights provisions of the constitution.
Dignity
In the first case of its kind in Fiji, and in the Pacific region in
general, the forcible gynaecological examination of a woman suspected
of giving birth and abandoning the baby was held to be an invasive
medical procedure. It was carried out in contravention of the bill of
rights which provides for the right to freedom from scientific or
medical treatment or procedures without informed consent. In assessing
damages in the Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Police & Attorney
General, the view was that the level of damages ought to
be assessed in
light of the country's social and economic conditions and not by
universal standards. It was also unnecessary to show outrageous conduct
on the part of the defendant because the issue was about the
infringement of human dignity.
Discrimination
Most of the cases analysed in this section under the grouping of
discrimination were not filed as discrimination cases per se. It is
extremely rare for cases to be filed under this ground in the Pacific
Islands region. Cases, which are in reality about some form of
discrimination, are often brought before the courts on other grounds. A
number of cases included in this category ought to have been argued on
this basis but were advanced on other grounds. However, those cases
have still been included under this heading. Discrimination against
women on the grounds of sex, gender or custom is profiled in this
section (as well as under the section on custom), even where it was not
alleged or advanced. The tensions between women's right to equality and
their subordinate status in custom remains a source of much controversy
in the region.
Sex discrimination is accepted as a legitimate part of custom by the
courts in some jurisdictions, but there is inconsistency in its
application around the region (see also the commentary under custom
previously). In Minister
for Provincial Government v Guadalcanal
Provincial Assembly, the Court of Appeal discussed the
possibility that
women were discriminated against because they were not able to be
chiefs. It held that discrimination against women was not
unconstitutional if the constitution itself legitimised that gender
discrimination. There is very little discussion in the Solomon Islands
courts of the discriminatory effect of laws and practices on women. In
this case, two members of the court recognised the effect of the
particular constitutional provisions in reinforcing traditional power
structures.
By comparison, a custom not allowing widows to have relationships was
held to be ultra vires
the equality provisions of the Constitution of
PNG in Raramu v Yowe
Village Court. One of the issues for consideration
was whether the custom contravened the constitution in being
discriminatory against women. The court refused to recognise such a
practice because it was oppressive and discriminatory of women.
Prohibiting widows from relationships struck at the equality provision
in the constitution. The custom failed to recognise the inherent
dignity of women as part of humankind.
Imprisonment for adultery is still a penalty in some parts of the
Pacific, most often enforced exclusively against women. Although Sipo v
Meli, as well as other cases from PNG regarding women's
rights, are
relatively old cases, they have been included for their human rights
interest. PNG is one of the few countries in the Pacific Islands where
adultery is still a criminal offence. It is punishable by imprisonment
as well as with the payment of compensation in both custom and civil
law. The court in this instance actually reinforced the importance of
maintaining adultery laws in PNG. The practice is anachronistic and in
violation of the inherent dignity of the person, and human rights
standards in general.
Continuing with the theme of sex discrimination and gender equality,
the courts have had to deal yet again with the sensitive issue of the
discriminatory corroboration evidence practice in sexual assault trials
in both Tonga (R v
Fungavai) and Solomon Islands (Teikamata v R). The
Tongan court, in considering the value of the uncorroborated evidence
of the complainant, came to the conclusion that there was no legal
requirement that a rape complainant's evidence had to be corroborated.
Yet it proceeded to consider it nevertheless. The Solomon Islands court
said that the cautionary warning in rape cases appeared to be
artificial and unnecessary and required removal by legislation. If it
was not removed by legislation, then the courts might have to act in
future. It is interesting that the courts cite corroboration as if it
were a binding law rather than a practice. Little thought is given to
its discriminatory origins well canvassed in other countries. In some
jurisdictions, the courts have indicated it should only be abolished by
legislation, while the Fiji Court of Appeal abolished the practice
citing among other things its discriminatory effect on women.2
It would be interesting to see what the Solomon Islands Court of Appeal
might have done had similar arguments about gender and sex
discrimination been put before it by counsel. In preferring to leave
the matter of abolition to parliament, a conservative approach was
clearly adopted notwithstanding that the corroboration rule is a
practice rather than a law.
Despite there being no specific legislation to cover the distribution
of property in de facto
relationships, the court was prepared to apply equitable principles to
fill the lacuna in
Mariango v Nalau.
The constructive trust principle as the basis for the
distribution of property in Vanuatu was extended to de facto marriages
even in the absence of legislation. The court did this by reference to
the recognition of equality as the basis for Vanuatu society.
In Toakarawa v The
Republic (Kiribati), a vicious domestic violence
case involving the permanent disability of the wife, the court had to
consider the relevance of forgiveness in domestic violence. It said
that domestic violence was not a private matter and did not affect the
court's duty to impose a sentence reflecting the gravity of the
offence.
Three landmark cases on age discrimination were argued on that basis in
both Samoa and Fiji. In the Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Suva City
Council, Fijian
Teachers'Association & Fiji Public Service
Association v Public Service Commission & Interim Attorney
General and Kirisome
& Ors v Attorney General &
Commissioner of Police (Samoa), Pacific Island courts
finally ruled on
the legality of retirement ages that had no specific link to an
employee's fitness, or any other reason. Age discrimination is
prohibited in the constitutions of both Fiji and Samoa. In the Fijian
Teachers' Association case, the defendant had arbitrarily
made the
decision to reduce the retirement age pursuant to a policy made by the
unelected interim government. The equality provisions of the
Constitution of Fiji were held to have been breached and the
justification for the policy made by the respondent was rejected. It
was determined not to have met the threshold requirement in that the
justification for the decision, i.e. savings and employment generation,
was not proportional or sufficiently connected to the standards of
equality.
In considering discrimination in Samoa in Kirisome & Ors v
Attorney General & Commissioner of Police, the
court applied a
test to determine whether a limitation on the prohibition on age
discrimination could be justified on an objective and reasonable basis.
It said that the inequality challenged must exist for a legitimate
purpose, and the manner in which those ends were achieved must be
proportionate. In practice, a balancing exercise is undertaken;
therefore the relationship or connection between the two (i.e. the
means and the ends) have to be reasonable or affect the other in a way
that bears relevance to what is appropriate in the circumstances. Where
this cannot be established, then the apparent inequality would be
struck down.
Several cases in this volume arose out of the political crises and
coups in Fiji of 1987, 2000 and 2006 and are considered under different
commentary. In the arena of discrimination, Qicatabua v Republic of
Fiji Military Forces & Ors concerned soldiers who
were charged
with mutiny in 2000, and who had attempted to kill Fiji's current coup
leader Commodore V Bainimarama. They were held to be entitled to the
same due process rights as ordinary civilians on the grounds of
constitutional equality. In Fiji
Human Rights Commission v Fiji Law
Society, the view was that it was unfair discrimination to
suspend
military lawyers for allegedly committing treason in December 2006
without a proper hearing.
Judicial independence
The issue of perception of judicial bias arose in the interesting case
of Takiveikata v The
State, another arising out of the political crisis
of 2000 and the attempted mutiny mentioned previously in Qicatabua v
Republic of Fiji Military Forces & Ors. The
accused, a
traditional
high chief, was alleged to be the leader of the attempted mutiny.
Comments made at a social event about the accused by the judge
adjudicating the matter were taken as perceived reasonable apprehension
of bias. The conviction was overturned on that basis and a retrial
ordered. On appeal to the Supreme Court, it declined the judge special
leave to appeal because he had no standing.
Legal aid
The availability of legal aid was the subject before the courts in
Vanuatu and Fiji in Office
of The Public Solicitor v Kalsakau and The
State v Silatolu, respectively. In the former, the court
was of the
view that a Member of Parliament in these particular circumstances did
not qualify as a needy person deserving of legal aid provided by the
state. The latter arose out of the political upheavals in Fiji in 2000.
The applicant for legal aid was an alleged coup perpetrator charged
with treason. The Legal Aid Commission was required to provide legal
representation in the treason trial as a matter of equality before the
law.
Liberty
In the case of In re
Eroni Delai the court had to consider whether a
custodial sentence was constitutional and/or necessary in a traffic
offence matter. The accused had served 6 months of a 12-month sentence.
The court said that imprisonment for failure to pay a debt such as
traffic fines would be rare; such penalties must be balanced against
the right to liberty.
Life/International
standards
The Tongan case of R v
Vola was the first verdict in a murder case in
Tongatapu in over 20 years. The court did not hesitate in applying
international cases and the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, notwithstanding that they did not apply directly to
Tonga or that Tonga had yet to ratify the covenant. It was recognised
that the principles set out in the covenant and in the numerous
authorities cited were reflective of the circumstances exercised in
relation to the death penalty. The court was not hindered by the
kingdom's non-ratification. The case illustrates the philosophical
concerns of the judiciary in particular, and the wider community in
general, in relation to the irreversible nature of the death penalty.
Like Solomon Islands in the Kelly
cases in this digest, this case marks
the first clear departure from traditional non-enforceability
approaches to international law in Tonga, and the growing influence of
international human rights law on domestic courts.
Movement
The right to free movement is critical in a democracy and is often
linked with discrimination on the grounds of free speech, political
opinions and belief. It is not uncommon in military dictatorships or
authoritarian states to punish political dissidents with travel bans or
blacklists preventing them from leaving their countries. In both Puloka
& Ors v The Kingdom Of Tonga and Leung v Interim Attorney
General (Immigration) (Fiji), the courts ordered that bans
be lifted to
allow the applicants to leave the countries freely. Although unstated,
the context was important, with a military-backed interim government or
a near absolute monarch exercising authority. Where an arbitrary regime
exercises power, the capacity of the courts to protect the rights of
ordinary citizens assumes even greater importance. On the other hand,
the court held in Khera
v Fiji Islands Revenue and Customs Authority
that preventing a citizen from leaving the country for non-payment of
taxes was a valid limitation on the right to free movement because it
was reasonable and justifiable.
In the Vanuatu case of Ayamiseba
v Attorney General (Immigration), the
court had to consider the validity of a ministerial deportation order,
requiring the removal of a West Papuan political activist. The court
held that although the right to freedom of movement of non- citizens
may not be the same as that of citizens, statutory discretion must be
exercised carefully. Despite the power conferred in these particular
circumstances, the minister was required to observe certain
preconditions before authorising a particular course of action.
Privacy
Where the bill of rights states that the right to privacy has
limitations prescribed by law as 'are reasonable and justifiable in a
free and democratic society' but does not expressly state those
limitations, it was for the courts to determine what was an excessive
or unreasonable interference with privacy. In Yaya v Attorney General
& Director of Public Prosecutions, the court held
that the
accused's right to privacy, despite his several previous convictions,
was breached due to the publication of his name in the media in
relation to reports of a series of violent robberies.
Procedure
Three cases from Kiribati, Fiji and Vanuatu concern the propriety of
filing cases under the constitution to seek constitutional remedies or
under ordinary legislation for an ordinary remedy when rights are
violated. In Ali v The
State (Fiji), the court stated that a remedy
under the constitution should not be lightly sought; where alternative
remedies were available these should be used first. The Kiribati court
in Attorney General v
Mbwe held a similar view that not all cases
involving procedural errors or irregularities by the state were rights
violations subject to constitutional redress and damages; this was true
in only rare cases where there had been a fundamental subversion of the
rule of law. The Vanuatu court held in Public Prosecutor v Emelee
& Ors that because an unreasonable delay in trial
was a
violation of fundamental rights in the constitution, such cases should
be brought under the constitution and not by way of judicial review. In
Railumu & Ors v
RFMF & Attorney General, the court
determined that time limitation rules on constitutional redress were an
unreasonable limitation on rights and the defence forces had the right
to equal treatment accordingly.
Religion
A Tuvalu court did not uphold the principle of freedom of religion and
non-discrimination in religion when it outlawed the establishment of a
new Christian church in deeply Christian Tuvalu, on the basis that it
was against Tuvaluan 'values'. In Teonea
v Pule o Kaupule &
Nanumaga Falekaupule, the High Court said that the equal
right to
freedom of religion was subordinate to the cohesion of Tuvaluan society
as reflected in the constitutional recognition of Tuvaluan values and
culture. In comparison, Samoan courts have consistently ruled in favour
of freedom of religion on the basis of non-discrimination.3
Rule of law
The cases in this section from Fiji and Solomon Islands arose out of
the crises, political upheaval, interruptions to democratic rule, and
coups in those countries. They involve
different violations of rights but are grouped together here (although
they could just as easily be included in other sections) because they
reflect varying attitudes to the rule of law. After the unlawful
removal of the government in Solomon Islands in 2000, an Amnesty Act
was passed to absolve various unlawful political acts associated with
the removal. However, in R
v Su'u & Ors, a Solomon Islands
court said that an amnesty was not available to an accused (charged
with murder) under the Act as it excused only political acts, not
criminal acts done in violation of international humanitarian or human
rights law. Ulufa'alu v
Attorney General & Malaita Eagle Force
& Ors unequivocally endorsed the orthodox view
that human
rights only apply vertically to bind the state vis-à-vis its citizens
and not horizontally,
i.e. as between individuals and between non-government entities and
individuals in the private sector. This meant that the citizens of
Solomon Islands had no remedy against the civilian militia forces
because they were not soldiers of the state's armed forces.
The constitutionality of the military regime's anti-corruption unit in
Fiji was the subject of litigation in Khera & Ors v Fiji
Independent Commission Against Corruption in 2007. The
court held that
the institution of criminal proceedings by parties other than the
Director of Public Prosecutions was illegal.
Despite In re Nikhil
Naidu being an 'old case', it has been included in
light of its significance in relation to recent events in Tonga,
Solomon Islands and Fiji. The Fijian court said that the proclamation
of a public emergency did not give the authorities power to limit
certain rights according to their discretion. Freedom of liberty under
the constitution cannot be extinguished, other than through certain
limitations regarded as reasonable and justifiable in a free and
democratic society. Certain alternative procedures which were
reasonably practicable, rather than detention, were not followed by the
police.
Sexual harassment
Sexual harassment lawsuits are virtually unheard of in the Pacific
region. Apart from Fiji, where the Human Rights Commission Act makes
sexual harassment a civil offence by providing that '… sexual
harassment, for the purposes of this section, constitutes harassment by
reason of a prohibited ground of discrimination',4 no
other Pacific
Island country has made it unlawful. Two cases involving sexual
harassment and unfair dismissal are included in this digest, one from
Tuvalu, Katea v Niutao
Kaupule & Satupa in Part I and an Indian
case, Apparel Export
Promotion Council v Chopra in Part II. The Indian
case was included not only because the Indian higher courts are trail
blazers in human rights, but to demonstrate the varying treatment
accorded the issue by different courts. In a landmark ruling, the
Tuvalu court held that a woman may sue in tort law for unfair dismissal
and damages citing sexual harassment as the basis for the factual
claim. Although the court dealt with the issue purely in terms of the
tort of assault and unfair dismissal as there was no formal civil or
criminal offence of sexual harassment in Tuvalu, the case is indicative
of the increasing assertiveness among women in Tuvalu in pursuing legal
remedies in cases of 'sexual harassment'. Constitutional arguments were
not considered, the applicable law being adequate to cover the
situation. A constitutional argument could have been advanced using the
constitution
and Tuvalu's ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) in a similar manner to
that advanced in the Vishaka
case.5
There remains a residual reluctance to apply human rights principles
and standards to cases that more readily fit into general law. Compare
this with Vishaka's
case, where the Supreme Court of India relied on
the Indian Constitution and international human rights instruments to
formulate sexual harassment guidelines in the workplace where there was
a lacuna in the law. In Chopra's
case, the argument was also initially
framed in tort. When the case reached the Supreme Court, it upheld the
appeal against the offender's reinstatement in terms of the violation
of the rights of the complainant under the Indian Constitution.
Speech
The right to free speech, expression and opinion is the cornerstone of
democracy. It is so fundamental that only in the most stringent of
circumstances ought it to be limited. In Samoa, in Efi v Attorney
General, the court said that by denying the Leader of the
Opposition
access to the government-funded media, the relevant policy
discriminated on the grounds of political belief and was therefore
unconstitutional; freedom of expression included the freedom to
communicate divergent opinions to others.
In cases challenging the authority of the military-backed interim
regime in Fiji in 2007, the court expounded on the concept of free
speech. In Interim
Attorney General v Draunidalo, it held that the
criticism of the judiciary by a lawyer in these circumstances was
within the right to freedom of expression. In Heffernan v Bainimarama,
RFMF & AG it ordered the military government not
to interfere
with a human rights activist's right to free speech, movement and
assembly.
There have been a number of attempts to limit the right to free speech
in Tonga. In 2004, a New Zealand-based Tongan language newspaper, Taimi
o Tonga, was banned from Tonga through amendments to the
constitution
and an act of parliament. In the case of Taione v Kingdom of Tonga,
the
Supreme Court held that the constitutional amendment and the act of
parliament were unconstitutional and unjustifiably limited press
freedom, including freedom of expression and freedom of the press
protected under clause 7 of the Tongan Constitution.
Torture
In another case arising out of the post coup regime of Lt Col Rabuka in
1987, an academic tortured by members of the military forces for
burning the military promulgated constitution in 1990 was awarded a
large sum of compensatory and exemplary damages in Singh v Ponijese,
Attorney General & Ors. Exemplary damages were
awarded for
punitive, arbitrary, oppressive or unconstitutional action by the
servants of the state. The military was vicariously liable in the
circumstances. No apology was offered and nor was disciplinary action
taken. The policy consideration that the commanders and the senior
officers had proper control of those under their command at all times,
and that human rights and the rule of law were upheld, had to be
reflected. Of great interest as well was the fact that although human
rights were clearly breached, the claim was dealt with purely in tort
and not under human rights law, which generally attracted lesser
damages. The involvement of the Fiji Human Rights Commission was
rejected by both parties, and also by the court in a separate order.
PART II
The second part of the digest contains four international cases
applying conventions.
Indian courts are continuing to expand the boundaries in human rights.
In Apparel Export
Promotion Council v Chopra, the court held, following the
famous Vishaka case, that the right to gender equality included being
free from the unwelcome actions of a supervisor. It ruled that sexual
harassment did not have to consist of actual physical contact. This
case was instituted as a tort not as a breach of human rights in the
constitution (see Singh
v Ponijese, Attorney General & Ors in this Digest
where a similar strategy was adopted). In recognising that there need
not be any physical contact, it acknowledged that sexual harassment
extended beyond that to any conduct that trespassed present acceptable
limits.
What constitutes a 'religion' was considered by the court in the Cayman
Islands in Grant
& Anor v The Principal, John A Cumber Primary School &
Ors. It had to determine whether a Rastafarian child was
allowed to wear dreadlocks, etc. and be enrolled at a school that had
rules about appropriate dress. The court held that the child's right to
education and freedom of religion as a Rastafarian had to be respected
by the school.
The medical practitioners' professional society was held to be guilty
of indirect discrimination on the basis of national origin by not
allowing doctors qualified in other countries to be registered on that
basis alone in the New Zealand case of Northern Regional Health
Authority v Human Rights Commission.
Putting to rest the unsettled nature of the law in South Africa, the
highly regarded Constitutional Court held that rights were enforceable
horizontally as well as vertically. This enabled ordinary citizens and
corporate legal persons, as well as the state, to be held accountable
for breaches of constitutional human rights in Khumalo & Ors v Holomisa.
PART III
In Part III, a number of HIV cases from other parts of the common law
world have been included. Although no cases have yet reached Pacific
Island courts, it is just a matter of time before they do. This is
because of the prevalence of HIV and the discriminatory treatment often
accorded people living with HIV. These cases represent the latest
thinking in human rights law and HIV/AIDS internationally.
The first group of four cases concerns the area of employment, probably
one of the most keenly contested areas. In Diau v Botswana Building Society,
the court upheld the right of an employee to refuse a compulsory HIV
antibody test for the confirmation of her employment. In Hoffmann v South African
Airways, MX v ZY and Nanditume
v Minister of Defence, the courts ruled that it was
illegal to either exclude an HIV person from employment or to refuse to
hire them, even in the armed forces.
In two highly controversial decisions, the court ruled in R v Secretary of State for the
Home Department ex parte Glen Fielding and Prisoners A-XX Inclusive v
State of New South Wales that a 'no condoms policy' was
legal, although opening the door in the latter case for a potential
action establishing that the prison/state owed a potential duty of care
to prisoners.
Although a policy decision in itself may not be reviewable by the
court, its effect – a breach of duty of care owed to the prisoners –
is. In Odafe &
Ors v Attorney General & Ors, an HIV-positive
prisoner was held to be entitled to medical treatment in prison. In R v Lo Chi Keung; HKSAR v
Vasquez Tarazona Jesus Juan, an HIV prisoner's sentence
was reduced on compassionate grounds.
In a highly contentious decision, the dismissal of a case against a
school for deferring an application for enrolment of a child living
with HIV was upheld. The decision in Perreira v The Buccleuch
Montessori Pre-School and Primary (Pty) Ltd & Ors
sets an unfortunate precedent for the large numbers of children around
the world living with HIV who have a right to an education. Although
acknowledging the potential for discrimination, it held that the
school's concern was well-founded. However, it is precisely these sorts
of caveats that fuel the debate about these issues.
Human rights are an evolving concept. The cases reflect the continuing
quest for equality in Pacific Island countries and the challenges that
have to be negotiated. The universality of these rights are now largely
accepted by our courts. But context is also important because it
provides the reference point for ensuring these rights are applied
appropriately and with sensitivity to manage the tensions between them
and existing social, cultural and religious values in the Pacific
Islands.
Co-Editors
P Imrana Jalal & Joni Madraiwiwi
PART
I: PACIFIC ISLAND CASES REFERRING TO CONSTITUTIONAL
BILLS OF RIGHTS, HUMAN RIGHTS CONVENTIONS, STANDARDS AND PRINCIPLES
ASSEMBLY
ASSEMBLY / FREE SPEECH /
DISCRIMINATION
The right to assembly is not an
unfettered right; it is subject to acting peacefully without disorder.
FUNAKI & ANOR v POLICE
Law considered
Constitution of Tonga (CT)
Police Act (PA)
Criminal Offences Act (COA)
Facts
This case arose out of a stand-off between police and marchers
(protestors) at the commencement of a large pro-democracy protest march
on 1 June, 2006. Thirty-four cases arising out of the same incident had
been adjourned in the Magistrates Court pending this appearance. The
protest march had intended to petition either the King or the
Legislative Assembly for democratic political reform under clause 8 of
the CT.
'Aleki Funaki (F) and another were convicted in the Magistrates Court
of disobeying the lawful orders of a police officer contrary to ss
35(1) and (2) of the PA and obstructing a police officer acting in the
execution of his duty contrary to s 114(b) of the COA. F appealed
against conviction.
F appealed on four grounds, only two of which were relevant for present
purposes: that the convictions were bad for duplicity and double
jeopardy and their rights under clause 8 of the CT had been breached by
the prosecution. Clause 8 states that:
All people shall be free to send
letters or petitions to the King or Legislative Assembly and to meet
and consult concerning matters about which they think it right to
petition the King or Legislative Assembly to pass or repeal enactments
provided that they meet peaceably without disorder.
Issue
Had F's rights been breached by the laying of two charges arising from
one set of facts and the consequent limitations on his right to free
assembly?
Decision
The court dismissed all four grounds of appeal. In relation to the
claim of duplicity and double jeopardy, it was possible to lay charges
for two different offences on the same set of facts. The first charges
under the PA related to disobedience to a lawful order given by a
police officer. The second under the COA concerned obstruction of a
police officer in the execution of his duty. Both were distinct
offences and involved different essential elements.
As for clause 8 of the CT, which concerned the right to write to or
petition the King or Parliament, and to consult the same peaceably, it
was not an absolute right; it was subject to the petitioners acting
peaceably without disorder. The standard for determining this depended
on the venue. Any form of assembly on a street or highway was likely to
result in obstruction. In those circumstances, it required the
petitioners to cooperate fully with orders given by the police. There
was ample evidence before the magistrate to conclude that clause 8 did
not give the petitioners the right to march in complete disregard of
orders by the supervising police officers.
Comment
This is a clear illustration of the limitation that rights have in any
society. They are not absolute (apart from the right to life, and
freedom against torture and slavery), but are subject to reasonable
limitations. In the present situation, given the venue was a public
street and there were two marches being staged at the same time, it may
have been reasonable for the police to be attempting to supervise the
event. However, in the circumstances the court may have been unduly
restrictive in its approach in deciding that F was not acting peaceably
within the meaning of clause 8 in refusing to follow orders. The
question that ought to have been asked was whether the police attempts
at controlling a peaceful gathering were reasonable in terms of the
rights guaranteed by clause 8 rather than emphasising their duty to
control traffic. It is possible to lay charges for different offences
on the same facts because they have different elements and could not be
considered to breach the double jeopardy rule.
CHILDREN
CHILDREN / ABUSE /
TRADITIONAL RECONCILIATION
The law must protect those
classified as children by Fiji law as well as in the Convention on the
Rights of the Child (CRC).
The significance and
value of a traditional apology are relevant to the length of sentence.
STATE v SORPAPELU
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Gates J |
Cr. Appeal HAA151.05S |
|
7 March 2006 |
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Penal Code [Cap 17] (PC)
Facts
The respondent (S) was a relative of the female complainant (C), who
was aged 16 years. C was visiting S's house to attend a family
function. C was asleep in S's house when he kneeled over her and sucked
her breasts. S was charged with indecent assault of a female under the
PC which attracted a maximum sentence of 5 years. S argued he should be
treated leniently as he had pleaded guilty thereby sparing C from
having to give evidence; had shown the court that he was remorseful and
ashamed; was married with four children and three other dependants; was
a first time offender who had readily cooperated with police; and had
made a customary traditional apology before the hearing.
The Magistrate's Court (MC) reduced the charge from 'indecent assault'
to a lesser charge of 'indecently insulting or annoying a female' and
sentenced S to a conditional discharge of 12 months. The appeal to the
High Court (HC) by the state concerned both the length of the sentence
and the legality of the reduction to a lesser charge.
Issues
- Was the MC entitled to reduce the charges without hearing
the views of
the parties?
- Was the sentence appropriate taking into account all the
mitigating/aggravating factors as well as Fiji's obligations under the
CRC?
- What was the value of the traditional apology to the formal
case?
Decision
The HC sentenced S to a term of nine-months imprisonment suspended for
two years on the basis of an 'excellent written submission which was
powerfully persuasive'. It refused to
accept the lesser charges for technical legal reasons (not discussed at
length in this synopsis), but noted that no force was applied, no
weapon used and no penetrative assault attempted. It was not possible
to state how significant the MC found the traditional apology to be; a
traditional apology could be a sign of remorse. There was no reason to
doubt the genuineness of the apology, it seemed to follow a pattern of
conduct and there was no evidence that the MC had 'overvalued' the
apology procedure. It also said that there was no Victim Impact Report
to suggest 'an unusual effect on the victim'.
Comment
It is unfortunate that despite invoking the provisions of the CRC, the
court nevertheless chose to give S a suspended sentence, thereby
reducing the overall punishment. The result is at odds with the
application of the 'best interest of the child' principle. Articles 16
and 19 of the CRC state the law must ensure the child (someone under
18) must be protected from such interference and attacks. The act of
sucking C's breasts was a gross violation of her body and her inherent
dignity, accentuated by her status as a child. The emphasis on the lack
of force and the absence of penetrative assault deflected consideration
of that significant aspect. The view that a non-penetrative assault is
somehow a lesser form of assault is a patriarchal one, viewing the
crime from the perspective of the offender and not the
complainant/survivor.
Was the traditional apology (bulubulu
or soro)
given too much prominence in the sentence? In Fiji women are not
usually prominent in apology ceremonies. As a matter of practice, the
male members of the family of the offender make the formal apology with
the presentation of gifts, mats and a whale's tooth (tabua), the latter
being the most prominent feature of the ceremony. Women may be present
but are silent observers. The complainants have no say in the matter
and usually do not even attend the ceremony. Their views are rarely if
ever sought. The purpose of the bulubulu is to heal the rift between
the families in order to enable the community to get on with life. It
should not be a mitigating factor in reducing the sentence. It is
difficult to say what actual weight was given to the bulubulu in the
final sentence, given the other mitigating factors. The impact of such
custom forgiveness ceremonies on sentencing is a subject of much
controversy amongst women's groups working in the area of sexual
assault and domestic violence.
CHILDREN / ADOPTION / INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
A mandatory provision in the
adoption legislation requiring an applicant for adoption to be a
Nauruan citizen could be overridden by a broad constitutional provision
and the CRC.
IN RE LORNA GLEESON
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Nauru (CN)
Adoption of Children Ordinance 1965 (ACO)
Customs and Adopted Law Act (CALA)
Facts
The applicant (G) appealed a decision by the Family Court refusing her
application for adoption on the ground that s 9(2) of the ACO required
her spouse to be a Nauruan. G's spouse was not a Nauruan citizen. G and
the child were both Nauruan citizens. G relied on the CRC and the CN to
argue that it was in the child's best interests under s 6(2) of the ACO
that G be allowed to adopt the child.
Issue
Whether a mandatory provision in the adoption legislation requiring the
applicants for adoption to be Nauruan citizens could be overridden by a
broad constitutional provision and the CRC.
Decision
The court allowed the appeal. The interpretation by the Family Court of
s 9 of the ACO was wrong because it was inconsistent with article 3 of
the CN, which concerned the protection of the right of the individual
to respect for 'his private and family life' and contrary to the spirit
of the CRC. The requirement in s 9(2) of the ACO that the applicant's
spouse be a Nauruan should not be regarded as applying to G's
application. Article 3 overrode s 9 of the ACO.
Comment
The court had no hesitation in taking the CRC into account to reinforce
the CN although it had not been 'domesticated'. Taking 'the best
interests of the child' as a starting point, it considered the CN and
the CRC in light of the facts of the case to nullify the requirement
that the applicant's spouse be Nauruan in the ACO. The arguments
relating to the CN and the CRC were accepted on submission by counsel.
This reinforces the widening application of human rights by the courts
in the Pacific. However, a human rights convention cannot contradict a
clear and unambiguous provision of domestic legislation. It can only be
applied to clarify an ambiguous provision or one that is capable of two
or more interpretations or to fill a lacuna. Compare this case to the
next case in this digest, Rhea
v Caine, where a Fiji court decided that a clear and
unequivocal residency requirement was fulfilled by a short- term stay,
together with a previous stay in Fiji. Both cases might be considered
to be untenable applications of international human rights standards.
CHILDREN / ADOPTION /
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
Whether the strict criteria set
out in adoption legislation on residency requirements for applicants
for adoption should be interpreted broadly to accommodate the best
interests of the child under the CRC.
RHEA v CAINE
Magistrates Court |
Fiji Islands |
Waqavonovono (Mag.) |
Adoption Case No. 26 of 2006 |
|
18 December 2006 |
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Adoption of Infants Act [Cap 58] (AIA)
Facts
This case concerned an adoption application where the applicants (R) or
(H for husband and W for wife) were American expatriates. R resided in
Tel Aviv, Israel. W obtained custody of the infant (I) on 16 July,
2006. She remained in the country for three months during which she had
continuous custody of the infant. H withdrew from the application
because he had not been with W during the period in which W had custody
of I. H arrived in Fiji a week before the adoption order was granted. H
and W had adopted the infant's older sister while they were living in
Fiji during 2003. The Director of Social Welfare challenged the
capacity of R to adopt on the basis that they could not and did not
fulfill residency requirements, which required a degree of permanent
settlement for a period of time. In essence, the director argued that a
temporary stay in Fiji could not satisfy a residency requirement.
The AIA, s 6(4), states that:
An adoption order shall not be
made in favor of any applicant who is not resident in Fiji or in
respect of any infant who is not a resident.
Issues
- Had the relevant provisions of the AIA on residency been
complied with by W staying in Fiji with the infant for three months
only?
- Could the relevant provisions of CRC influence the
interpretation of a mandatory requirement of the adoption statute
thereby changing its meaning?
Decision
The Magistrates Court (MC) allowed W to adopt the infant. The CRC could
be taken to influence the meaning of residency, given that all the
relevant provisions of the AIA had been complied with, taking into
primary consideration the best interests of the child. Article 3 of the
CRC states:
In all actions concerning the
children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare
institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative
bodies, the best interest of the child shall be a primary
consideration.
S 43(2) of the CF provides:
In
interpreting the provisions of this chapter, the courts must promote
the vales that underline a democratic society based on freedom and
equality and must, if relevant have regard to public international law
applicable to the protection of rights set out in this chapter.
The term 'resident' in Fiji under s 6(4) of the AIA was to be construed
in such a way so as to take into account the period in which W had
lived in Fiji subsequent to the filing of the application for adoption.
Such a construction would not conflict with any other provision of the
AIA. Any reversal of the infant's placement would be detrimental to the
infant's survival needs and future development. Therefore, it was in
the best interests of the child that an adoption order be made.
Comment
While citing precedent and the provisions of the CF, the decision by
the court raises serious issues. In particular, there is some doubt
about the liberal interpretation of the term 'resident in Fiji' in s
6(4) of the AIA. If one assumes residence 'involves an element of
permanent resettlement for a foreseeable period of time and not some
temporary period of sojourn' (per Byrne J In Re S (1977) FJHC
(182)) this approach is inconsistent. It treated the three- month
probationary period as residence as well, which by definition is not
permanent.
Reading into a clear and unequivocal residency requirement a short-term
stay, together with a previous stay in Fiji, as fulfilling a residency
requirement is, with respect, excessive. A human rights convention
cannot contradict a clear and unambiguous provision of domestic
legislation. It can only be applied to clarify an ambiguous provision
or one which is capable of two or more interpretations. The case is
problematic because it is now possible that this precedent will be
exploited, regardless of its narrow construction, to allow those with mala fides
intentions towards children to stay in Fiji for three months and then
be granted a legal adoption on that basis. This is precisely what s 6
(4) was designed to prevent. The three- month rule was designed to
assess whether the adoptive parent has the capacity to care for a
child, not to satisfy a residency requirement. The residency
requirement is a separate issue and is designed to ensure that a
thorough investigation is able to be conducted on prospective adoptive
parents. If the prospective parents are not resident/domiciled in Fiji
with some degree of permanency, the local welfare authorities are less
able to conduct a proper investigation as to suitability. If the
prospective parents are overseas residents, they must apply through the
relevant authorities abroad in a government-to-government arrangement
that is designed to weed out those with mala fides
intentions or who are otherwise not suitable. The government
arrangements have long waiting lists of those who have been thoroughly
checked and who are patiently waiting their turn. In a sense, the
applicants here are 'queue jumpers'.
CHILDREN / ADOPTION /
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
Residency requirements in
legislation cannot be dispensed with even in light of the CRC.
SOCIAL WELFARE v MARSHALL
& ORS
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Phillips J |
[2008] FJHC 283; Civil Appeal No. HBA 11 of 2006 |
|
7 March 2008 |
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Convention on Protection of Children and Co-operation (CPCC)
Adoption of Infants Act [Cap 58] (AIA)
Adoptions of Infants (Magistrates Courts)
Rules South Australian Adoption Act 1988
Facts
H and W made an application to adopt two infants. The applicants were
not residents of Fiji under s 6(4) of the Adoption Act. The
Magistrates' Court made the adoption order in their favour, although
they were not resident at the time of application.
The Solicitor General's Office filed an appeal on behalf of the
appellant Social Welfare Officer (SWO), the Guardian Ad Litem
for the infants at the centre of the adoption proceedings before the
High Court. The appellant argued:
- That the learned
magistrate erred in law in and in fact in not taking into account the
best interest of the children as required under the Adoption Act (Cap
58) and Fiji's obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the
Child 1993 in the following:
- the fact that there
was no Home Study Report available from the Guardian Ad Litem
- that the proper
inter-country adoption procedures were not followed in this adoption
application
- [that
proceedings] should have considered that it would be in the best
interest of the child that they comply with South Australian Law, with
its own conditions.
The SWO further argued that s 6(4) of the AIA was clear that an
Adoption Order should not be made in favour of any applicant who was
not resident in Fiji, or in respect of any infant who was not a
resident, and that the learned magistrate erred in law and in fact in
not taking into account the residency of both applicants.
Issue
Whether or not H and W being non-resident foreigners were able to adopt
Fiji citizen children in Fiji given the mandatory requirements of
residency for applicants for adoption.
Decision
The court held that whilst it sympathised with the respondents, it was
the function of the court only to interpret the law and not to amend
it. It could not change the meaning of s 6(4), which required residency
in Fiji. The court also noted that the CPCC, in respect of
inter-country adoption, imposed additional obligations on state
authorities which could not be overcome by an amendment to s 6(4) of
the AIA. The court upheld both grounds of appeal.
To the question as to whether s 6(4) of the AIA infringed the
respondents' constitutional rights and was therefore discriminatory,
the court held that s 6(4) was not an infringement. However, it was a
legitimate restriction pre-conditional to the resident requirement and
that it must be supported with credible evidence to show that indeed it
amounted to limiting the constitutional right. Suffice to say, non-Fiji
residents did not enjoy the same constitutionals right enjoyed by Fiji
citizens.
Comment
The decision shows the advancement of the principle of 'the best
interest of the child' in adoption cases and the 'prerequisites for
inter-country adoption'. The best interest of a child that is provided
for under CRC (Fiji is a state party) and the AIA (Cap 58) is designed
to protect children and safeguard their interests. In any inter-country
adoption application, the court must be satisfied that what is done is
in the best interests of the children. In the present case, the court
had no factual foundation to arrive at a determination of what was in
the best interest of the children, in that there was no home study
report of the prospective parents (respondents).
Even if it were possible to get a home study report, s 6(4) of the AIA
makes it explicitly clear that an adoption order shall not be made in
favour of applicants who are 'not resident in Fiji'. Residency is a
matter for the court to decide based on the evidence before it. This
condition seeks to ensure that children and their families are
protected from unscrupulous people who may seek to unlawfully obtain
children for adoption, and to prevent trafficking in and abduction of
children. In support of that, the CPCC, in respect of inter-country
adoptions, placed additional obligations on state parties to act
according to the principle of the child's best interest; that is, to
meet the prerequisites required in any inter-country adoption process.
While Fiji is not a party to this convention, the convention takes
effect by virtue of s 43(2) of the Constitution of Fiji.
This case may be compared to that of the two previous cases in this
digest, Rhea v Caine
and In re Lorna Gleeson,
where the courts extended the boundaries of the application of the CRC
to give similar residency and citizenship requirements an unrealistic
meaning.
Editors' note: Although
as human rights lawyers we fully support the application of
international law to domestic courts where relevant, it cannot be used
to directly contradict a clear mandatory provision, especially one
designed to protect the rights of children. This
case illustrates also some of the interesting tensions between the
rights of adult individuals versus the rights of children. In our
respectful view, this interpretation of 'residency requirement' is to
be preferred.
CHILDREN / ADOPTION
In
inter-country proceedings, the local court cannot override a decision
made by another court abroad on residence, especially in light of
commitments under the Hague Convention.
NAI & ORS v CAVA
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Phillips J |
[2008] FJHC 274; Civil Action No.18 of 2008 |
|
6 February 2008 |
International instruments
and law considered
Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction
(HC)
Family Law Act 2003 (FLA)
Facts
The two parties to the case were (C) who was the natural mother of
five-year-old (D) and the respondents (N), who were relatives who had
played a role in raising D. N made applications for custody and
adoption of D, while C sought to have orders that she be granted
custody of D and have the liberty to take the child to Australia. C and
D had Australian citizenship.
D had been resident in Australia for 14 months prior to travelling to
Fiji and there had been an order in a New South Wales Court giving C
'residential responsibility' over the child. C was residing with N
during the course of the case.
Earlier orders made were:
- 28 January 2008: The Magistrate ruled that interim custody
of D be given to N with limited access given to C pending the outcome
of custody and adoption applications before the court. The magistrate
also ordered that the Attorney General and the Director of Social
Welfare be parties to the case under ss 177 and 178 respectively of the
FLA.
- 19 February 2008: Phillips J granted an interim stay order
on the above orders of the Magistrate. Phillips J stated in her order
that:
- the Magistrates' Courts in Fiji did not have jurisdiction
to entertain adoption applications in respect of a child who is an
Australian citizen;
- Section 43(2) required the courts to have regard to public
international law if relevant, in this case the Hague Convention on the
Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction;
- the child be returned to Australia to her mother as soon as
possible.
Issue
Whether the court was able to make an order giving the child liberty to
leave the jurisdiction before a decision was made on the issue of
'habitual residence'.
Decision
The court declined the application to stay the previous order. It held
that the circumstances of the case, including the 14-month period that
D had lived in Australia and the fact that D and C both had Australian
citizenship, made them habitual residents of Australia.
The court referred to the Hague Convention in upholding its earlier
decision that the child should be returned to her mother. Article 3 of
the convention dealt with child custody and the court cited this to
rule that D's mother had the right to custody in this instance.
Comment
This case set a precedent on the application of international law
principles from two bold perspectives. First, it was the first
application in Fiji of the Hague Convention, an unratified convention.
Although other unratified conventions, such as the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) have been
applied previously, it is a first for the Hague Convention. Second, the
court interpreted s 43(2) of the Constitution of Fiji to mean that it
had an obligation to apply human rights conventions even when counsel
did not make submissions citing international conventions.
CHILDREN / PARENT'S BAIL
The best interests of the child
are a primary but not paramount consideration in the granting/refusal
of bail for the child's parent who is awaiting trial.
DEVI v THE STATE
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Penal Code [Cap 17] (PC)
Bail Act (No.26 of 2002) (BA)
Facts
This was a second application for bail pending trial for the applicant
(D) who was charged with three counts of imitation of currency. It was
based on two main grounds, namely that the prosecution had no basis in
law to request further remand and that D had a four-year-old son who
now had no caregiver and whose clothes were locked up at D's house
while she
was in custody. D's husband, the co-accused, was also in custody. Bail
was initially refused on the basis that investigations were continuing.
D said this was not a good reason for refusing bail. Under the CRC, the
court needed to consider the best interests of D's child in granting or
refusing bail.
Article 3(1) of the CRC states:
In all actions concerning
children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare
institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative
bodies, the best interests of the child shall be a primary
consideration.
Article 9 concerned the principle of non-separation of parents from
children, unless it was in the child's best interests.
Issue
Whether bail should be granted to D, taking into account the best
interests of the child as required under the CRC.
Decision
The court granted bail to D on the basis that the child should not be
separated from its parent. It considered the CF and the BA on the right
of a person to be released from detention on reasonable terms, and the
right to be released on bail unless the interests of justice otherwise
required. The primary consideration in deciding whether to grant bail
was the likelihood of D appearing in court to answer the charges laid
against her. D was charged with misdemeanours and had no history of
offending or absconding.
The care of dependants was a relevant consideration in the granting or
refusal of bail as per s 19(2)(b)(iv) of the BA. It held that the CRC
was a valuable guide to the weight that a court must give 19(2)(b)(iv)
to the BA. Where, for instance, both parents were in custody and there
were no arrangements for the care of young children, bail should be
granted because it was in the interests of the children that they were
not separated from their parents. The CRC applied in Fiji pursuant to
s.43(2) of the CF. However, while the best interests of the child was a
primary consideration, it did no more than give those interests first
importance. This had to be taken into account with other
considerations.
Comment
The court applied the best interests of the child in the CRC to give
weight to s 19(2)(b)(iv) of the BA relating to the care of dependants.
However, it was mindful that the principle could not be applied
arbitrarily. While important, it had to be considered with the other
factors that had to be taken into account under the Act. In certain
situations it might not be sufficient to counter the particular
circumstances of a case, as for example, where a parent was charged
with murder or rape. In applying the relevant provisions of the BA, the
court endorsed an interpretation conforming to international law and
the state's obligations. This case demonstrates that the principle of
the best interest of the child under the CRC is increasingly being
applied to all areas of the law where children are involved.
This case may be compared to the next case, Yuen v The State,
where a similar issue arose.
CHILDREN / PARENT'S BAIL
The best interests of the child
were a primary consideration in granting bail to the accused parent.
YUEN v THE STATE
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Facts
This was a second application for bail by the defendant (Y). Y and her
husband were among six others accused of manufacturing the illicit
drug, methylamphetamine. Both were in prison pending trial. The
resident judge of the Court of Appeal rejected the first bail
application on the basis it required a full bench. However, that
application was withdrawn and a fresh application made to the High
Court.
Y had two children, who according to a general and child health
practitioner were showing signs of 'overt and subtle psychological
patterns distinctive of children during prolonged separation from
parents'. The younger child was emotionally withdrawn and comparatively
under-developed for a pre-schooler. The doctor was concerned at the
effect of separation, taking into account their migrant status and
exclusive Chinese cultural upbringing.
Successive applications for bail had to be based on changed
circumstances. Without that, earlier decisions could not be properly
reconsidered.
Issues
- Was the absence of both parents a genuine psycho-social and
developmental concern of sufficient impact to constitute changed
circumstances?
- What was the impact of the CRC on bail in these
circumstances?
Decision
In granting bail, the court referred to s 43(2) of the CF which
provides that the courts: 'must,
if relevant, have regard to public international law applicable to the
protection of the rights set out in this chapter.' In
applying the 'best interests of the child' under the CRC, it took into
account concerns that Y could interfere with witnesses or re-offend
while on bail. However, those concerns were lessened somewhat by Y's
need
to ensure that the best interests of her children were satisfied.
Citing the decision of Minister
of State for Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Teoh
(1995) 69,6 while the best interests of the child were a primary
consideration, the court did no more than give them first importance,
along with such other considerations as may in the circumstances of a
given case require equal but not paramount weight. The best interests
of the children were of first importance in this new application for
bail. However, this decision should not be taken as a precedent for the
principle that if both parents in a relationship are sent to jail, they
can automatically expect to get bail because of their children's needs.
Comment
This case applied the approach adopted by Shameem J in Devi v The State
in which the best interests of the child were considered as a primary,
but not paramount consideration. However, the caveat is that bail is
not automatic for parents invoking this principle. It would depend on
the circumstances and context of the particular case and whether the
best interests of the child/children outweighed competing factors. In
another case, this primary consideration might be displaced by other
competing factors such as the gravity of the offence with which a
parent or caregiver was charged.
CHILDREN / SOLDIERS /
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
The trial of a child soldier did
not violate children's rights mentioned under the CRC.
There is a difference
between being recruited to a state military group and to an illegal
military or para-military group.
KELLY v R
Court of Appeal |
Solomon Islands |
Lord Slynn of Hadley P, |
[2006] SBCA 17 |
McPherson & Morris JJA |
25 October 2006 |
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
International Guidelines for the Administration of Juvenile Justice
1985 (The Beijing Rules) (BR)
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
(CERD)
Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (CAT)
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the
involvement of children in armed conflict (CRC-OP)
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Facilitation of International Assistance Act 2003 (FIAA)
Penal Code [Cap 26] (PC)
Juvenile Offenders Act [Cap 14] (JOA)
Facts
This case arose out of the political crisis of June 2000 in which
civilian militia removed the democratically elected government of
Bartholomew Ulufa'alu. This was followed by inter- ethnic fighting
between the people of Malaita and Guadalcanal.
On 24 April 2003, six members of the Church of Melanesian Brothers went
to the Weathercoast in search of one of their members, who was believed
to be held prisoner there by the Guadalcanal Liberation Front (GLF).
The GLF was an insurrectionist group that had taken over control of
that part of Guadalcanal and were illegally exercising powers of
government and terrorising people in defiance of the authority of the
regular government and laws of Solomon Islands. K, a 14-year-old member
of the GLF, was accused of killing Patteson Gatu, one of the six church
members. K was charged with murder. He applied for a permanent stay of
the proceedings pending against him. It was argued that the prosecution
of a juvenile was an abuse of process, being so unfair and wrong that
to allow the prosecution to proceed would bring the administration of
justice into disrepute.
The prosecution submitted that the Parliament of Solomon Islands had
provided for the prosecution of juveniles under the JOA. The PC also
provided for an age where children were criminally responsible. The age
is, at most, 12 years, and on occasion as low as 8 years. The
prosecution of a child who was 13 or 14 years old at the time of the
alleged offence was in accordance with Solomon Islands law. The CSI
provides for specific legal safeguards for any person charged with a
criminal offence; however, there is no distinction of children.
The grounds of the application were as follows:
- The age of K at the time of the alleged commission of the
offence was an issue;
- The prosecution was an abuse of process;
- The prosecution should not proceed given the international
nature of the prosecution and the international guidelines on the
prosecution of child soldiers;
- The prosecution should not proceed because in the event
that the accused was convicted, he would be sentenced to a mandatory
life sentence in contravention of the CRC to which Solomon Islands is a
signatory.
Issues
- Whether the continuation of the prosecution against a child
soldier was unfair in that it would bring the administration of justice
into disrepute.
- What was the international law on child soldiers and what
was the applicability of such law to Solomon Islands?
- In the absence of the domestication of international law,
what constitutional safeguards applied to protect the rights of child
soldiers?
Decision
Dismissing the appeal, the court emphasised that the constitutional
responsibility was to ensure that a fair trial was afforded to K at
every stage of the proceedings. The CRC related to the enlisting of
children into the armed forces of a country and not into an illegal
paramilitary group. As such, the prosecution of K was neither
oppressive nor prejudicial. The CSI and the JOA provided adequate
protection.
While Article 37 of the CRC provided safeguards for the children, it
was for the court to ensure the procedure and process conformed to the
provisions of the CRC. The Solomon Islands Government had the
responsibility to enact legislation that would give effect to relevant
international conventions. In the absence of legislation, the court
would do all within its powers to protect juveniles under the CSI and
the JOA.
The lack of proper detention facilities for juveniles was of serious
concern, but proceedings for cases properly prosecuted would not be
stayed because of the lack of proper detention facilities. Balancing
the right of K to a fair trial with the safeguards provided by the CSI
and existing legislation did not render this case to be so rare or
exceptional that the court should stay the proceedings. Therefore the
application was dismissed.
Of further relevance are the following comments:
This leaves for consideration
the propriety of prosecuting the appellant for a murder committed at so
young age, having regard to his understanding and appreciation of the
nature of the proceedings in which he was tried. Solomon Islands has
acceded to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which came into
force on 2 September 1990. The convention has not, however, been
ratified by Parliament so as to incorporate it into the domestic law of
Solomon Islands. As most, therefore, it serves as a guide to the
procedure to be followed in a case of this kind at common law or under
statute. In fact, the only relevant provision of real consequence is
Article 37(a) providing that life imprisonment 'without possibility of
release' shall not be imposed on a person under 18 years who commits an
offence, but this is relevant to the sentencing of young offenders
rather than to their prosecution or conviction. The International
Guidelines for the Administration of Juvenile Justice 1985 (the
'Beijing Rules'), which do not constitute the terms of a binding
treaty, lay down desiderata which appear to have been complied with in
the appellant's case. So far as relevant here, those rules are again
material only in relation to sentencing. In addition, reference was
made to an Amnesty International policy paper on the prosecuting of
child soldiers. It does not possess authoritative status in
international law or in Solomon Islands law except as the opinions of
persons who are expert in the subject in question. The emphasis in
paragraph 6 of the paper is that 'where persons under 18 acted entirely
voluntarily, and were in control of their actions, they should be held
to account for their actions in the appropriate setting'. Paragraph
6.1 remarks that the Convention on the Rights of the Child 'does allow
young people to be prosecuted if the procedure can be fair and takes
into account the particular needs and vulnerability of young people'.
Comment
The court adopted a conservative approach in declining to stay the
proceedings on the basis of K's relative youth and the surrounding
conditions, which created an oppressive and hostile environment for a
child. In finding that there were adequate safeguards in the CSI, it
appeared to focus on the gravity of the offence rather than on the
status of the offender. Further, in applying the CRC (ratified by
Solomon Islands on 10 April 1995) in a narrow and restrictive manner,
no account was taken of realities on the ground and the forced
conscription of child soldiers by militia groups during the civil
crisis. It is a tragic reality that child soldiers are largely
recruited by guerilla or rebel groups rather than by national military
forces. It may well be that K was caught up in forces beyond his
control, which might therefore have been considered a mitigating
circumstance. The CRC appears not to forbid the imprisonment of
children, but requires humanitarian conditions consistent with
children's rights.
International universal principles relating to 'child soldiers' and
'prosecution of child soldiers' have evolved into international legally
binding instruments and jurisprudence laid down by international courts
such as the International Criminal Court (ICC). Solomon Islands has not
ratified the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the
Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict (CRC-OP).
However, through its ratification of the CRC it has an international
legal obligation to respect the principles of the CRC-OP, which is an
extension of Article 38 of the CRC duly ratified by the Government.
Several other instruments that relate to conscription of child soldiers
by irregular armed groups or forces have been ratified by Solomon
Islands, including the Geneva Conventions of 1949, the Protocol
Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and the
Protection of Victims of Non-International Armed Conflicts (Protocol
II) 8 June 1977.7
CRC and related international treaties on child soldiers call on
ratifying governments to do everything feasible to ensure that members
of their armed forces who are under 18 years of age do not take part in
hostilities. It reaffirms governments' responsibilities and obligations
to take appropriate measures when it comes to conscription of children
in armed forces, which could be regular or irregular forces. The
responsibility rests heavily on state parties to the CRC and CRC-OP and
much less on private armies or guerillas.
The Solomon Islands courts failed to explore the wider spectrum of
international law relating to 'prosecution of child soldiers' that
includes the ratified Geneva Conventions and the decisions of the
International Criminal Court, which criminalise the conscription of
child soldiers. The court applied a narrow and literal approach when
interpreting the provisions of CRC in its limited interpretation of
'armed forces'. In this case, the court used a 'dualist approach' when
interpreting international law, stating that it had not been
domesticated or become part of legislation.
In Pacific Island countries and territories, only Vanuatu has ratified
the CRC-OP. Fiji is a signatory.
7.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/htmlall/genevaconventions
Editors' notes: Several
cases arose out of the same set of facts involving the defendant Kelly.
The case discussed here is the appeal against the decision of the High
Court for conviction. The Court of Appeal substantially upheld the
decision of the High Court. On appeal before the Court of Appeal, the
court refused to set aside the conviction for murder, despite K's age,
but allowed the appeal against life imprisonment, ordering a separate
hearing on sentencing. The Court of Appeal, when considering arguments
by K's counsel that international law regarding child soldiers should
apply, said that 'Such treaties and agreements may provide interpretive
assistance in applying local law. But, disregarding occasions of
ambiguity, they cannot control or displace the positive provisions of
Solomon Islands law under which the prosecution was instituted ...'
At the subsequent
hearing for sentencing (R v K [2006] SBHC 35), the High Court imposed
an eight-year sentence for murder, and given the period already spent
in prison, released K into community care under the supervision of a
relative for the remainder of the sentence.
CHILDREN / SOLDIERS /
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
CRC prohibits life sentences for
persons below the age of 18 years and requires consideration of
alternatives.
R v K
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Beijing Rules (BR)
Juvenile Offenders Act [Cap 14] (JOA)
Penal Code [Cap 26] (PC)
Facts
This case arose out of political events emanating from the illegal
removal of Prime Minister Ulufa'alu in June 2000 by civilian military
forces battling for land and other resources. It pitted a civilian
militia group, the Malaita Eagle Force (MEF), from Malaita against the
Isatabu Freedom Movement (IFM) civilian militia forces from
Guadalcanal, in Guadalcanal.
On 24 April 2003, six members of the Church of Melanesia went to the
Weathercoast in search of one of their members who was believed to be
held prisoner there by the Guadalcanal Liberation Front (GFL). The GFL
was an insurrectionist group that had taken control of this part of
Guadalcanal and were illegally exercising powers of government and
terrorising people in defiance of the authority of the regular
government and laws of Solomon Islands.
K, a 14-year-old member of the GLF, was accused of killing Patteson
Gatu, one of the six church members. K was charged with murder and
after being found guilty, was a minor awaiting sentence. The murder
occurred in April 2003 when K was only 14 years old. On appeal against
the conviction, the Court of Appeal determined that the mandatory life
sentence did not apply to persons below the age of 18 years and, while
dismissing the appeal against conviction, it allowed the appeal against
sentence and remitted the case to the High Court for sentencing.
Issue
What alternative punishment may be given by the courts for murder and
what might be the reasons for doing so?
Decision
The court upheld the conviction on the basis that s 14 of the PC
introduced exceptions to convictions for murder for persons between the
ages of 8 to 12 years. It made reference to the CRC and the Beijing
Rules, but said the former had not been incorporated in domestic law
and the latter were guidelines that appeared to have been followed. In
relation to the sentence, s 32 of the JOA introduced a specific regime
for those under 18 years ('a young person'), to allow their youth to be
a factor in sentencing. Section 1 of the CSI provided that a person
under the age of 18 years must not be deprived of liberty save 'for the
purpose of his education or welfare'. Section 13 of the JOA provided
the court could sentence any offender to be 'detained for said period
as may be specified in the sentence'. Section 14 conferred power on the
minister to discharge the offender from detention. Reading ss 13 and 16
of the JOA with s 20 of the PC, together with reference to
international treaties and conventions, implied that the State should
amend the mandatory sentencing for murder in s 200 of the PC. K was
released into the custody of a relative.
Comment
Reliance was placed on the CRC as a guideline to reinforce the
statutory interpretation followed to limit the effect of a mandatory
life sentence for murder on a person under the age of 18 years.
Acknowledgement was also made of the fact that s 5(1) of the CSI
reflected international law principles requiring a special regime of
incarceration for persons under the age of 18 years.
Although no legislative changes were made after ratification of the
CRC, it was used to provide guidance in sentencing. There were also
overwhelming mitigating factors that were taken into consideration. The
vulnerability of children and disadvantages they face,reinforce the
need for international and domestic safeguards. This case appears to be
the first one in Solomon Islands in which an international human rights
convention ratified by the government was referred to by a Solomon
Islands court. This case may be compared to the case of R v Su'u & Ors
also reported in this digest, in which the court applied unratified
conventions. These cases signal a departure from traditional
non-enforceability approaches to international law in Solomon Islands
and the growing influence of international human rights law on domestic
courts.
CHILDREN / TORTURE /
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
Accession to the CRC is an
indication that a state party is bound by its terms.
FA'AOSO v PAONGO & ORS
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Facts
The applicant (F) claimed damages of $29,000 for being wrongfully
assaulted by the police. F, aged 13 years (12 at the time of the
incident), was savagely beaten by police officers after being falsely
accused of theft. F was detained by the police for 20 hours before
being released. F also claimed that he had suffered injuries as a
result of the attack. Upon his release, F further claimed that he had
been threatened. The police pleaded guilty and accepted that F had been
wrongly accused.
Issues
- What was the relevance of Tongan incomes in assessing the
amount of damages?
- Whether the CRC applied or was relevant in a case of
torture of children.
Decision
F was awarded damages of $10,000, comprising $5,000 for wrongful
confinement and
$5,000 for exemplary damages. The court referred to the case of Akau'ola v Fungalei [1991] Tonga
LR 22, and issued the following admonition to police
officers:
A number of police officers
still appear to believe that they have the right to exercise discipline
over the public … such abuse of authority will not be tolerated, and
where it is proved to have occurred it will be stamped on, with
increasing severity, until the bully boy in uniform no longer roams our
streets.
Police officers had to understand that their role in criminal
investigation was exactly that – to investigate cases through
interviewing witnesses and, through appropriate use of forensic
methods, to gather hard factual evidence that would stand up in a court
of law.
In December 1995, Tonga acceded to the CRC. The judge further said that
though it still had to be properly ratified, the accession indicated a
willingness by the nation to be bound by its terms. Article 37 of the
convention sets out the obligations of a state concerning the
apprehension and detention of a child (defined as a person under the
age of 18 years). The opening words of each paragraph of the article
are relevant to the present case. They read:
- No child shall be
subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment …
- No child shall be
deprived of his or her liberty, unlawfully or arbitrarily
…
- Every child deprived of
liberty shall be treated with humanity and respect for the inherent
dignity of the human person, and in a manner which takes into account
the needs of persons of his or her age …
- Every child
deprived of his or her liberty shall have the right to prompt access to
legal and other appropriate assistance …
In the present case, all of these obligations were flagrantly abused.
However, in the assessment of damages, the fact that some Tongans have
no regular source of cash income was taken into account with a view to
keeping awards of damages in proportion to the value of money and
general conditions in the Kingdom.
Comment
The CJ remarked on the 'culture of violence' in the police force. The
courts played an important role in checking abuse by officers of the
state such as the police. The tender age of the youth did not preclude
him from a savage beating by police officers. It was a particularly
acute form of abuse of power because police are authority figures in
small communities where their status is reinforced by traditional
structures.
The court adopted a Teoh
approach. Ratification by Tonga of the CRC was relied on to reinforce
the award of damages against the state. The institution of such
proceedings reflected an increased awareness by the public of their
rights.
This case appears to be the first application of the CRC in Tonga but
not the first application of a human rights convention. In 2005,
Webster CJ applied the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) in R v
Vola. Both cases signify a clear departure from the
habitual reluctance to apply international human rights standards in
Tonga.
CRUEL,
INHUMAN OR
DEGRADING TREATMENT
CRUEL, INHUMAN OR
DEGRADING TREATMENT / PRISONERS
Effect of prison conditions on
granting of bail; [conditions violating inherent dignity absent].
Relevance of
international standards to prison conditions.
STATE v BOILA & NAINOKA
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment (CAT)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners
(UNSMRTP)
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Facts
The applicants (B and N) reapplied for bail on the grounds that the
conditions of their custody in the 'awaiting trial' block of Korovou
Prison were inhumane and degrading. Both had made a previous bail
application that was refused because they had escaped from police
custody and were unlikely to surrender to the custody of the court.
They described the conditions in which they were held, both stating
that prison conditions were in breach of the UDHR, ICCPR and the
UNSMRTP. In visiting the facilities upon B and N's invitation, the
court found the following: cell blocks had three occupants; there were
three mattresses, three pillows and three blankets. The mattresses were
damp and the blankets were used to cover the floor. There was one
bucket latrine, which was emptied twice a day, one light bulb, one
window, no water can, no mosquito nets and no medication for B and N's
injuries. Dinner was consumed inside the cell. The Commissioner of
Prisons said that on 8 October during the proceedings all remand
prisoners had been moved to dormitories with better conditions.
Issue
Should the court grant bail on the basis of B and N's likelihood of
surrendering to custody or on the basis of s 25 of the CF, which states
that 'Every person has
the right
to freedom from torture of any kind, whether physical, mental or
emotional, and from cruel, inhumane, degrading or disproportionately
severe treatment'?
Decision
The court refused bail to both B and N. In carefully weighing the
arguments of both parties, it referred to Tyrer v U.K [1978]
2 EHRR 1,
in which the European Court of Human Rights held that the reason for
inhumane treatment is irrelevant because it breaches Article 3 of the
ECHR. Similarly, in Seluck
Asker v Turkey (12/1997/769/998-999), the
right under 'Article 3 of the European Convention enshrines one of the
most fundamental values of a democratic society. Even in the most
difficult of circumstances … Article 3 makes no provision for
exceptions and no derogation from it is permissible … even in the event
of a public emergency'.
Reference was also made to the UNSMRTP (Part C) concerning untried
prisoners, as B and N were in this case. The rules require that one
prisoner is kept in one cell and that there are adequate sanitary
facilities.
B and N argued that the conditions in which they were required to live
in their cells contradicted the interests of the public. Both had a
history of escaping police custody as well as a history of convictions.
The offences were serious and there was a real risk of re-offending
whilst out on bail. Considering these two issues alone, the court was
inclined to refuse bail. However, the second step was to consider
whether the conditions were so severely humiliating that they sapped
the inherent dignity of the person. In the present case, both B and N
were healthy and young, were no strangers to the criminal justice
system and were both awaiting trial on multiple charges relating to
violence.
The right of each man, woman and child in Fiji to be treated with
dignity was an inalienable right. Breaches of s 25 of the CF could
never be justified on the basis that Fiji was an underdeveloped
country, or that the people of Fiji, because of their poor and simple
backgrounds, were accustomed to being treated with inhumanity or
disrespect. The prisoners of Korovou Prison, despite the crimes they
might have committed against society, deserved to be confined in
custody with no further degradation than was inherent in the act of
confinement itself.
Notwithstanding those facts, there were few cells that
satisfied the UNSMRTP and s 25 of the CF. If B and N were to remain in
the dormitories, conditions would not be as inhumane and degrading as
in the 'awaiting trial' block. Therefore B and N were to be remanded in
the dormitories where the conditions were not inhumane. Accordingly,
bail was refused. However, if there were future complaints about the
condition of the holding facilities, bail would be granted without
hesitation.
Comment
The judge in this case took the unusual step of visiting the prison.
Despite the criminal history and seriousness of the offences with which
B and N were both charged, careful consideration was given to whether
the conditions of the prison were fit for human habitation. The
detailed manner in which the court weighed the interests of the public
to be protected from B and N against the prisoners' right to be treated
humanely and with dignity, despite their remand status, reflected the
evolving concern with human rights. Rights were not
diminished by their context but to be interpreted, bearing other
relevant factors in mind. What these and other similar cases
demonstrate is that arguments about lack of resources or policy
considerations will not dissuade the courts from intervening where they
consider the right invoked is being breached and there are no
extenuating circumstances.
CUSTOM
CUSTOM / CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
Use of customary
obligations/practice as a mitigating factor for murder is unacceptable.
Rights generally have
vertical application between state and citizen, and not horizontally
between citizen and citizen.
LOUMIA v DPP
Court of Appeal |
Solomon Islands |
Connolly & Kapi JJA, |
[1986] SBCA 1 |
Wood CJ |
24 February 1986 |
Law considered
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Penal Code Chapter 26 (PC)
Facts
The appellant (L) appealed against his convictions for the
murders of three men. L was with other members of a group that attacked
the victims' group with knives, bows and arrows, which resulted in the
deaths of the three victims. L was convicted of murder. He appealed on
the grounds that the Acting Chief Justice erred in refusing to allow
the assessors to consider that pursuant to Kwaio custom, L believed in
good faith and on reasonable grounds that he had a legal duty to kill
those people responsible for the death of a close relative. (Editors' note: this is known in
some Melanesian countries as 'payback' custom.)
L argued that s 4 (the right to life) in the CSI applied
only to relationships between private persons and the state and not to
those between private persons. Therefore L's duty to kill under Kwaio
custom was not inconsistent with s 4 of the CSI and so should have been
recognised as part of the law of Solomon Islands. Section 4(2) provides
inter alia
that a person shall
not be regarded as having been deprived of his life if he dies as a
result of the use of force as is necessary to defend life and property.
On this basis, L argued that the charges against him ought to be
reduced from murder to manslaughter.
Issues
- Should customary revenge killing be a factor in reducing a
murder charge to manslaughter?
- Do
rights apply vertically and horizontally (between individuals and
between individuals and private actors, or only vertically between the
state and the individual)?
Decision
The appeal was dismissed. Most of the fundamental rights
guaranteed in Chapter II of the CSI were principally concerned with the
relationship between the citizen and the state. If the Kwaio customary
duty to kill were part of the law of Solomon Islands, it would be
public law and therefore inconsistent with the CSI.
Common law together with the PC is a complete statement of the
law in relation to the offences with which it deals. Killing for
revenge is not lawful under the PC or the common law. Therefore, a
custom that called for killing was inconsistent with the law and,
pursuant to Schedule 3 para. 3(2) of the CSI, was not part of Solomon
Islands law.
The exception to the prohibition on deprivation of life did
not include the taking of a life as payback in accordance with custom.
Nothing in s 4 of the CSI limited the protection against deprivation of
life to acts by the state only. By implication, s 4(1) prohibited
deprivation of life by a private person. Accordingly, the acts were
contrary to s 4 of the CSI and the sentence of murder could not be
reduced to manslaughter.
In relation to the issue of provocation, on which L argued the learned
judge misdirected the assessors, killing in retaliation could not be
regarded as a lawful act. The assessors in the High Court were also
indigenous Solomon Islanders and their assessment of the behaviour and
reactions of L took into account Kwaio custom, which practised revenge
killings, as well as the issue of provocation. Therefore there was no
misdirection.
Kapi JA had a different perspective, holding that s 4 of the
CSI applied not only to the relationship between the state and the
individual but between individuals as well. His Lordship observed:
It is
true that most of the
provisions in Ch. II are
principally concerned with relations between the citizen and the State.
However, I cannot find any words in s 4 which would confine the
protection against deprivation of life by the State only. The words,
'No person shall be deprived of his life intentionally …' must be given
a wide and generous application. Ministry of Home Affairs &
Another
v Fisher and Another [1979] All ER 21, per Lord Wilberforce.
[The] purpose of s 4 is
to protect the right to life against
any person or authority (including the State). This can be inferred
from s 4(2)(a) where it is permissible under law (e.g. s 17 of the
Penal Code) to allow a private person to kill another in defence of
another person or property. The implication is that s 4(1) prohibits
deprivation of life by a private person.
Examination of the other
provisions in II also supports a
wider application of fundamental rights provisions. Section 15(3) of
the Constitution
prohibits certain types of treatment as between private persons and
private bodies.
The essence of
fundamental rights provisions in Solomon
Islands is that they apply to all persons and they are limited only by
their terms and qualifications set out thereunder.
The court rejected the submission by counsel for the appellant
and found the deceased were entitled to the protection of life under s
4 of the constitution.
The majority of the court said in considering s 4 in Chapter
II of the CSI, it was 'principally concerned with the relations between
the citizen and the State'.
His Lordship also said:
The fundamental rights and
freedoms of the individual may be infringed
by the State in, broadly speaking, one of two ways. The infringement
may occur arbitrarily and in defiance of the general rules of law. In
such circumstances the individual has his remedy in the courts. It is
thus not strictly necessary, though it may be salutary, to have
contained in the Constitution provisions guaranteeing those fundamental
freedoms. The evident purpose of the provisions of Chapter II is to
prevent the infringement of those freedoms by the enactment of laws or
regulations which impair them. The customary duty to kill or maim a
wrongdoer who has himself killed or maimed which is contended to be
part of the law of Solomon Islands in relation to the Kwaio people
would, to that extent, be part of the public law and therefore, on any
view, inconsistent with s 4 of the Constitution.
Comment
In Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands in particular, some communities
condone the practice of revenge killings in particular circumstances.
While the constitutions of many countries in the Pacific Islands region
recognise customary law, there is a clear line drawn in terms of
serious criminal offences. The courts have held that the recognition of
such practices must be consistent with the constitution and laws of the
state. They must also accord with international standards of human
rights. The taking of a life for customary reasons does not fall within
the exception to the deprivation of life, i.e. taking of a life in
defence of another person. (See
the 'witchcraft' case – The State v
Aigal & Kauna – later in this digest for a comparison between
custom and formal law.)
An interesting aspect of this case is the perspective of the members of
the court regarding the application of Chapter II of the CSI. A
majority held that it concerned the relationships between the state and
the individual exclusively. Its purpose was to prevent the infringement
of fundamental freedoms, and the incorporation of Kwaio custom as part
of the law of Solomon Islands was inconsistent with s 4 of the CSI.
Kapi JA agreed with the result, but found Chapter II also applied
between individuals in some respects; s 4 was to be given a broad
interpretation and the victims were therefore entitled to its
protection. The decision in respect of the vertical versus horizontal
application of rights is similar to that of the
Ulufa'alu
case discussed later in this volume, in which the court also
ruled that rights were only enforceable vertically.
Editors' note: We
respectfully disagree with this view. There is no
logical basis for the argument that some rights are vertical, whilst
others are also horizontal. Globally, there is a growing recognition
that human rights are a matter for all to observe, including the
private sector and individual citizens.
CUSTOM / CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
Breach of custom could be a
proper cause of action but it must be properly pleaded. It must clearly
state what the custom is and who applies it and also provide details of
its requirements in clear, precise and adequate terms.
MAGITEN v BEGGIE &
WAHIGINIM
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Cannings J |
[2005] PGNC 75 |
|
21 April 2005 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Underlying Law Act 2000 (ULA)
Customs Recognition Act, Chapter 19 (CRA)
Facts
The plaintiff (M) sought an application for a default judgment against
his wife (B) for being illegally married to his brother (W, the second
defendant), which he said was contrary to customary law. M served a
summons on B and W, who did not file an intention to defend. M claimed
that while away on travel, B formed an association with and married W.
M claimed that the marriage of B and W was a breach of their custom.
M sought the following orders:
1. That the marriage of B to W was prohibited according to custom and
as such breached the fundamental rights of the children;
2. That B and W pay damages to M.
Issue
Whether the breach of custom was a legal cause of action and an
adequate ground for the court to execute a default judgment.
Decision
The application for a default judgment was refused. The court using its
discretion was not satisfied that there was a reasonable cause of
action arising from the originating summons and other documents. Breach
of custom could be a proper cause of action, but it must be
properly pleaded. The application should have clearly stated what the
custom was and who applied it, and should also have provided details of
the custom's requirements in clear, precise and adequate terms.
The summons failed to meet those requirements and as a result B and W
did not know the details of the custom they were alleged to have
breached. The motion as it stood was dismissed.
However, the court could not dismiss the whole proceedings as this
would be unfair to the plaintiff. The court also looked at the sources
of the Underlying Law Act, which includes common law as well as
customary law. Customary law should be applied unless it was
inconsistent with a written law or by its application and enforcement
would be contrary to the National Goals and Directive Principles and
the Basic Social Obligations in the CPNG and if in its application it
would be contrary to the basic rights guaranteed by the constitution.
Moreover, the ULA also stated it was the duty of the counsel in
relation to customary law that he or she assisted the court by calling
evidence and obtaining relevant information and opinion that would
assist the court.
The CRA recognised custom but not if its application would result, in
the opinion of the court, in injustice or would not be in the public
interest. Therefore, the application for a default judgment was refused
but the other proceedings could continue.
Comment
This case illustrates the interesting tensions between formal and
custom laws. It also highlights the unsettled nature of the
relationship between constitutional rights and customary law. The
tension between communal values and individual rights in PNG is
apparent and the challenge lies in mediating between the conflicting
values. The courts are aware of these contradictions and often attempt
to craft compromises that may vary according to circumstances. They
recognise that rights, while being universal in nature, have to be
applied in a context that may require some modification.
CUSTOM / DISCRIMINATION
Discrimination against women in
the payment of pension funds is reinforced by custom law.
TANAVALU & ORS v TANAVALU
&
SOLOMON ISLANDS NATIONAL
PROVIDENT FUND
High Court |
Solomon Islands |
Lungole-Awich J |
[1998] SBHC 4 |
|
12 January 1998 |
Court of Appeal |
Solomon Islands |
Mason P, McPherson & Williams JJA |
[1998] SBCA 8 |
|
25 November 1998 |
Law considered
Constitution of the Solomon Islands (CSI)
Solomon Islands National Provident Fund Act [Cap 109] (SINPFA)
Facts
The deceased husband (H) had nominated his brother and nephew as
beneficiaries of his pension when he joined the fund. Under s 32 of
SINPFA, that nomination became invalid when he married the following
year. The Act provides that if a member of the fund dies without
nominating a beneficiary for their accumulated funds, distribution is
to be in accordance with the custom of the member, 'to the children,
spouse and other persons' entitled in custom (s 33(c)). No provision is
made as to how this custom is established.
In this particular case, after H died, his father applied for and was
paid the amount held in the fund on the basis of custom in Babatana,
South Choiseul. Of the $11,079 paid to him, the father deposited $4,000
in an interest-bearing deposit account in the name of H's son. He used
$3,000 to meet funeral expenses, paid $2,000 each to the deceased's
brother and nephew and $79 was used for his own purposes.
The deceased's widow (W) challenged this distribution, seeking a
declaration in the High Court that she and her infant child were each
entitled to a third share of the money. The evidence in the case showed
that inheritance in H's tribe was patrilineal and that H's father was
entitled to distribute the estate to relatives. According to customary
law, H's father had the discretion to pay some amount of the
inheritance to the widow, but in some circumstances, for example, where
she had left the father's house, he was entitled to leave her out of
the distribution altogether. Although most of the argument concentrated
on the proper interpretation of s 33(c), it was also argued for W that
the customary law of that island was discriminatory against women and
was therefore unconstitutional.8
The relevant sections of the CSI read:
Protection
from discrimination on grounds of race, etc.
15.-(1) Subject to the
provisions of subsections (5), (6) and (9) of this section, no law
shall make any provision that is discriminatory either of itself or in
its effect.
(2) Subject to the
provisions of subsections (7), (8) and (9) of this section, no person
shall be treated in a discriminatory manner by any person acting by
virtue of any written law or performance of the function of any public
office or any public authority.
…
(4) In this section, the
expression 'discriminatory' means affording different treatment to
different persons attributable wholly or mainly to their respective
descriptions by race, place of origin, political opinions, colour,
creed or sex whereby persons of one such description are subjected to
disabilities or restrictions to which persons of another such
description are not made subject or are accorded privileges or
advantages which are not accorded to persons of another such
description.
5) Subsection (1) of
this section shall not apply to any law so far as that law makes
provision-
…
(c) for the application, in the
case of persons of any such description as is mentioned in the
preceding subsection (or of persons connected with such persons), of
the law with respect to adoption, marriage, divorce, burial, devolution
of property on death or other like matters that is the personal law
applicable to persons of that description.
(d) for the application
of customary law.
Issue
Whether the customary law bias towards men on the distribution of
pension funds was
discriminatory to the widow on the grounds of gender and therefore
unconstitutional.
Decision
The court had to consider customary inheritance for the purpose of the
SINPFA. In the High Court, the judge found that the word 'law' in s
15(1) did not include customary law. His basis for this finding was
that the section was referring to a law to be made in the future and
customary law was not such a law. Rather, it was 'evolving or was
already pertaining at the time of the adoption of the Constitution'.
The court said that discriminatory customary law would be protected by
the section in any event, because he considered that ss 15(5)(c) and
15(5)(d) excused discriminatory law in a case such as this.
The Court of Appeal upheld the first instance decision and limited
their consideration of the conflict between customary law and
protection from discrimination to the following words:
The Constitution (s 15(5) and cl
3 of Schedule 3) recognises the importance of customary law to citizens
of the Solomon Islands. The former provision recognises that the
application of customary law may have certain discriminatory
consequences. The learned trial judge was correct in holding that the
Act was not unconstitutional because s 36(c) discriminated against the
widow.
Custom was accepted as an exception to the principle of
non-discrimination on the grounds of sex. The court took the view that
the Constitution of the Solomon Islands permitted the use of custom law
even if it discriminated against women.
Comment
Sections 15 (1) to (4) of the CSI, which protect against
discrimination, are often in direct conflict with the so-called values
underpinning customary law in Solomon Islands. The 'values' are of
course defined by men. The practical effect of this decision, together
with The Minister for
Provincial Government v Guadalcanal Provincial Assembly
referred to later in the 'Discrimination' section of this digest, is to
perpetuate discrimination against women based on customary law and
practice. It is interesting to note that even where a provision is
capable of a number of interpretations, rather than exercising
discretion and finding in favour of the human rights of women and
equality under the CSI and CEDAW, gender discrimination is so inherent
in the legal system that the courts generally apply a strict formal law
interpretation where possible.
CUSTOM / DISCRIMINATION /
WOMEN
Recognition of women's autonomy
and right to enter into de facto relationships violated by customary
imprisonment under custom law.
IN RE THESIA MAIP
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Woods J |
[1991] PNGLR 80; N958 |
|
27 February 1991 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Marriage Act (MA)
Facts
M claimed her personal liberty under s 42(5) of the CPNG was violated
by the Village Court. M was taken to the Village Court at Balk on a
complaint from S, the husband, that M was his wife and had left him for
another man. M and S had lived together for about two years before S
was arrested and taken to Bougainville and imprisoned for some months
on an unrelated matter. S escaped some time in 1990 and came to the
Western Heights to Balk village to look for M. By that time M was with
another man so S took M to the Village
Court. M was ordered to pay K700 compensation, which was later reduced
to K300 by the
Local Court Magistrate when endorsing the order for imprisonment. Upon
failure to pay this compensation, M was imprisoned for 30 weeks by the
Local Court. M filed a complaint under s 42(5) of the CPNG invoking the
jurisdiction of the national courts.
Issues
- Was the relationship between M and S recognised as a
marriage?
- Whether de facto relationships were recognised by custom
law.
- Did the decision of the Village Court breach M's right to
liberty?
Decision
The National Court held that the Village Court had unjustly and wrongly
assumed a marriage without considering all the aspects and implications
of the case. The decision by the Local Court was discriminatory and
caused grave injustice to M as the female partner. Under s 42(5) of the
CPNG, there was an overriding discretion to grant a hearing in cases
where people claimed to be unlawfully or unreasonably detained. Where
unsophisticated village people were imprisoned, did not understand the
procedures of appeal and time was of the essence, there was a
responsibility to act quickly and efficiently.
There were three recognised ways of getting married (custom, religious
and civil marriage). However, the Village Court had purported to
recognise a casual non-customary arrangement as a formal marriage. In
this case, there was no proper marriage either by formal law or custom.
Because of the legal implications and responsibilities of a marriage,
the law would not recognise anything but a properly arranged or
certified marriage.
Comment
The practice and procedures of institutions such as Village Courts
reflect a bias against women. In this case, the Village Court had no
qualms in holding there was a 'marriage' even though the relationship
failed to fulfill the basic requirements of a customary, civil or
religious marriage. This was notwithstanding the fact that the male
partner was from another part of the country, while the woman was from
the district. The Local Court, a level above the Village Court, in
reducing the compensation awarded to S nevertheless endorsed the order
for imprisonment. Section 42(5) of the CPNG, which the National Court
had no hesitation in invoking to protect M, was clearly tailored to
such circumstances. It is a sobering thought that were the National
Court not on circuit (the court rotates around the country), women
could be incarcerated for some time before they could seek remedies
from superior courts.
CUSTOM / DISCRIMINATION /
WOMEN
Unlawful detention illegal for
failure to pay compensation under customary law bride price practice.
IN RE YONGO MONDO
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Woods J |
[1989] PGNC 35; N707 (M) |
|
10 May 1989 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Village Court Act [Cap 44] (VCA)
Facts
The applicant (Y) claimed that she was being unlawfully or unreasonably
detained in a corrective institution. Y was held on a warrant for 84
weeks imprisonment by virtue of an order of the Village Court. Y had
failed to obey a Village Court order to pay compensation of K480,
thereby contravening s 31 of the VCA. The amount was to compensate Y's
bride price after she left her husband and returned to her village.
Issue
In acting under the VCA, did the court unlawfully deprive the claimant
of her liberty?
Decision
The court held that the imprisonment of Y was unlawful. Whilst the
Village Court had power under s 31 of the VCA to order imprisonment for
failure to obey an order for the payment of compensation, it was
subject to s 42(1) of the CPNG, which states that no person shall be
deprived of their liberty except under certain exceptions.
An order for imprisonment for failure to pay bride price compensation
was not one of those exceptions. Therefore the order for imprisonment
was clearly contrary to the CPNG. Under s 42 of the CPNG, the National
Court could enquire at any time into the detention of persons held in
custody.
Comment
The supervisory role of the National Court in such circumstances is
critical. In rural areas and at village level, the power and influence
of custom and traditions may often compromise or adversely affect the
rights of women and other disadvantaged groups such as young people and
people living with disabilities. The intervention of superior courts
may be required to ensure the provisions of the CPNG are fully observed.
CUSTOM / PROPERTY
In some cases, the long-held
possession of land granted by custom chiefs could be upheld in light of
modern property rights under formal written property law.
AUSTRALASIAN CONFERENCE
ASSOCIATION LTD v SELA & ORS
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji 1997 (CF)
Facts
The plaintiffs (ACAL) requested an order for vacant possession from the
defendants (S) for land they had purchased from the traditional land
owners. S's ancestors had settled and
lived on a portion of the land since 1935. ACAL requested a declaration
for possession of the entire land area. The defendants were Solomon
Islanders whose ancestors had come to Fiji from the mid 1800s to 1900s.
S claimed that they were given the right to remain in perpetuity upon
the land according to the laws of the then prevailing system of land
ownership. The land was given to them by the rightful chiefs of the
said area and to this day the relationship with the Tamavua land owners
had continued. There had been a wide and accommodating cultural
acceptance of the defendants by the custom land owners.
Issue
Whether the formal legal acquisition of land through sale and purchase
agreement overrode the customary grant of the land by the chiefs.
Decision
The court made a declaration that the ACAL were estopped from removing
the defendants from the part of the land that they occupied. (Estoppel
is a remedy preventing a person from doing something.) Under equity, S
had an equitable right to remain on the property. They were on the
property prior to the transfer, the occupation continued after the
transfer and ACAL was clearly aware of that. It was argued that if ACAL
were to be successful, it would deprive S of their interest in the
property, which was in breach of s 40(1) of the CF. Acquisition of the
land would only be permissible for public purposes and was subject to
payment of agreed compensation, taking into account all the relevant
factors. Furthermore, s 40(b)[i]-[v] illustrates that the court must
take into account the use of the property, the history of acquisition,
its value, the interests of those affected and any hardship to the
owner. The original permission was in perpetuity subject to the
performance of custom obligations. It was a grant for the Solomon
Island people and their descendants. Estoppel continued because there
was continued occupation; the continued occupation by direct
descendants of the original grantees and performance of customary
obligations continued. Subsequently, the court refused to make a
declaration that ACAL was entitled to possession of the said land.
Comment
Although not the main issue, the case addresses some of the tensions
between customary and formal land law. A cautious approach by the court
in this case allows for the rights of not only the defendants to be
protected, but the rights of others who have inherited property in the
same manner. As stated in the judgment, an objective person who has no
knowledge of land tenure might quickly come to the decision that it
would be unfair to remove the defendants given the length of time
involved and the way in which the land was given to them. On the other
hand, one could also say that ACAL in good faith allowed S to remain on
the land and, prior to seeking court orders, had given adequate notice
and even offered to assist in the relocation. In balancing the rights
of both parties, the court would closely look into which rights would
be directly affected. Again, in this approach, any party limiting the
right would have a greater duty to give a justifiable reason for doing
so.
CUSTOM / RECONCILIATION /
WOMEN
Traditional reconciliation under
custom cannot be a mitigating factor in rape sentencing, particularly
when rape is accompanied by further violence.
NABUAKA v THE REPUBLIC
Court of Appeal |
Kiribati |
Hardie Boys, Tompkins & Fisher JJA |
[2006] KICA 14 |
|
26 July 2006 |
Law considered
Penal Code [Cap 67] (PC)
Facts
The appellant (N), aged 17 years, was sentenced to imprisonment for 12
months for assault occasioning actual and bodily harm, and four years
for rape, to be served concurrently. Both charges arose from the same
incident. N physically abused and then later raped the victim during a
party.
N appealed the sentence imposed. He argued that it was manifestly
excessive, certain affidavits were not filed before the sentence was
passed, the victim had eventually accepted a traditional apology and
that he had low self-esteem.
Issues
- What was the effect of the 'reconciliation'?
- Would consideration of the affidavits alter the sentence
imposed?
Decision
The appeal against sentence was dismissed. The major aggravating factor
in addition to the rape was the violence involved. Also of importance
was the social stigma that resulted from a young unmarried girl 'having
sexual intercourse'. Mitigating factors such as the age of N, the fact
that he was supporting his family, his involvement in a Catholic youth
group, his guilty plea as well as several attempts by N's mother to
apologise to the victim on behalf of her son, did not materially alter
the seriousness of rape itself, particularly where the rape was
accompanied by violence.
Comment
Reconciliation continues to be a mitigating factor in sexual offence
(and domestic violence) cases around the Pacific. The practices of bulubulu (Fiji) and
ifoga
(Samoa) are examples of the genre. Such a practice is clearly
discriminatory against women because the overwhelming majority of
sexual predators are males. Furthermore, in traditional apologies, the
victim's opinion is not relevant and the practice is more of a protocol
between the heads of the families affected. The remorse of the
perpetrator usually plays little or no part. Survivors of sexual
offences suffer not only during the commission of the offence but often
for a lifetime as the experience may have a traumatising effect on
their psychological state.
CUSTOM / WITCHCRAFT /
DISCRIMINATION
Witch hunting might violate the
right of women to equality and might
therefore be unconstitutional.
THE STATE v AIGAL & KAUNA
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Brunton J |
[1990] PNGLR 318 |
|
12 July 1990 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Criminal Code
Facts
This case involved the alleged execution of a woman and the alleged
detention and torture of seven others suspected of practising
witchcraft. The accused (A) was charged with manslaughter and was given
a three-year suspended sentence. The Public Prosecutor appealed against
the sentence, but the appeal was not pursued. The state then filed a nolle prosequi (to
withdraw the case).
Issues
- In its constitutional role of protecting human rights,
could the court reject a nolle
prosequi
so that the appeal against A's minor sentence proceeded?
- What factors would the court take into account in refusing
a nolle prosequi?
Decision
The court accepted the nolle.
It held that under s 57 of the CPNG it could prevent a nolle prosequi
from being filed if it would jeopardise A's right to a fair trial
within a reasonable time under s 37(3) of the CPNG and if it amounted
to an abuse of process. In principle, it should also be able to apply
the same power in respect of other rights. Account was taken of the
fact that the case was investigated long after it occurred and the
possibility of A being the community scapegoat. The nolle prosequi was
accepted.
The secret killing of women suspected of witchcraft as a practice
within the Simbu province was considered. There was a belief that
witches were a public menace causing death and disease, and that
society was justly entitled to protection from them. It was pattern of
socially approved customary terror exercised against elderly women, to
keep them in their place. The power of older women, as against men, was
limited by the threat of an allegation of witchcraft, which usually
resulted in their death. Witch hunting also violated the constitutional
rights of the victims – the right to life, the right to freedom from
inhumane treatment, and the constitutional direction to improve the
status of women in the Constitution's National Goals and Directive
Principles.
Comment
The role of witchcraft in sexual politics is a reflection of male
dominance in certain communities in Papua New Guinea. It is used as a
means to ensure elderly women remain in submissive roles. The practice
is both discriminatory of, and an implicit threat against, elderly
women. The allegation of witchcraft is difficult to disprove and
engenders strong community feelings. Tragically, once such accusations
are made, victims are either killed or suffer serious harm. These were
issues that a court would ordinarily take into account in rejecting a nolle prosequi on
the basis that the human rights of those accused had been infringed.
However, a significant passage of time had passed since the alleged
offence (over a year) and the fact the offender was not the only one
involved compelled the court to accept the nolle prosequi,
thus ending the proceedings against A.
Many commentators continue to glamourise custom and culture and
encourage the rejection of 'western' laws without paying sufficient
attention to the fact that numerous customs are discriminatory against
women. PNG has ratified CEDAW and guarantees the equal rights of women
in the CPNG. Its responsibilities under both require the upholding of
women's rights not only in the courts of law, but in policy and
practice.
CUSTOM / SLAVERY /
CHILDREN
Whether the customary practice of
giving a daughter to the victim's family is a mitigating factor for
murder and whether the practice violates constitutional prohibitions on
slavery.
THE STATE v KULE
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Doherty J |
[1991] PNGLR 404 |
|
3 December 1991 |
International instruments
and law considered
Slavery Convention (SC) 1926
Supplementary Convention on the Abolition of Slavery, the Slave Trade,
and Institutions and Practices Similar to Slavery (CASST)
1956
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Customs and Recognition Act [Cap 19] (CRA)
Facts
The defendant (K) pleaded guilty to unlawful killing. Upon conviction,
K pleaded that the customary practice of giving of a child as
reparation ought to be a mitigating factor in his favour, which should
reduce the sentence. K had given one of his daughters to a relative of
the deceased victim according to customary obligations. K allegedly
carried out the killing because he thought that the victim had been
gossiping about him.
Issue
Whether such a cultural practice could be considered as a mitigating
factor when it directly violated s 253 of the CPNG, which forbids
slavery and all similar institutions and practices.
Decision
The Court refused to recognise the custom of handing over one of K's
daughters to the relative of the deceased as a mitigating factor. It
was contrary to the welfare of the child under s 3(1)(b) of the CRA.
The handing over of the child was an institution or practice similar to
slavery and therefore prohibited by the CPNG, even if the evidence
showed that such a custom was a common practice. Whilst compliance with
customary obligations was a matter to be taken into account, the
particular custom must also be proven by evidence.
The exception was that there should be evidence to demonstrate that
such a custom was not contrary to the welfare of the child. Another
consideration was whether it was contrary to the public interest to
recognise a custom and reduce the sentence where a child had been
handed over to another group of people as payment of obligations. The
CRA conferred power to refuse the recognition of custom. Furthermore,
the custom was not recognised because it was contrary to s 253 of the
CPNG which states:
Slavery, and the slave trade in
all its forms, and all similar institutions and practices are strictly
prohibited.
Although unable to cite any case law within jurisdiction on the
interpretation of the word slavery, reference was made to the SC which
refers to slavery as:
The status or condition of a
person over whom other powers attaching to the right of ownership are
exercised.
The reference to 'person' included institutions that encouraged debt
bondage, serfdom, bride price and exploitation of child labour. The
handing over of a child in reparation for the misdeeds of another was
similar to these situations and therefore prohibited by the CPNG.
Comment
The court in this case was not debating whether the custom was proved
or not. It had to determine whether such customary practices were
consistent with the CPNG and the country's international obligations.
The welfare of the child principle would be affected by such practices.
International conventions were considered as guidelines to determine
whether such a practice was in fact contrary to the CPNG. In this case,
the welfare of the child was not the only reason for not allowing the
daughter to be given to the victim's family. Apart from legal powers
conferred by the CRA to not recognise the practice, it contravened the
CPNG for the reasons discussed. In this case, the offer of girls as
reparation for offences committed brought into sharp relief the
conflict that sometimes occurs between human rights and customary
practices. It is of interest that although the court referred to the SC
and the CASST (which PNG has not ratified), it did not refer to the
CRC, which also had not been ratified then. The CRC would have been of
great assistance as well. PNG ratified the CRC on 2 March 1993.
DIGNITY
DIGNITY / MEDICAL
TREATMENT WITHOUT CONSENT
Freedom from scientific or
medical treatment or procedures without consent first considered in
Fiji.
• Right of arrested or detained persons to be treated with humanity and
respect for their inherent dignity.
FIJI HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION v
POLICE & ATTORNEY GENERAL
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Singh J |
Civil Action No. 118093 of 2002 |
|
8 November 2005 |
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Facts
A female employee (J) of Village
6 cinemas reported finding a newborn baby in a toilet
cubicle in the cinema complex. A few days after J reported the matter
to the police (P), she was taken to the Central Police Station and
thereafter escorted to the Colonial War Memorial Hospital. There she
was made to undergo a medical examination to determine if she had given
birth recently. J alleged that she was forced to undergo the medical
test. P claimed that the test was necessary to remove doubt that J was
the mother of the child as 'her breast milk was flowing'. P also said
that J had consented to the medical procedure in writing. The Fiji
Human Rights Commission (FHRC) on behalf of J filed a claim for damages
on the basis that:
- J was forced to undergo an invasive medical procedure
without her consent in contravention of s 25(2) of the Bill of Rights
of the CF, which provides for the right to freedom from scientific or
medical treatment or procedures without informed consent; and
- s 27(1)(f) gives an arrested or detained persons the right
to be treated with humanity and respect for their inherent dignity.
Issues
- What constituted consent to treatment?
- Were the actions of P in breach of J's fundamental rights
and freedoms in violation of the Bill of Rights?
- Could damages be awarded for a breach of constitutionally
protected human rights and were damages a right or a discretion?
Decision
The court found J's rights had been violated and awarded
damages. This
case concerned the balancing of P's powers to investigate and detect
crime with an individual's right to personal privacy and to be treated
with dignity. An adult person of sound mind has a right to decide what
may or may not be done to her own body; anything done without consent
is unlawful. 'Informed consent' means consent obtained after the person
had been told what risks, even if minimal, or side effects are involved
in treatment. In this case, J gave her consent in writing with a
'shadow of police presence in the background'. Although the doctor was
present at the time consent was given in writing, J was clearly
distressed and believed that she would not be released unless she
agreed to the medical procedure.
J asked for damages of F$100,000 and for additional exemplary or
punitive damages. Under s 41(1) of the CF, the court had clear power to
award damages. Such an action was not a new tort but a public law
action directly against the state for which the state was primarily
liable (quoting Simpson
v AG (1994) 3 NZLR 667 (Baigent's case)).
An added value was attached to the protection of a right, and that
infringement of that right, even without injury or harm could lead to
an award of damages (Mohammed
v State [1999] 2 AC 111). However, every breach did not
automatically deserve damages and whether damages were to be awarded
was discretionary. There was no prima
facie right to damages.
The level of damages ought to be awarded on the basis of the following
principles:
- The amount must be assessed against the backdrop of the
country's social and economic conditions and not by universal
standards;
- The level must not be excessive but restrained or moderate;
extravagant awards were to be avoided;
- It was unnecessary to show outrageous conduct on the part
of the defendant because the issue was about the infringement of human
dignity (although outrageous conduct would attract greater damages).
In the present case, P had reasonable cause to arrest J because her
breasts were flowing with milk (subsequently found to be an
idiosyncratic medical condition). However, the medical tests completely
excluded J as a potential perpetrator of the crime. J's right to be
treated with dignity had been violated by her treatment by P in
subjecting her to an embarrassing experience against her will. J was
awarded $5,000 in damages, $2,000 of which went to the FHRC for costs.
Comment
This was the first case of its kind in Fiji. It provides a salutary
guide for the police in terms of exercising powers that involve
invasive actions affecting the public in general and vulnerable groups
such as women and children in particular. There is often a tendency on
the part of the police to focus on the offence or mischief to the
exclusion of the privacy and dignity of the person. In the present
case, J was treated in a particularly offensive and intrusive manner,
given the personal sensitivities involved. The discussion of the issue
of damages highlights the different principles applied where human
rights breaches are established and for tortious actions. Compare with Singh v Ponijese, Attorney
General & Ors discussed later in this volume,
where the issues were dealt with purely in tort.
Editors' note: The FHRC
appealed the decision of the High Court on the ground that the award
was inadequate. It sought compensatory damages for financial loss, for
humiliation, loss of dignity and injury as well as for exemplary
damages. Allowing the appeal, the Court of Appeal took into
consideration that the forced medical examination was unnecessary, the
conduct of the police highhanded, the context in which J was detained
(and the additional breaches of her rights, such as the failure to
caution or inform her of her right to counsel, and lack of contact with
next of kin), the lack of consideration in her treatment and the
subsequent response by police. Accordingly, the damages were 'wholly
inadequate' and an amount of $15,000 was awarded. There was no basis
for awarding exemplary damages and financial loss was not proved. In
increasing the amount, the Court of Appeal focused more closely on the
conduct of the police and the blatant manner in which they had abused
their powers.
DISCRIMINATION
DISCRIMINATION / ADULTERY
Adultery is still punishable by
imprisonment even if the accused chooses to be silent and not present a
defence.
SIPO v MELI
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Narokobi AJ |
[1980] PGNC 7; N240 |
|
23 May 1980 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Native Regulations Act [Cap 44] 1989
Facts
The appellant, S, was a female cadet journalist at the University of
PNG. She was convicted by the local court of having sexual intercourse
with a 'married native' while knowing him to be married. She was
sentenced to two month's imprisonment with light labour.
The evidence which led to S's conviction was that she was seen together
with LM by MM (wife of LM) on several occasions and that there were
witnesses who had seen them 'sleeping together'. S appealed on the
following grounds:
- That the evidence to prove the elements of the crime was
insufficient;
- That the sentence was manifestly excessive;
- That she was denied her rights under s 37(10) of the CPNG,
which allowed her to remain silent if she chose;
- That s 84(2) of the Native Regulations Act denied her the
constitutional right to equality before the law.
Issue
Whether the offence of adultery had been proven, even where the accused
chose not to defend herself as was her constitutional right.
Decision
The court reduced the sentence of S. In relation to the magistrate's
decision on the evidence, the court held that the magistrate had
properly entered a plea of guilty. Courts have to make the best they
can of prior and subsequent events to be satisfied beyond reasonable
doubt that adultery has occurred.
As to S's claims that the magistrate imputed guilt because of her
silence, S was given adequate opportunity to respond and call witnesses
but chose not to.
The Native Regulations Act on adultery required someone to lodge a
complaint and in most cases the complainants were the partners of those
involved in adultery. In this case, S was single and MM would be the
obvious complainant. But since the respondent was single, there was no
one to lay a complaint against MM. As the judge stated:
As the common saying goes 'it
takes two willing parties, adultery'. Why therefore should one willing
party be immune from liability simply because the law lacks procedures
to bring to trial a party to the offence? It is quite right therefore,
in my view, for a citizen to invoke the Constitution and say, 'If we
are all equal before the law, irrespective of race…or sex, then why is
it that I am being punished and not the other co-offender who happens
to be a man?' The appellant may well have recourse to s 39 of the
Constitution (Reasonably Justifiable in a Democratic Society) and argue
that this adultery law is not reasonably justifiable in a democratic
society, having a proper regard for the rights and dignity of mankind.
The same arguments could indeed be presented by a single man who has
sexual intercourse with a married woman or commits adultery with a
married woman.
However, this was a constitutional matter, which was more appropriate
for the Supreme Court. Subsequently, the decision by the magistrate was
set aside and the sentence reduced to two-weeks' imprisonment with
light labour.
Comment
Although this case, and others from PNG regarding women's rights, are
somewhat older cases, they have been included in this volume because of
the human rights element. PNG is one of the few countries left in
Melanesia, indeed in the Pacific Islands, where adultery is still a
criminal offence punishable by imprisonment and by payment of
compensation in both custom and civil law. The court in this instance
actually reinforced the importance of maintaining adultery laws in PNG.
The practice is outdated and in violation of human rights standards and
the inherent dignity of the person.
DISCRIMINATION / AGE
The bill of rights in the
constitution takes precedence over collective agreements between
employer and employee in industrial/employment law where there is
conflict between the two.
FIJI HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION v
SUVA CITY COUNCIL
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Human Rights Commission Act 1999 (HRCA)
Facts
The plaintiff (FHRC) on behalf of M claimed that she was discriminated
against on the basis of her age by the Suva City Council (SCC). M
received a retirement notice when she was 54 years old, giving her six
months notice of the SCC's intention to retire her. The SCC retired M
on the basis of a collective agreement between the SCC and the staff
union, which gave the SCC, in clause 19 of the agreement, discretion on
whether to continue employment after employees reached the age of 55.
The FHRC sought an order that declared the collective agreement void
and unenforceable.
SCC argued that the collective agreement was not 'law' for the purposes
of the CF and was therefore not subject to the bill of rights.
Issues
- Did the bill of rights extend to the SCC, i.e. was it an
agency of the
state?
- Could the bill of rights apply to collective agreements as
well as ordinary legislation and other 'laws'?
- Did the agreement violate the bill of rights s 38(2) of the
CF, which states that a person must not be unfairly discriminated
against, directly or indirectly, on the grounds of inter alia age?
Decision
The court held that the SCC was clearly part of local government.
Section 21 of the CF stated that the bill of rights bound every level
of government; therefore the CF clearly bound the SCC. The collective
agreement, although not law in the strict sense of the word, was a
policy that could be caught by the bill of rights as it could amount to
a law.
There was no definition of discrimination in the CF or in the HRCA.
Coventry J referred to the common law, which described discrimination
as a distinction, whether intentional or not, based on grounds relating
to personal characteristics of the individual or group, or
disadvantages of such individuals or group not imposed on others, or
withholding or limiting of access to opportunities, benefits and
advantages available to other members of the society. Discrimination
against a person on the grounds of age was regarded as unacceptable.
This was confirmed in many policy documents and in the legislation of
the majority of countries.
It was generally accepted that age did not determine a person's ability
and should not be used as a guide for access to or retention of
employment. The fact that in exceptional circumstances someone might
continue to work beyond that age was irrelevant. The fact that someone
over the age of 55 was liable, at the discretion of the SCC, to be
retired was discriminatory. The line was drawn by age and that in
itself was discriminatory. The retirement age in the collective
agreement had no rationale and was therefore unfair discrimination.
Comment
This case clearly spells out that if an agreement, irrespective of it
being collective, is not in accordance with the CF it will be void.
Thus, even consensual union agreements must comply with the bill of
rights. In taking this approach, the court found that the SCC was bound
by virtue of the provisions of the CF and took a horizontal approach to
the enforcement of rights. The court also took into consideration the
various conventions and policy to which many other countries, both
regional and beyond, have aligned themselves. This case also
demonstrates that policies may be invalidated by the bill of rights if
they conflict with it. Certainly, many state-owned or partially
state-owned companies need to amend policies and collective agreements
that violate the discrimination provisions of the bill of rights.
DISCRIMINATION / AGE
Lowering of the mandatory
retirement age without agreement is in breach of the equality
provisions of the constitution.
FIJIAN TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION
& FIJI PUBLIC SERVICE ASSOCIATION v
PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
& INTERIM ATTORNEY GENERAL
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Jitoko J |
[2007] FJHC 145; Judicial Review No. HBJ 3J of 2007S |
|
20 December 2007 |
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Public Service (General) (Retirement Age Amendment) Regulations
Facts
The post-coup interim administration in Fiji, headed by Commodore V.
Bainimarama of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces as interim prime
minister, unilaterally reduced the retirement age. The applicants, the
Fijian Teachers'Association (FTA) and Fiji Public Service Association
(FPSA), the largest union of public servants in Fiji, instituted
judicial review
proceedings challenging the Public Service (General) (Retirement Age
Amendment) Regulations 2007 made by the Public Service Commission,
which reduced the retirement age for public servants from 60 to 55
years. The plaintiffs challenged the decision and sought to reinstate
the compulsory retirement age of 60.
Issues
- Was the decision to reduce the retirement age valid?
- Could it be justified as an exception to s 38 of the CF?
Decision
The court held that lowering the mandatory retirement age without
agreement was a breach of s 38 of the CF, which protected an individual
from discrimination on the basis of age. It was open to groups as well
as individuals to invoke the provisions of s 38 because rights were to
be given a broad and liberal interpretation.
To justify the reduction in retirement age as 'reasonable and
justifiable in a free democratic society', the legislative objective
that the limitation would achieve must be sufficiently important to
warrant overriding a constitutional right. It must also be 'a pressing
and substantial concern'. Secondly, the means to achieving those
objectives must be proportionate or appropriate to those ends.
There were three aspects to the proportionality: the limiting measures
must be carefully designed or rationally connected to the objective;
they must impair rights as little as possible; and their effects must
not so severely impinge on individual and or group rights that the
objective is nevertheless outweighed by the abridgment of rights. In
the present case, the rationale of the decision to save costs and
create more employment did not meet the threshold requirement. It was
neither proportionate nor rationally connected to the objectives to be
accomplished because it was not certain the decision would achieve
those ends in any case.
In light of past practice, there was a legitimate expectation that the
applicants would be consulted on such a decision. However, there was no
consultation as the respondent merely explained its intentions rather
than engaging the applicants. There was therefore procedural
impropriety given the respondent's failure to observe the requirements
of natural justice.
Comment
The decision is an important one given the circumstances. The PSC
arbitrarily decided to reduce the retirement age pursuant to a policy
made by the unelected interim government. The equality provisions of s
38 of the CF were breached and the justification the respondent
advanced to justify it was rejected. It was held not to have met the
threshold requirement in that the justification for the decision, i.e.
savings and employment generation, was not proportional or sufficiently
connected to those ends. The court considered in detail the rationale
for the decision and determined that the state had not made a case for
unilaterally reducing the retirement age as an exception to s 38 of the
CF.
DISCRIMINATION / AGE
Discrimination in applying the
legal age of retirement in the police force is unconstitutional.
KIRISOME & ORS v ATTORNEY
GENERAL &
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
International instruments
and law considered
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
Constitution of Samoa (CS)
Police Service Act 1977 (PA)
Facts
An application was made for judicial review of the retirement age for
members of the Samoa police force. K aged 61, W aged 61, and M aged 57,
claimed that the termination of their services was discriminatory and
unfair. K, W and M had been served with a letter purporting to
terminate their services. The applicants sought an interim injunction
to stop the purported termination. The injunction was granted, but was
subsequently discharged by the second respondent. The amended
proceedings included the Commissioner of Police (CP) as second
respondent.
CP cited two reasons in justification. Two of the applicants were over
the age of 60 years, which was the maximum age for extension. The
second reason was based on good administration. There were a number of
senior officers in the force who were near, or had passed, the age of
retirement. However, there were also a number of able and energetic
young officers who were uncertain of a clear career path within the
service because the senior ranks were 'top heavy' and there was a
general reluctance amongst officers who had reached retirement age to
retire. To achieve a balance, without weakening the police service to
an unacceptable degree, not all officers who had reached the retirement
age of 55 years were to retire at one time.
Issue
Whether the decision to retire K, W and M was discriminatory on the
basis of s 15 of the CS, which guaranteed equality before the law.
Decision
It was held that K and W had reached the maximum age of retirement by
law and therefore their services could not be further extended. M's
application was granted.
The procedure undertaken to retire M did not observe the principles of
natural justice or the duty to act fairly. He had not reached the
maximum retirement age of 60 years. Given the number of officers who
had reached the retirement age and continued working (some until
the age of 60 years), M had a legitimate expectation that he would be
given the opportunity to comment or make submissions on any question of
his possible retirement prior to a decision. The circumstances and
subject matter under consideration required that procedure be followed.
As M was not given such an opportunity, the decision to retire him was
void. Section (15)1 of the CS, which protects against discrimination,
including age discrimination, had been violated. In order to explain
this, the court drew on international law and the ECHR, which was
quoted in Principles of
Judicial Review (1999) pp 482-493 by de Smith, Woolf and
Jawell:
Unequal
treatment under the
convention [Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights]
requires 'objective and reasonable justification'. Under this test the
apparent inequality that is being challenged must be valid, pursue a
'legitimate aim' and in addition, the means pursued to achieve the end
must be proportionate.
For CP to prove justification and that the difference in treatment was
valid, two grounds had to be established: first the difference in
treatment pursued a 'legitimate aim', and second, that the means
employed to achieve that aim was proportionate.
From the material presented, M had been treated differently from other
police officers. Although there was a legitimate aim because there were
too many high ranking police officers of retirement age, the
proportionality between the means employed and the objective was
problematic. Other officers who had reached the age of 60, and who were
older than M and in poor health, were still working. Therefore there
was no proportionality between the means employed and the legitimate
aim achieved.
Comment
In considering discrimination, the courts may sometimes apply a test to
determine whether it can be justified on an objective and reasonable
basis. The inequality challenged must exist for a legitimate purpose,
and the manner in which that end is achieved must be proportionate. In
practice, a balancing exercise is undertaken; therefore the
relationship or connection between the two (i.e. the means and the end)
have to be reasonable or affect the other in a way that bears some
linkage that is appropriate in the circumstances. Where this cannot be
established, then the apparent inequality will be struck down. The
approach recognises that discrimination and equality may sometimes have
to be established in complicated and irregular situations.
DISCRIMINATION / DOMESTIC
VIOLENCE
The relevance of forgiveness in
domestic violence does not affect a court's duty to impose a sentence
reflecting the gravity of an offence.
Domestic violence is not
a private matter.
TOAKARAWA v THE REPUBLIC
Court of Appeal |
Kiribati |
Hardie Boys, Tompkins & Fisher JJA |
[2006] KICA 9 |
|
26 July 2006 |
Law considered
Common law
Facts
T was a 22-year-old married man. His wife was four months pregnant at
the time. Whilst intoxicated, T beat his wife, who escaped to another
house. T followed her and dragged her home by the hair. He continued to
beat her and bit her on the nose, cheek, lips and fingers of both
hands. He resisted attempts by neighbours to intervene. Her injuries
were considerable and included the upper and lower lips being bitten
off, exposing the teeth. The disfigurements were permanent. T
maintained that at the time he was so intoxicated he did not know what
he was doing; he had apologised for his actions and later reconciled
with his wife.
The Chief Justice emphasised that domestic violence was not a private
matter, that it was shameful, that it was to be severely punished and
that it was a serious crime no matter who the victim was. That it was
T's wife made it worse. The CJ noted, however, the apology,
reconciliation, state of drunkenness, absence of previous convictions
and early plea of guilt. T was sentenced to three years' imprisonment.
T challenged the sentence, arguing amongst other things that he needed
to earn money for the family.
Issue
Was the apology, reconciliation and the fact that T was the main
breadwinner relevant to sentencing in a domestic violence case?
Decision
The Court of Appeal agreed with the High Court and State Lawyer that
assaults on wives were to be treated as serious matters of public
concern and that the extraordinary ferocity and duration of the attack
and the resulting permanent disfigurement made the sentence
appropriate. It refused to reduce T's sentence of imprisonment.
Comment
Although this judgment demonstrates positive changes in judicial
thinking – for example, that reconciliation, apologies and the famous
'breadwinner' argument are not relevant issues in reducing sentencing –
it still falls short of awarding a sentence adequately reflecting the
seriousness of the offence. This is particularly so in a region where
wife beating is held to
be a customary 'right' of a husband. The violent nature of the assault
on T's wife was remarked on by the court, but the rhetoric was not
reflected in the relative leniency of the sentence. The wife's
pregnancy and relationship to T should perhaps have been viewed as
aggravating features of T's actions.
DISCRIMINATION / SEX /
EVIDENCE
Value of a complainant's
uncorroborated evidence: there is no requirement for corroboration of a
rape complainant's evidence.
R v FUNGAVAI
Law considered
Common law
Facts
The accused (F) was a police officer charged with one count of rape and
two counts of indecent assault. The complainant (C) was the estranged
wife of another police officer. She alleged that F had raped and
indecently assaulted her during her detention in a police cell. C
claimed that she had great difficulty laying the complaint because of
resistance by the police. F denied he raped C, saying she had been
drunk and had failed to make complaints about F on the morning of the
incident. C's credibility and the fact that her evidence was
uncorroborated were also raised.
Issues
Whether the evidence of C carried sufficient weight.
Was C a credible witness?
Decision
The court convicted F on the basis of C's evidence, which it found was
corroborated by one of the police officers in relation to
identification. There was no requirement that the evidence of a
complaint in a rape case had to be corroborated but nevertheless the
court considered it.
Comment
Although C was found to be a completely believable witness, reference
was still made to the need for corroboration. It is interesting that
courts in common law countries have not outlawed the corroboration
practice. Instead, it is treated as if it were a binding law without
much thought to its discriminatory origins, which have been well
canvassed in other countries. In some other jurisdictions (for example,
Solomon Islands), the courts have indicated it should only be abolished
by legislation, while the Fiji Court of Appeal outlawed
the practice, citing among other things its discriminatory application (Balelala v State).9
The persistence of this practice is a reflection of the deeply
entrenched systemic character of gender discrimination in the legal
system. There appears to have been no discussion of the fact that this
rape occurred in police custody, exposing the particular vulnerability
of female prisoners. The case raises interesting questions about
judicial perceptions.
DISCRIMINATION / SEX /
EVIDENCE
The discriminatory cautionary
corroboration warning in rape cases appears to be artificial and
unnecessary and requires removal by legislation; if this is not done,
then the courts may have to act in future.
TEIKAMATA v R
Court of Appeal |
Solomon Islands |
Lord Slynn of Hadley P, |
[2007] SBCA 3 |
Adams & Salmon JJA |
30 March 2007 |
Law considered
Common law
Facts
In July 2004, the complainant (C), aged 15 years, went to a relative's
house to collect some clothes where she was allegedly raped. The
appellant (T) was 24 years old at the time and said that the
intercourse was consensual. Medical evidence suggested otherwise and C
made a complaint of rape soon after. T was arrested and charged. He
pleaded not guilty, but was convicted of rape in the High Court and
sentenced to six years' imprisonment. He appealed his conviction on the
basis that the court did not properly consider the law relating to
corroboration in sexual offence matters, and had made a mistake in
finding that the evidence of the complainant was corroborated. The
prosecution invited the Court of Appeal to make a finding on the need
for corroboration in Solomon Islands. (Editors' note: but without
mentioning the gender discriminatory elements of the requirement, it
would seem.)
Issue
Whether the cautionary warning requiring corroboration should still
apply in sexual assault trials.
Decision
The court dismissed the appeal and upheld the conviction. Any removal
of the rule was to be achieved by statute. The accepted practice in
Solomon Islands was that the trial judge must warn himself or herself
of the dangers of acting on the uncorroborated evidence of a
complainant. This was a requirement in many common law countries which
in many instances had been abolished, usually by statute. In this case
there was no reason to interfere with the trial judge's
decision. The High Court had found C to be a credible witness. The
requirement for the rule was one of discretion involving a judge acting
alone and that a finding of guilt could in any case be established on
the basis of her credibility. While citing Balelala's case
from Fiji, it was felt that Solomon Islands Parliament should remove
the practice by statute, failing which there could be judicial
intervention.
Comment
In the Fiji case of Balelala
v State,10 the
Fiji Court of Appeal fully considered
whether it was appropriate that the rule should continue. The practice
in a number of countries was reviewed. A distinction was drawn between
countries where the rule had been abolished through legislation and
further instances where it had been struck down in decisions of
appellate courts. It was held that the rule should no longer apply in
Fiji because it was discriminatory against women and served little
practical purpose.
On the invitation of counsel for the prosecution, a specific finding on
the rule was made. The common law rule of practice had been vigorously
opposed by the women's movement in Fiji as an example of systemic legal
discrimination against women. Counsel had argued that the rule was
discriminatory against women on the basis of sex and gender. Such
discrimination was unlawful under s 38 of the Constitution of Fiji and
was contrary to Fiji's obligations under CEDAW. The Fiji court closely
scrutinised the origin of the rule and its erroneous assumptions about
women's sexuality and held that the rule was unconstitutional.
It would be interesting to see what the Solomon Islands Court of Appeal
might have done had similar arguments about gender and sex
discrimination been put before it by counsel. In preferring to leave
the matter of abolition to parliament, a cautious approach was clearly
adopted. However, there was also a suggestion of judicial intervention
if parliament did not act. While the corroboration rule was 'a
practice' that was part of the common law, the court as a maker of such
law did not feel it was appropriate in the first instance for it to
remove the rule as was done in Balelala's
case. This approach is surprising for those reasons. The Solomon
Islands Constitution makes sex discrimination unlawful (s 15(4)) and
the state has also ratified CEDAW.
DISCRIMINATION / LAWYERS
Unfair discrimination in
suspending military lawyers alleged to have committed treason without a
proper hearing.
FIJI HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION v
FIJI LAW SOCIETY
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Gates J |
Civil Action No. HBC02.07S |
|
6, 20 June 2007 |
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Legal Practitioners Act 1997 (LPA)
Human Rights Commission Act (HRCA)
Facts
This case occurred against the background of the takeover of Fiji's
democratically elected government by the Republic of Fiji Military
Forces (RFMF) and the installation of the military-backed interim
administration of Commander V Bainimarama. The Fiji Human Rights
Commission (FHRC) acted on behalf of the six plaintiffs, all military
lawyers. They sought declarations of unfair discrimination under ss
38(1) and (2) of the CF and sought guidelines on the approach to the
LPA procedure in regard to suspension of practising certificates. The
six plaintiffs were all members of the legal unit of the RFMF.
The defendant, the Fiji Law Society (FLS), had written to the
plaintiffs advising them that their practising certificates had been
suspended due to their actions in assisting the RFMF to commit illegal
acts against the Republic of the Fiji Islands. The FLS also claimed
that the plaintiffs were in breach of the oath they had taken to uphold
the law of the Fiji Islands and in their duty as officers of the High
Court of Fiji.
Specifically, the FLS stated the plaintiffs breached s 93(2) of the
Constitution Amendment Act 13 of 1997 when the RFMF removed the
democratically elected government; s 187 of the same act in their
declaring a state of emergency; and s 90 of the act in appointing
Commodore Bainimarama as the President of the Republic of the Fiji
Islands.
The breaching of s 109 of the CF was also cited in relation to
dismissing the elected prime minister and appointing a caretaker prime
minister, and s 108 of the CF in dissolving parliament.
The FLS concluded its letters of advice to the plaintiffs by citing its
powers to suspend practising certificates under the LPA pursuant to s
45(1)(d).
The plaintiffs sought declarations stating:
- the actions of the FLS were contrary to ss 38(1) and (2) of
the CF in that the FLS unfairly discriminated;
- Section 38(1) of the CF and the HRCA had been breached by
the FLS in their actions of unfairly discriminating against the RFMF
legal practitioners as the FLS had not sought to suspend the practising
certificates of military legal practitioners in the 2000 coup;
- appropriate legal and administrative steps to be taken or
guidelines to be followed by the FLS under the LPA, consistent with ss
38 and 156 of the CF as well as the HRCA, in the event of a major
upheaval or crisis (such as a coup);
- guidelines consistent with human rights principles
established by the 1997 CF and the HRCA as well as the LPA on the type
of offences for which a practising certificate could be suspended or
cancelled; and
- under s 2 of the CF, consistency between the LPA provision
on suspension and cancellation of practising certificates and the CF,
the HRCA and other relevant human rights laws applicable in Fiji.
After the legal proceedings had begun, the FLS lifted the suspensions
of the practising certificates in response to written submissions from
some of the applicants. The FLS then claimed to the court that the
plaintiff's case was an abstract question not arising from the existing
facts of the case or existing rights. The FLS also raised issues of
jurisdiction, questioning the appointment of the FHRC's proceedings
commissioner and therefore her ability to represent the plaintiffs. For
these reasons the FLS sought to strike out the originating summons.
Issues
- Was there a reasonable cause of action for the plaintiffs,
i.e. should the FLS summons to strike out the plaintiffs claim be
allowed? Was the plaintiffs' case procedurally correct, in that the
matter had substance and did not deserve to be struck out, especially
since the FLS had lifted the suspension it had imposed upon the
plaintiffs?
- Was there illegal discrimination by the FLS under ss 38(1)
and (2) of the CF?
- Was the suspension letter written by the FLS valid in its
assertion of citing powers under s 45(1) of the LPA?
- Did the FLS deny the plaintiffs procedural fairness
(natural justice)?
- Was the appointment of the proceedings commissioner
illegal?
- Was the occurrence of a major upheaval (i.e. a coup)
grounds to change the FLS's disciplinary proceedings? And was this a
proper question for the court?
Decision
Gates J found that the plaintiffs' application for declarations 1 and
2, i.e. that the FLS had illegally discriminated, was an arguable case
and that therefore the FLS summons to strike out the claim failed.
Declarations 3 and 4 sought guidelines from the court. The request for
declaration 3, seeking guidelines for the FLS to act in a time of
crisis under the LPA was in fact a power given to the FHRC by virtue of
s 7(1)(m), and not a power necessarily given to the court. The seeking
of these guidelines in declaration 3 was not therefore a question for
the court.
In relation to declaration 4, there was no reason at this stage of the
strike-out application by the FLS to go into substantive arguments,
which would leave the application open for the plaintiffs to pursue
further.
It was found that declaration 5 'does
not state the nature of the inconsistency between the LPA and the CF.
This declaration needs to be re-drafted'. The plaintiffs
were given seven days to file an amended claim for declaration 5.
Gates J found further that the powers of the LPA had been incorrectly
applied and implied that indeed there had been a denial of natural
justice. However, at this stage of the 'strike- out' application by the
FLS it was not necessary to decide on this question.
Comment
The decision emphasises the requirement for fairness and natural
justice. Even in circumstances where the plaintiffs were prima facie
complicit by virtue of their membership of an institution that had
committed an illegal act, they were entitled to be given a hearing.
The FLS could not unilaterally suspend member without first giving him
or her an opportunity to be heard. The practising certificates of the
plaintiffs had been reinstated prior to the preliminary hearing, which
suggests the FLS may have been somewhat hasty in its actions.
The
FHRC came under sharp scrutiny for curiously choosing to advocate on
behalf of military legal personnel well qualified to represent
themselves, at a time of great upheaval in Fiji when the commission was
under attack from members of the public for allegedly siding with the
military regime.
DISCRIMINATION / PROPERTY
Constructive trust principle in
distribution of property extends to de facto
marriages in some cases, even in the absence of legislation.
MARIANGO v NALAU
Court of Appeal |
Vanuatu |
Lunabek CJ, |
[2007] VUCA 15 |
Young, Goldsbrough, Saksak & Bulu JJ |
24 August 2007 |
Law considered
Constitution of Vanuatu (CV)
Facts
The appellant (M) appealed a decision in which the Supreme Court held
that equitable principles applied to de facto marriage property rights.
M and N were formerly in a de
facto relationship, with the intention of marriage, in the
course of which they built a house for rental income. M contributed the
money and N his labour. The relationship ended after N refused to marry
M and N sought compensation. M was ordered to pay N 500,000 vatu for
his contribution to the development of the property.
Decision
Dismissing the appeal, the court held that article 95(2) of the CV
incorporated the application of equitable principles in the law of
Vanuatu. They applied to ensure fairness in de facto
relationships in the absence of any statutory guidance inconsistent
with article 5 of the CV, which recognised Vanuatu society was based on
'fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual without
discrimination ...' As to N's refusal to marry M, the parties made
their contributions to the construction of the house on the basis and
in the belief they would marry. The rental would provide them an
income.
No agreement could be inferred that if one party called off the
marriage, they would forfeit their contribution. The facts of the case
justified compensation. It was reasonable for N to have expected some
compensation for his work should the marriage not take place. On the
facts, estoppel arose as in belief, reliance and detriment. This meant
that M was prevented from stating that N had no right to a share. A
constructive trust could also be inferred
through the efforts of the parties and their reasonable expectations.
Unjust enrichment and a common intention inferred from the
circumstances were also possible based on the facts. It did not matter
which equitable principle was appealed as the underlying approach was
similar. In the circumstances, the amount of the award was reasonable.
Comment
Despite there being no specific legislation to cover the distribution
of property in de facto
relationships, the court was prepared to apply equitable principles to
fill the gap. It involved the constitutional provisions that recognised
the application of equitable principles and the court reinforced this
by reference to the recognition of equality as the basis for Vanuatu
society.
This case is to be compared to that of Joli v Joli11 in
which the same Court of Appeal considered s 5(k) of the CV, which
prohibits discrimination on specific grounds including sex
discrimination, to be a 'broad aspirational statement'. In the result,
it granted the wife's application for a share of the matrimonial
property but declined to apply CEDAW. It avoided consideration of
whether a law inconsistent with the equality provisions of the CV would
be void or unconstitutional.
DISCRIMINATION / MILITARY
FORCES / INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
Members of the defence forces are
entitled to the same due process rights granted civilians.
International instruments
and the constitution were cited by soldiers appealing a court martial
sentence.
QICATABUA v REPUBLIC OF FIJI
MILITARY FORCES & ORS
International instruments
and law considered
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Republic of Fiji Military Forces Act [Cap 81] (RFMFA)
Facts
These facts arose out of the political crisis in Fiji in 2000. The
attempted coup d'etat
in May 2000 was followed by an attempted mutiny against Commodore V
Bainimarama at the Queen Elizabeth Barracks on 2 November, 2000. The
applicant (Q) was convicted with others by a Court Martial for offences
relating to the takeover of the Fiji Parliament in May
2000 and for mutiny. The mutineers were all convicted and sentenced to
various terms in prison.
Q had already appealed the Court Martial sentence imposed on him to the
Court of Appeal (CA). (A Court Martial is a military tribunal of
equivalent standing to the High Court.) According to a plain and strict
reading of s 30 of the RFMFA, a convicted soldier could only appeal
against conviction but not against the sentence. The provision and act
were silent about appeals against a sentence. The CA ruled that s 30 of
the act did not permit an appeal against a sentence.
Issue
Whether s 30 of the RFMFA, in appearing to deny an appeal against a
sentence, contravened ss 25, 28 and 30 of the CF, which gave all citizens due
process and civil rights.
Decision
The court held that s 30 of the RFMFA was inconsistent with s 28(1)(f)
and s 38 of the CF because it failed to provide an appeal against a
sentence. Applying ss 43(2) and (3) of the CF, it read in the
additional words 'and sentence' to s 30 to ensure an appeal against a
sentence was possible. In the event of any inconsistency, the CF took
precedence as supreme law and any inconsistent law or executive
practice was rendered void. Section 43(2) of the CF was cited, which
obliged the court to promote the values that underpinned a democratic
society and the content of public international law.
The court said that all persons had the right to be treated equally
before the law. Article 26 of the ICCPR also provided a similar
assurance. Circumstances existed where there could be a discriminatory
provision based on reasonable classification, but it had to be rational
and not arbitrary. It had to be based on an intelligible degree of
difference that separated those who were grouped together from those
who were excluded. Few professions were as dependent on discipline as
the army; the personal interest and concerns of individuals were
subservient to the collective good, needs and purpose. The RFMFA
provided that soldiers were liable for criminal offences that they
committed and, in addition, could be dealt with for numerous offences
that were unique to the army, such as mutiny and desertion.
A person who was convicted and sentenced by the High Court for a
criminal offence had the right of appeal against both conviction and
sentence to the Court of Appeal. It did not stand to reason that simply
because a person happened to be a soldier sentenced by a Court Martial,
he should be given lesser justice. The expansive approach taken by the
court was reflected as follows:
Section 43(2) and Section 3 of
the Constitution enable or require courts to interpret legislation
expansively or permissibly as far as the Bill of Rights is concerned.
The spirit of section 43(2) is captured if a court in proper cases were
to read in words which change the meaning of a provision in a
legislation to make it Bill of Rights and International Convention
compliant. I am of the view that section 43(2) demands of courts and
imposes an obligation to take a stronger approach than mere purposive
interpretation when interpreting Bill of Rights provisions. The
court can take a radical rather than a purely purposive approach when
considering rights provisions. Justice Bhagwati [of the Indian Supreme
Court] advocated a creative and purposive and a goal-oriented approach.
The Court has a duty within the bounds of the Constitution to provide
effective relief for infringement of any rights even if it means
shaping innovative remedies.
Applying ss 43(2) and 3 of the CF, the court read in the words 'and
sentence' after the word 'conviction' in s 30 of the RFMFA. It was of
the view s 43(2) imposed a
stronger obligation
on the courts than a 'mere purposive interpretation'. It conferred a
duty within the bounds of the constitution to provide effective relief
for infringement of any rights including the shaping of innovative
remedies. Apart from the constitutional provisions, the court took into
account the fact that the amendment would pose no additional obligation
on the state and that parliament had been dissolved in advance of
elections. In relation to this latter issue, it could transpire that Q
and others may well have served their time by the time parliament
intervened.
Comment
The court adopted a progressive approach in 'amending' the RFMFA to
enable soldiers to appeal their sentence, applying ss 43(2) and (3) of
the CF. It also gave s 43(2) of the CF greater weight, which reinforced
the capacity of the courts to go beyond mere purposive interpretation.
The orthodox view would have been to simply conclude that s 30 of the
RFMFA precluded any appeal against a sentence. The approach taken by
the Indian, Canadian and South African courts was applied, holding that
without effective relief the values underlying the rights provided in
the bill of rights could not be promoted. Material considerations in
this particular context were the absence of any additional burden on
the state and the dissolution of parliament ahead of elections. This
meant it could be some time before there was any legislative enactment,
by which time the issues may have been rendered irrelevant. According
to the Bangalore
Principles on the Domestic Application of International Human Rights
Norms (1988),12
international law may be relied on to fill
a lacuna, so the approach adopted by the court was consistent with
accepted judicial practice.
Editors' note: At the
time of publication, the Court of Appeal had issued its decision
reversing this decision. The appeal decision will be recorded in Volume
3 of the PHRLD.
DISCRIMINATION / WOMEN
Custom not allowing widows to
have relationships is ultra vires the equality provisions of the
Constitution of Papua New Guinea.
RARAMU v YOWE VILLAGE COURT
National Court of Justice |
Papua New Guinea |
Doherty J |
[1994] PNGLR 486; N1262 |
|
22 November 1993 |
Law considered
Constitution of Papua New Guinea (CPNG)
Facts
R was a widow but was nevertheless convicted and sentenced by a Village
Court to a term of six months' imprisonment for being involved with
another man. The customary practice in many areas did not allow widows
to have subsequent relationships.
Issues
Whether the custom contravened the CPNG in that it was discriminatory
towards women.
Could the Village Court convict for offences not provided for in the
Village Court Regulations?
Decision
The court refused to recognise such a practice because it was
oppressive of and discriminatory against women. Prohibiting widows from
relationships struck at the equality provision provided in s 55 of the
CPNG. The custom failed to recognise the inherent dignity of humankind.
The Village Court erred in imprisoning people for breach of what was
only custom and not codified as law. Accordingly, R was to be released
forthwith together with her four-month-old child.
Comment
The enforcement by a Village Court of this customary practice which
discriminated against widows reflects the structural inequalities women
face in everyday life. It was irrelevant that the practice was custom
rather than law. In striking down the decision of the Village Court,
the National Court was asserting the primacy of the constitution in
general and human rights in particular over discriminatory practices
that disadvantaged a particular group. When the situation is reversed,
the uneven treatment accorded R is magnified: widowers are not
similarly treated and the male involved with R was not punished. It was
to safeguard against such occurrences that jurisdiction was referred to
the National Court to grant a hearing where people claimed to be
unlawfully or unreasonably detained.
DISCRIMINATION / WOMEN
CHIEFS
Discrimination against women is
not unconstitutional if the constitution itself legitimates that gender
discrimination.
• The constitution itself discriminates against women in that
traditional chiefs are male.
MINISTER FOR PROVINCIAL
GOVERNMENT v
GUADALCANAL PROVINCIAL ASSEMBLY
Court of Appeal |
Solomon Islands |
Kapi (Ag) P, |
[1997] SBCA 1 |
Williams & Goldsbrough JJA |
11 July 1997 |
Law considered
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Provincial Government Act 1996 (PGA)
Facts
When the CSI came into effect on 7 July 1987, there were no provisions
for a system of provincial government. In the High Court, the
Guadalcanal Provincial Assembly (GPA) attacked the validity of certain
provisions of the PGA, which it argued were invalid as being
inconsistent with the CSI. This argument was upheld on the basis that
the system of government was required to be representative.
On appeal, the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal on the basis that s
114(2) of the CSI allowed parliament to consider the role of chiefs in
providing for governments of the provinces. Section 114(2) included an
obligation on the part of parliament to 'consider the role of
traditional chiefs in the provinces'.
Issue
How does the provision in s 114(2) for traditional representation of
custom chiefs in governance of the CSI affect the rights of women?
Decision
The court held that the PGA was consistent with the CSI. While Kapi
(Ag) P made no specific reference to women and traditional chiefs,
Williams JA observed as follows:
There are two aspects, however,
to which I should specifically refer lest it should be thought that I
have not addressed them. Firstly, the traditional position is that only
a male can be a 'traditional chief'. That means that one-half of the
members of the Area Assembly must be males and that, it might be said,
effectively denies females equal opportunity with males. There is
certainly force in the argument, but the answer in essence is that the
constitution recognises that the 'traditional chiefs' should play a
role in government at the provincial level. The constitution itself
therefore
recognises this imbalance or discrimination and it will remain until
the role of 'traditional chief' under the constitution is re-evaluated.
Initially the role for women in government at the provincial level will
be limited to standing for election to Area Assemblies, and undoubtedly
when that has become more readily accepted, consideration will be given
to the discriminatory effect of appointing chiefs and elders pursuant
to ss 30 and 31 of the 1996 Act.
Goldsbrough JA observed:
Section 114 is clear and without
ambiguity. Parliament has made provision for provincial government. It
was required to do so. It has considered, as required, the role of
traditional chiefs. Indeed, it has decided to enhance their role, as
compared to the repealed legislation. In this regards it is clear that
women at present may be disadvantaged, given that traditional chiefs
are male. This I conclude cannot be said to offend against the
constitution as it is required consideration by that same constitution.
Two members of the court acknowledged that the effect of s 114 of the
constitution affected women adversely because of the social context.
Comment
What is of interest, and is the basis for reporting the case in this
volume, is the consideration of the rights of women in the discussion
concerning traditional chiefs. There is very little discussion in the
Solomon Islands courts of the discriminatory effect of laws and
practices on women. This case is reported because of the discussion by
two members of the appellate court of the possible disadvantageous
effect of including chiefs in the governance structure. In this case,
two members of the court recognised the effect the particular
constitutional provisions had by reinforcing the traditional power
structures. At the same time there was an acknowledgement that society
was changing and not static and there was every likelihood that the
question of male traditional chiefs would be re-evaluated in time.
Solomon Islands has ratified CEDAW. Although there was no reference to
international instruments that Solomon Islands had ratified, these
conventions would have been modified by the constitutional provisions
in place. It also should be remembered that a purposive (goal oriented)
interpretation takes account of changes recurring in society over time.
JUDICIAL
INDEPENDENCE
JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE /
PERCEPTION OF BIAS
Comments by a judge at a social
event about the accused could be taken as perceived bias, rendering the
judge unfit to hear the trial.
TAKIVEIKATA v THE
STATE
Court of Appeal |
Fiji Islands |
Ellis, Penlington & McPherson JJA |
[2007] FJCA 45 |
|
25 June 2007 |
Law considered
Common law
Facts
This case arose out of a series of political uprisings in 2000 in Fiji
spearheaded by the illegal removal of the elected government headed by
Mahendra Chaudhry, which was instigated by George Speight on 19 May
2000. The military assumed control and there were curfews on movement
and restrictions on various rights. A group within the military,
allegedly supported by others, attempted a mutiny but failed. The
appellant (T), a traditional high chief, was convicted in the High
Court of four counts of incitement to mutiny. The judge was Justice
Anthony Gates. T appealed, alleging bias, and sought an acquittal or
retrial. T relied on two affidavits sworn by a married couple in which
they alleged Gates J had told them at a social gathering on 14 July
2004, 'I am going to put him away'.
Editors' note: Gates J
was Acting Chief Justice under the military-backed interim
administration headed by Commodore V Bainimarama, head of the Republic
of Fiji Military Forces, as prime minister, when the decision was
handed down.
Issues
Was bias or an apprehension of bias made out on the facts?
Whether the perception of bias affected the principle of judicial
independence.
Decision
The court upheld the appeal, quashed the guilty verdicts on all four
counts and ordered a new trial on those counts. On the issue of whether
a 'not guilty' verdict should be entered on all four counts, where the
decision of the credibility of witnesses was made difficult by their
position as accomplices and by the conflicting views of the assessors
and the judge, there was a large advantage in hearing and seeing the
witnesses. There would therefore be no entering of 'not guilty'
verdicts.
Only if the evidence contained discrepancies, displayed inadequacies,
was tainted or otherwise lacked positive force in such a way that an
appellate court could conclude, even allowing for the advantage enjoyed
by a judge or jury, that there was a significant possibility an
innocent person had been convicted, could it intervene to set aside a
verdict.
In weighing the evidence, the couple's version of events was accepted.
On the facts, a fair- minded lay observer might reasonably consider
that the judge might not bring an impartial and unprejudiced mind to
the resolution of the question the judge was required to decide. There
was therefore certainly the possibility of an absence of an impartial
mind on the part of the judge.
Comment
The case is a salutary reminder of the maxim that 'justice must not
only be done but must be seen to be done'. It is also a reflection of
the smallness of Pacific Island societies. While citing numerous
factors in assessing the evidence, what appears to have weighed heavily
with the court was that the judge did not directly contradict the
couple being witnesses nor their credibility. Further, there was no use
of direct speech in the judge's affidavit and no suggestion of ill will
or ulterior motive by the couple. The delay by the couple in bringing
the precise words to T's attention was explained in part by their being
lay people and that there was no connection with T by the couple other
than indirectly.
Editors' note: At the
time of publication, the Supreme Court rejected Gates J's appeal and
upheld the decision of the Court of Appeal. Gates J has been appointed
Chief Justice by the regime in power in December 2008.
LEGAL
AID
LEGAL AID / MEMBER OF
PARLIAMENT
A member of parliament, in
particular circumstances, did not qualify as a needy person deserving
of legal aid provided by the state.
OFFICE OF THE PUBLIC
SOLICITOR v
KALSAKAU
Court of Appeal |
Vanuatu |
Lunabek CJ, |
[2005] VUCA 13 |
Treston J |
24 August 2005 |
Law considered
Constitution of Vanuatu (CV)
Penal Code [Cap 135] (PC)
Public Solicitors Act [Cap 177] (PSA)
Facts
The respondent (K), a member of parliament, was charged with the
offence of perverting the course of justice under s 79 of the PC. K
claimed that he should have been provided with a lawyer by the
appellants under article 5(2)(a) of the CV and that this lawyer should
be given sufficient time to prepare for the trial. The Public Solicitor
(PS) appellant claimed that the primary judge did not go far enough in
inquiring into the specific details of K's circumstances in determining
his eligibility for legal aid.
The trial judge made the following orders:
- The PS must engage a lawyer from outside the PS's Office to
represent K.
- K must enter into an agreement immediately with the PS
about his contribution to the legal cost of running his case.
Issue
Whether K qualified as a 'needy person' under s 56 of the constitution (…where the state shall provide
for the office of the Public Solicitor's Office, appointed by the
President of the Republic of Vanuatu on the advice of the Judicial
Service Commission, whose function shall be to provide legal assistance
to needy persons).
Decision
The appeal was allowed and the court held that K must either act for
himself or find his own lawyer. The PS submitted that article 5(a) of
the CV must be read together with article 56. The definition of a needy
person was contained in s 5 of the PSA. The court in this instance had
an opportunity to analyse the sworn statement of K about his monthly
income, expenditure, assets and liabilities. An analysis of those
figures indicated that K was not a needy person because he had the
means to meet the probable cost of a lawyer. The decision on whether K
could be represented by a state lawyer had to be limited to the
particular circumstances; therefore alternative legal assistance was
available to K. Accordingly, the appeal was allowed and the orders of
the primary judge were set aside as K did not qualify to be provided
with a lawyer at the expense of the state.
Comment
The courts will go to great lengths to ensure a fair trial. In this
case, K claimed that he should have had the right to be represented by
a state lawyer. Given his financial circumstances, the appeal was
allowed and K had to pay for his own lawyer. However, for those meeting
the criteria of a needy person, legal representation and assistance
will be provided. This right to legal representation is enshrined in
the Constitution of Vanuatu and is further supported by the Public
Solicitors Act.
LEGAL AID / TREASON
Legal Aid Commission is required
to provide legal representation in a treason trial as a matter of
equality before the law.
THE STATE v SILATOLU
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Legal Aid Act 1996
Facts
In 2000 there was a series of political uprisings in Fiji spearheaded
by the illegal removal of the elected government headed by Mahendra
Chaudhry, which was instigated by George Speight on 19 May 2000.
Parliamentarians were held hostage in parliament for 56 days. There was
an attempt by Speight to illegally abrogate the constitution and
establish a new government. Racial tensions between indigenous Fijians
and Indo-Fijians escalated and there were burnings of Indo-Fijian homes
in Muanaweni, Dreketi and elsewhere. The military assumed control and
there were curfews and restrictions on various rights. A group within
the military attempted a mutiny but failed. An interim civilian
government was installed by the military after it had attempted to
abrogate the constitution and to rule by decree. In Republic of Fiji
& Attorney General of Fiji v Prasad,13 the Court
of Appeal held
the constitution to be extant and ordered a general election.
Silatolu (S) was charged with treason (allegedly committed between 19
May and 27 July, 2000), which is punishable by the mandatory death
sentence. S applied for constitutional redress. He sought to enforce an
aspect of his constitutional right to a fair trial under s 29(1) of the
constitution. S sought specifically to enforce his qualified
constitutional right to be given the services of a legal practitioner
under a scheme for legal aid s 28(1)(d), i.e. the right to be given
legal representation. Secondly, he sought to enforce his constitutional
right to equality before the law under s 38(1).
S claimed that:
- his right to be given legal representation had been
infringed;
- his right to equality before the law had been infringed;
and
- the current estimate of the length of the trial proper, as
made by
the prosecution, was '4 to 6 weeks'. The trial was expected to be
lengthy, as well as complex and he therefore needed legal
representation.
Issues
- Whether the applicant's qualified right 'to be given the
services of a legal practitioner under a scheme for legal aid' had been
contravened.
- Whether legal representation would be in the
interests of justice.
Decision
The court held that S had consistently and reasonably expressed his
concern that his qualified right to be given the services of a legal
practitioner should not be infringed and that the Legal Aid Commission
had deemed S entitled to legal aid as he had insufficient means to
engage a private legal practitioner.
The test was whether 'the interests of justice require' the applicant,
being a person charged with treason, 'to be given the services of a
legal practitioner under a scheme for legal aid'.
The factors to be taken into account included:
- the seriousness of the offence with which the applicant was
charged.
Treason was one of the most serious criminal charges which any person
in Fiji could face; and
- the length and complexity of the case.
Comment
The decision to require legal aid to represent S was just, given the
penalty for treason, the complexity of the issues, and the widespread
interest in the case throughout Fiji. The culpability of S was not an
issue. The decision on whether he ought to receive legal aid was to be
determined in the light of applicable constitutional and legislative
provisions. It was irrelevant that S had been a very public presence in
George Speight's overturn of the Chaudhry government and in the hostage
crisis which followed. S was still entitled to his day in court and to
appropriate legal representation.
LIBERTY
LIBERTY / DEBT
Imprisonment for failure to pay a
debt such as traffic fines is rare.
IN RE ERONI DELAI
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Penal Code [Cap 17] (PC)
Criminal Procedure Code [Cap 21] (CPC)
Human Rights Commission Act 1999
(HRCA)
Facts
The applicant (D) was produced before the court by the Commissioner of
Prisons on 11 April 2000 after a writ of habeas corpus (an
order
requiring a person to be brought before the court) had been issued. J
had been sentenced to 12 months in prison by the Magistrate's Court.
D was a mini-van driver who during 1997 and 1998 committed 93 traffic
offences, mostly incorrect stopping or using a private vehicle as a
taxi. On each occasion, D was served with a Notice to Attend Court
(NAC) under the provisions of s 80 of the CPC. (A NAC is, by virtue of
s 80(2) of the CPC, equivalent to a summons). However, according to
paragraph 5 of D's supporting affidavit, on no occasion did he actually
attend court as required by the notice.
Section 80(1) of the CPC empowers a resident magistrate to deal with
the offence to which the summons relates in the absence of the accused
as long as the offence is only punishable either by a fine or by a fine
and imprisonment not exceeding three months, and providing that the
accused pleads guilty or is legally represented. A resident magistrate
can also deal with the matter under s 199 of the CPC, which permits a
hearing to take place in the absence of an accused where the accused is
charged with an offence punishable by a fine not exceeding FJ $100 or
imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months. This procedure is
commonly referred to as 'formal proof'.
In each case, D was given time to pay the fines but did not do so. The
procedure went badly wrong in this case. Whereas the convictions were
entered and the fines and default periods were imposed during 1997 and
1998, the first warrants of execution were not issued until 1999, by
which time the applicant had accumulated huge fines and fees.
The Legal Aid Commission became aware of D's predicament and commenced
proceedings for habeas
corpus. At the application stage, leave was
granted to the Director of the Fiji Human Rights Commission to
intervene in the proceedings under the provisions of s 37(2) of the
HRCA.
Issues
- Was a custodial sentence constitutional and/or necessary?
- Was the fine imposed by the court unreasonable?
Decision
The court ordered D's immediate release from prison. The reason was
simple. In the words of the Magistrates' Bench Book (February 1994
Edition):
Where the court imposes a
custodial sentence it should review the
aggregate to ensure that the overall effect is just.
The principle, usually known as the 'totality principle', meant that
the aggregate of sentences must bear some relationship to the gravity
of the individual offences. It was abundantly plain and obvious that a
man who parked his van illegally or used his private vehicle as a taxi
should not be required to serve a 12-year term of imprisonment. By
April 2000, D had already served 6 months' imprisonment. Further
imprisonment would clearly be unjust.
Section 23(1) of the CF provided that:
A person must not be deprived of
personal liberty except:
(a) for the purpose of executing the sentence or order of a court … in
respect of an offence of which the person has been convicted; [or]
(c) for the purpose of executing the order of a court made to secure
the fulfilment of an obligation imposed on the person by law.
Section 23(2), however, stated that:
Paragraph 1 (c) does not permit
a court to make an order depriving a person of personal liberty on the
ground of failure to pay maintenance or a debt, fine or tax unless the
court considers that the person has wilfully refused to pay despite
having the means to do so.
The questions to which s 23 immediately gave rise were whether the
provisions of s 88(4) of the CPC and the procedure whereby fines were
imposed on absent offenders after a CPC s 199 hearing were
constitutional.
Secondly, there was no evidence to indicate that the court had enquired
into D's means to pay the fines before it imposed them. Therefore, it
could not have satisfied itself that the applicant was in fact able to
pay them. Accordingly, it could not be satisfied, as was required by s
23, that the non-payment was on the ground of wilful refusal.
The court's view on s 23(2) was clear: an offender could only
constitutionally be ordered to serve a default period of imprisonment
if the court was satisfied that the offender had the means to pay the
fine imposed but wilfully refused to pay it. This reading of the
section was consistent with the detailed provisions of s 37(4) of the
PC, which required the court to examine the offender's means either
before imposing the fine or before issuing a warrant for committal for
non-payment.
Where, however, larger fines were imposed for more serious offences,
then the Penal Code required an examination of means to take place
before the fine was imposed and this was entirely consistent with s 23.
Comment
Imprisonment for failure to pay a fine or debt would be rare. Such
penalties must be balanced against the right to liberty. In this case,
the Magistrate's Court proceeded to impose a custodial sentence on the
basis of the convictions and fines that had been entered against D
after he appeared in response to arrest warrants. The appellate
jurisdiction of the High Court ensured that what was clearly a
miscarriage of justice was lessened. D should not have been imprisoned
without the court first having an examination of means.
Editors' question: What
about situations where a parent fails to pay maintenance for children?
Should this be an exception or should exactly the same principles apply?
LIFE
LIFE / INTERNATIONAL
STANDARDS
International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights (ICCPR) taken into consideration in determining
the arbitrariness of the death sentence.
R v VOLA
International instruments
and law considered
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966 (ICCPR)
Criminal Offences Act [Cap 18] (COA)
Facts
V was found guilty by a jury of murdering P by repeatedly hitting him
on the head with an iron bar.
Both V and P were drunk on the night in question and started arguing.
V's friend hit P with an iron bar. V then took the iron bar from his
friend, stood over P and hit him repeatedly with the iron bar. V's
defence of intoxication and extreme provocation to the point that he
lost his power of self-control was rejected by the jury. Under s 91 of
the COA, there were two alternative penalties for murder: a death
sentence or life imprisonment. There was only a limited discretion to
impose the alternative punishment after considering all relevant
factors.
Issues
- Whether to impose the death penalty or a life sentence.
- What was the effect of the ICCPR, an unratified convention,
on Tongan legislation?
Decision
The court sentenced V to life imprisonment. Although the effectiveness
of the death penalty was a matter for government and parliament, the
court had to understand the debate surrounding the death penalty in
order to make an informed decision. A consideration of the debate,
although not directly relevant to Tonga, was important in understanding
the principles involved.
On the matter of the arbitrariness of the death penalty, reference was
made to article 6(1) of the ICCPR. Although Tonga was not a party to
it, the principles encapsulated therein were fundamental:
Every human being has the
inherent right to life. This right shall be protected by law. No one
shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life.
In exercising its discretion, the guidelines set out in Bachan Singh v State of Punjab
(255 E- H, 256 A-C) were applied. The circumstances surrounding the
offence were not exceptionally depraved or heinous in character, nor
did it constitute, on account of its design and the manner of its
execution, a source of grave danger to society at large. There was also
no evidence of aggravation of an abnormal or special degree.
Comment
This was the first verdict in a murder case in Tongatapu in over 20
years. The court did not hesitate in applying international cases and
the ICCPR notwithstanding, they did not apply directly to Tonga nor was
Tonga a party to the ICCPR. It was recognised that the principles set
out in the ICCPR and in the numerous authorities cited were reflective
of the circumstances exercised in relation to the death penalty. The
court was not hindered by the kingdom's non-ratification. The case is
illustrative of the philosophical concerns the judiciary in particular
and the wider community in general have to the irreversible nature of
the death penalty. As in the Kelly
cases from Solomon Islands, this case heralds the first clear departure
from traditional non-enforceability approaches to international law in
Tonga and the growing influence of international human rights law on
domestic courts. See also Fa'aoso
v Paonga & Ors earlier in this digest, where the
court said in 2006 that accession to the CRC was an indication to the
state party to be bound by its terms.
MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT / DISCRIMINATION
Right to apply for an order
guaranteeing free movement and lifting a travel ban was still possible
even when the ban was no longer applicable.
LEUNG v INTERIM ATTORNEY
GENERAL
(IMMIGRATION)
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Facts
L, a solicitor, former Human Rights Commissioner and
immediate past President of the Fiji Law Society, instituted a judicial
review of a decision by the Director of Immigration to place him on an
immigration watchlist of people banned from leaving Fiji. The ban was
lifted before the beginning of the hearing of the leave application.
Issue
Was there any basis for the court to make a decision given the issue
was no longer live,
i.e. that the ban on L's travel by the military had been lifted?
Decision
The court gave leave to apply for judicial review and
confined it to damages, costs and declarations that the decision was
unlawful, void and of no effect and that the interim administration
acted unlawfully in breach of L's expectations. Although the actual
issue was no longer outstanding, it was a matter of public interest.
The core of this application was L's freedom as a Fiji citizen to
travel overseas under s 34(3) of the CF, which guaranteed freedom of
movement. The exercise of his ability to do so in light of the interim
administration's power was a matter of public importance. L's intention
to travel in the near future and the possibility of further damages
being sought were additional reasons for the grant of leave.
Comment
The court could have refused leave to apply for the order on
the basis that there was no longer a live issue and that the attendant
issues upon the travel ban were of little consequence. However, leave
was granted because of the principles involved: the freedom of a Fiji
citizen to travel overseas under Article 34(3) of the CF and the
exercise of discretion conferred on a public officer to affect the
rights of a citizen. Although unstated, the context was important where
a military-backed interim government was arbitrarily exercising
authority and unduly restricting the rights of citizens. Where an
arbitrary regime exercises power, the capacity of the courts to protect
the rights of ordinary citizens assumes even greater importance.
Editors' note: Fiji at
the
time was being governed by a military-backed interim government with
the commander of the Republic of Fiji Military Forces as interim prime
minister. Those opposing the regime were placed on a watchlist and
prevented from leaving the country for publicly opposing it and
exercising free speech. L wanted an order, notwithstanding, given
possible future problems in leaving the country. The matter did not
proceed to a substantive hearing because the parties settled out of
court for an undisclosed amount.
MOVEMENT / EMERGENCY
POWERS
Unlawful restriction on freedom
of movement by placing a travel ban on those opposing the state.
PULOKA & ORS v
THE
KINGDOM OF TONGA
Law considered
Constitution of Tonga (CT)
Emergency Powers Act [Cap 45] (EPA)
Facts
This case arose out of a political crisis in Tonga in November 2006
when pro-democracy supporters rioted and burnt down parts of the
capital, Nuku'alofa. Emergency regulations were issued after the riot.
The plaintiffs (P) claimed that they had been unjustly deprived by the
defendant (KOT) of their basic rights to freedom of movement and
travel. Their names were included on what was described in the
pleadings as a secret list of Tongans blacklisted or prohibited from
going to certain areas or leaving Tonga. P claimed that they had been
stopped at various checkpoints around the country; they had been
searched and were humiliated and highly embarrassed at being treated as
criminals.
The list was drawn up by the defendant under the Emergency Powers
(Maintenance of Public Order) Regulations (ER), made under s 2 of the
EPA. In each case, military personnel, in relying on the names included
in the list, had made orders prohibiting P's freedom of movement and
travel.
The ER extended significant powers to any person authorised by Cabinet
and every member
of the Tonga Police Force and the Tonga Defence Force to act 'for the
purposes of preserving
public order and securing the public safety'. P challenged the legality
of the 'list'.
Issue
Were the actions of the state in denying P and others the right to
freedom of movement ultra
vires the CT?
Decision
The court considered the strong
prima facie case for a judicial review
and in the circumstances awarded interim relief by giving leave for
judicial review and allowing P to travel. The defence services denied
that they had considered the case of the respective plaintiffs or that
they had made a decision in putting their names on a list. In reality,
a decision was made in each case which restricted P's freedom of
movement or travel. The decisions had been
made without any consideration of the individual case before it but on
the basis of the list. A decision made on that basis could properly be
described as unreasonable and irrational.
In passing the Chief Justice commented that:
A cursory examination of the
authorities … indicates that courts are
reluctant to comment on or criticise the wisdom or expediency of steps
taken by the authorities to deal with a perceived state of emergency
situation. The courts, nevertheless, retain the power by way of the
remedy of judicial review, to ensure that officials act within their
legal powers and exercise any discretionary powers on reasonable
grounds after following a proper process.
Comment
Although there was no ruling on the legality of the list, the interim
relief granted was a significant check on the power of the authorities.
While accepting the rationale of the regulations, a distinction was
made in the particular circumstances of the case. The police had merely
acted on the basis of P's inclusion on a list of banned persons without
considering the individual merits of each case. This was sufficient to
attract the supervising jurisdiction of the courts to make a
preliminary finding that the decisions were unreasonable and
irrational. It appears that had the authorities been able to
demonstrate to the court's satisfaction that, after individually
reviewing each case on its merits, there was good reason to place the
persons on the list, their decision would have been upheld.
MOVEMENT / NON-CITIZENS
The right to freedom of movement
of non-citizens may not be the same as that of citizens.
AYAMISEBA v ATTORNEY
GENERAL
(IMMIGRATION)
Court of Appeal |
Vanuatu |
Lunabek CJ, |
[2006] VUCA 21 |
Robertson, Doussa, Fatiaki, Saksak & Tuohy JJ |
6 October 2006 |
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC)
Constitution of Vanuatu (CV)
Immigration Act [Cap 66] (IA)
Facts
A was an activist for the West Papuan independence movement. Although
not a citizen of Vanuatu, A had lived in Vanuatu for lengthy periods of
time amounting to more than 20 years. The Minister of Immigration (M)
had ordered his deportation. A appealed against orders made by the
Supreme Court, which refused to quash the removal order made against
him by M.
A first came to Vanuatu in 1983. He assisted in various election
campaigns. He visited Vanuatu on an ongoing basis until 1988 when he
was deported to Australia. In that same year he was removed from the
immigration watchlist and again made several trips to Vanuatu. He had
been residing in Vanuatu without any specific authorisation since the
expiry of his
diplomatic passport. He was the father of a ni-Vanuatu child who was a
citizen. A claimed
that the removal order was inconsistent with the IA.
The respondents (AG) relied on s 17A(1) of the IA, which gives M the
power to remove non-citizens if:
\
- the person is involved in activities detrimental to
national security, defence or public order; and
- he is a wanted person in a foreign country for any criminal
offence he has committed in that foreign country.
In these instances, M said he did not need to give notice for the
removal of such persons (s 17A(2)).
Issues
- Were the reasons for limiting the rights of A to free
movement reasonably justifiable?
- Whether the minister acted ultra vires (beyond
his powers) the IA and the CV.
Decision
The court allowed the appeal. Parliament had provided for two specified
situations that were defined in s 17A, (1) (a) or (b). The regime under
s 17A did not 'prohibit' or 'prevent' M from giving notice or affording
a non-citizen the rights of natural justice; it merely empowered M to
decide whether he needed to do so in a particular case. It was wrong to
say that the provision explicitly removed rights to prior notice to
which a non-citizen might otherwise be entitled. As a matter of
statutory interpretation, M must be of the opinion that the
circumstances under either ss. (1) (a) or (b) existed and then under
subsection (2) whether in the circumstances he needed to give notice.
Consequently, M needed to undertake a separate and distinct enquiry and
assessment on whether he needed to give notice.
There was no evidence to suggest that such an enquiry had been
undertaken. Therefore, the exercise of power and the deportation that
followed were unsustainable in law. The court mentioned in passing that
as A had a ni-Vanuatu child who was a citizen of Vanuatu, the
obligations under the CRC had to be given due regard.
Comment
The exercise of a statutory discretion must be exercised carefully.
Despite the power conferred in these particular circumstances, M was
required to observe certain preconditions before authorising a
particular course of action. He omitted to do so and it did not matter
that A might well have been involved 'in activities detrimental to
national security, defence of public order…' because M was obliged to
follow the prescribed procedures. The courts will carefully scrutinise
the exercise of those powers that impinge on the rights of those
affected; they will not hesitate to quash the decision of public
officers if they are not made in accordance with the specific law or
regulation.
MOVEMENT / TAXES
Preventing a citizen from leaving
the country is a valid limitation on the right to free movement if the
limitation is reasonable and justifiable.
KHERA v FIJI ISLANDS REVENUE
AND
CUSTOMS AUTHORITY
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Income Tax Act (ITA)
Facts
The plaintiff (K) challenged the validity of a Departure Prohibition
Order (DPO) imposed on him by the Fiji Islands Custom and Revenue
Authority (FIRCA) for unpaid taxes of FJ
$3.458 million on the ground that it impinged on K's freedom assured by
s 34 of the CF. K argued that the DPO was therefore unconstitutional,
and if valid it was not a reasonable and justifiable restraint on his
freedom of movement in a free and democratic society.
Issue
Whether curtailing K's right to free movement for unpaid taxes was a
valid limitation on his human rights.
Decision
Dismissing the application, the court upheld the validity of the DPO as
falling within a valid limitation imposed by s 34(7) of the CF, the
freedom of movement guaranteed by subsection (3) thereof. The DPO was
validly issued under s 77A of the ITA. The restraint on K's freedom was
reasonable and justifiable. It was also no more restriction than
necessary to achieve the purpose of the limitation. It was the duty of
FIRCA to recover assessed tax. The DPO was intended to ensure it was
able to do so. Tax had been assessed as due from K. FIRCA was entitled
to determine what was adequate security given K owed F$3.458 million
and had defaulted on undertakings to make repayments. Therefore, the
restriction on K's movement or the demand by FIRCA for adequate
security was reasonable.
Comment
In assessing restrictions and limitations to freedoms, the courts will
scrutinise the nature of the limitation closely. An assessment will be
made to determine whether the measures are properly conceived and there
is a connection with the objective. The right restricted should be
minimally impaired. There must be a balance between the adverse effects
of the restrictions and the purport and intent of the legislation. In
the present case, the restriction on K's movement was for a clear
public purpose. It was not a unilateral restriction on K's freedom of
movement but justifiable in terms of affecting the revenues due to the
state from K. Compare this with the restriction in Leung's case, which
could not be related to a public purpose or reasonable grounds.
PRIVACY
PRIVACY / CRIMINAL RECORDS
Bill of rights and international
human rights law protection for the right to privacy of persons with
criminal records.
YAYA v ATTORNEY GENERAL &
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
Constitution of Fiji 1997 (CF)
Police Act [Cap 85]
Facts
The applicant (Y) claimed that the respondent (AG) breached his right
to privacy under s 37(1) of the CF when the former police commissioner
mentioned his name in the media in relation to a series of violent
robberies. The reports were titled '10 most wanted persons' and were
widely disseminated via television, newspapers and radio. Y was named
first on the list. Y gave himself up to the police after the media
broadcasts and confessed to the robberies. Subsequently Y was tried,
convicted and sentenced.
Y claimed the broadcast of his name through the media by the former
commissioner gave his family and the public the impression that he
committed the offences at a time when he was innocent. Y claimed that
he was not on bail and did not have any charges pending against him. Y
asserted that he had a right to be presumed innocent until proven
guilty. The broadcast was therefore unreasonable, and caused him
humiliation, distress and loss of dignity. Because of the broadcast, Y
claimed that the public attention on him was excessive and invasive and
thus his right to privacy was breached.
The AG claimed that he reserved the right under the Police Act to
broadcast names through the media when safeguarding the interests of
the public. There had been a series of violent robberies and as a
result of their investigations, the police believed that Y and nine
others were involved in the robberies. Airing the broadcast would
caution the public and give Y and the nine others an opportunity to
clear their names.
Issues
- Did the media blitz by the police on Y, bearing in mind his
lack of
involvement in criminal activities at the relevant time (despite his
past convictions), infringe his right of privacy contrary to s 37(1) of
the bill of rights?
- What were the court's powers to define limitations on
rights in the
constitution when there was no express legislation limiting the right?
Decision
The court held that Y's right to privacy was breached owing to
publication in the media. Great weight was given to s 37(2) of the CF,
which states that the right to privacy has limitations prescribed by
law as being 'reasonable and justifiable in a free and democratic
society'. However, it did not expressly state the limitations. It
provided that legislation was yet to be enacted that regulated or
prohibited the specific forms of interference with privacy, thus
leaving it for the courts to determine what was excessive or
unreasonable interference with privacy.
Reference was made to international conventions and common law to
define what was a reasonable limitation of the said right. The burden
of proof for the effectiveness of the limitation of a right rests on
the party making the claim. The CF permitted the application of public
international human rights law by virtue of s 43(2) and cited the UDHR
(Art 12), the ECHR (Art 8) and the ICCPR (Art 17) on privacy
protection, and cases litigating those articles in the English courts
and the European Court of Human Rights.
The publication of names or photographs in the media, however, was
justified given the public interest and the need to protect the life
and property of citizens and combat crime. However, it needed to be in
accordance with what was necessary in a democratic society. Publication
of the information to the entire public was not necessary in this case.
Distribution of the information on Y should have been limited only to
persons who could make use of it. A limited circulation would not have
breached the bill of rights provision. Therefore, the former police
commissioner's publication of Y's name to the nation was undignified
treatment of an 'innocent member of the public' as Y was at that time.
Comment
Y had a criminal history as well as being a suspect for the allegations
to which he later confessed. This, however, did not give the police or
any other local law enforcement agency the right to publish the names
of individuals in the national media. Human rights apply to all manner
of people and levels of the community. It matters not who they are.
Each and every person has a right to be treated with dignity. When
weighing the right of individuals against the interest of the public,
the court applies a stricter test to those who make arguments seeking
to limit the right. Despite there being no specific legislation, the
court read in the limitation in accordance with guidelines laid down in
the international conventions and cases referred to.
Editors' note: So far,
courts in the Pacific Islands have only referred to cases from other
common law countries when looking at human rights issues. Another
source of case law is the decisions of the treaty monitoring bodies
that oversee the various human rights treaties. Although not binding,
these cases provide an additional source of information as to the
meaning of various key rights. Of particular interest are the cases
brought under the Optional Protocol procedures in which various human
rights committees consider individual complaints.
PROCEDURE
PROCEDURE /
CONSTITUTIONAL REDRESS
A remedy under the constitution
should not be lightly sought; where alternative remedies are available
these should be used first.
ALI v THE STATE
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Prison Act [Cap 86] (PA)
Facts
The applicant (A) applied for constitutional redress for an assault. He
said he was backslapped by a prison officer (V) resulting in a bleeding
nose. Damages and filing of an assault charge against V were sought.
Issue
Whether A's case was a rights violation that qualified for
constitutional redress or an alternative non-constitutional remedy.
Decision
Dismissing the application, the court found it was an abuse of process.
Section 41 of the CF gave discretion to refuse the grant of relief if
an 'adequate alternative remedy' was available. The Redress Rules under
the CF did not provide a parallel process where other remedies were
available. A could have complained to the police about the assault,
filed a writ in the Magistrates' Court for damages and sought redress
under the PAand Regulations thereunder.
Comment
Constitutional redress is an entitlement that is not an open
endorsement to seek interventions by the courts. Where there are
adequate alternative remedies, such applications may be refused. While
not standing on technicalities or complicated procedures, redress is
not to
be used as a short-cut or a substitute for normal procedures and
mechanisms in place. These remedies should only be sought in
appropriate circumstances, for example, where rights have been
allegedly breached. They are not to be invoked as a ready option for
the convenience of parties.
PROCEDURE /
CONSTITUTIONAL REDRESS
Not all cases involving
procedural errors or irregularities by the state are rights violations
subject to constitutional redress and damages, which apply only in rare
cases where there has been a fundamental subversion of the rule of law.
ATTORNEY GENERAL v MBWE
Court of Appeal |
Kiribati |
Hardie Boys, Tompkins & Fisher JJA |
[2006] KICA 3 |
|
26 July 2006 |
Law considered
Constitution of Kiribati (CK)
Facts
The Attorney General (AG) appealed against a decision of the High Court
to quash an order that the respondent (M) be imprisoned for six months
for contempt of the Nikunau Magistrates' Court. The HC ordered that he
be freed and ordered that the AG pay him the sum of AUD 1,250 by way of
redress. The appeal was brought solely in relation to the redress
order. M had been in custody awaiting trial for several months on an
outer island without access to the main court in Tarawa.
In the appeal, the AG's concern was confined to the possibility that
individuals adversely affected by procedural irregularities would rely
on this case as a precedent for a right to compensation under the CK
for every procedural irregularity. The AG argued that compensation for
procedural irregularities amounting to a breach of constitutional
rights should be reserved for the most extreme cases, not those in
which a person had the opportunity to use other legal avenues, for
example, the appeal process.
Issue
Whether M's case was a rights violation that qualified for
constitutional redress or an alternative non-constitutional remedy.
Decision
The appeal was dismissed. This was one of those rare cases in which a
person had suffered from both a fundamental subversion of the rule of
law and lack of any effective means of overcoming the problem through
conventional procedural channels. The consequences were serious.
Comment
The rights of the accused remain paramount during the process of an
investigation or trial. The court must have a high regard for all the
rights accorded to an accused person and should ensure that they are
protected. This is not only for the benefit of the accused, but more so
for the whole court process. All persons must be treated fairly before
the law and failure of this is an abuse of process and a breach of
one's constitutional rights. Not all procedural irregularities are
rights violations – some are and some are not. Compare this case to the
previous decision, Ali
v State, in which the court found that not all violations
require a constitutional remedy.
PROCEDURE /
CONSTITUTIONAL REDRESS
Unreasonable delay of a trial is
a violation of fundamental rights in the constitution.
Such cases should be
brought under the constitution and not by way of judicial review.
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR v EMELEE
& ORS
Court of Appeal |
Vanuatu |
Lunabek CJ, |
[2005] VUCA 11 |
Saksak & Treston JJ |
6 June 2005 |
Law considered
Constitution of Vanuatu (CV)
Penal Code [Cap 135] (PC)
Facts
E was charged with conspiring to defeat the course of justice contrary
to s 79 of the PC in charges related to forgery. The Supreme Court
discharged the respondents (E and others) of charges laid against them.
The state appealed the decision to the Court of Appeal. E argued that
pursuant to article 5(2) of the CV, they were entitled to a fair
hearing within a reasonable time. However, they could not at that stage
have such a hearing because the events happened 18 months before. It
was held that despite the offence, it was not unduly complex and
accordingly E was discharged.
On appeal, the state submitted that article 5 of the CV had to be read
with s 15 of the PC, which states:
No prosecution may be commenced
against any person for any criminal offence upon the expiry of the
following periods after the commission of such offence…
(b) in the case of
offences punishable by imprisonment for more than 3 months and not more
than 10 years – 5years.
Issue
Whether the delay was so unreasonable as to violate the rights of E
under the constitution.
Decision
The appeal was allowed. The charges of conspiracy to defeat the course
of justice were serious ones and it appeared that E and the respondents
were persons of some substance, holding offices of significance. There
was a legitimate public interest in public order to ensure such matters
against such individuals were dealt with appropriately by the court. A
balance was to be struck between the protection of human rights and the
legitimate public interest in bringing offenders to account. The matter
should be brought under the constitution as it was a breach of a
fundamental right, rather than by way of judicial review.
Comment
In considering delays in the prosecution of criminal cases, the context
is critical. The delay could not be considered in isolation. It had to
be balanced with the legitimate public interest in public order and in
holding people accountable. Moreover, delays are not a mathematical
issue, but have to be assessed on the facts of each case. In this
particular instance, the apparent 18 months' delay was reduced to nine
months because the state was not at fault. As for the provisions of the
PC, which stipulated five years for the prosecution of the offences for
which E (and others) were charged, the court did not have to consider
their validity given the decision it took. As a matter of practice,
courts only strike down legislation as a last resort. As far as
possible, they will seek to craft interpretations that preclude that
option.
PROCEDURE / MILITARY /
CONSTITUTIONAL REDRESS
Members of the defence forces had
the right to equal treatment.
Time limitation rules on
constitutional redress were an unreasonable limitation on rights.
To make an argument in
terms of national security, there had to be a clear connection between
the issue and those whose rights were affected.
RAILUMU & ORS v RFMF
& ATTORNEY GENERAL
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Army Act [Cap 31] (AA)
High Court (Constitutional Redress) Rules 1998 (HCR)
Facts
This case arose out of the political crisis of May 2000 in which George
Speight removed the democratically elected government of Mahendra
Chaudhry. The military intervened and eventually handed power to an
interim government. In November 2000, there was an attempted mutiny
against Commodore V Bainimarama, the head of the military forces, which
ultimately failed. The applicants (R), eight soldiers in all, were
charged with various offences under the AA, ranging from mutiny to
misprision of treason. They had all been in custody ('close arrest')
for the past 24 months. Six of the eight had unsuccessfully applied for
release under habeas
corpus proceedings in May 2002. All eight had been in
detention since November 2000. The application was by motion seeking
declarations in respect of their constitutional rights, which they
alleged had been breached by their continued detention, and an order
for their release pending their Court Martial.
R's application was made pursuant to the HCR. However there was a
limitation on the time during which application could be filed as set
out in Rule 3(2):
An application under paragraph
(1) must not be admitted or entertained after 30 days from the date
when the matter at issue first arose.
According to the applicants, the 30-day rule was unconstitutional in so
far as it infringed the right of the individual to unfettered access to
the courts, as provided for under s 29(2) of the constitution.
The applicants sought the following declarations:
- That R's respective constitutional rights to have their
cases determined within a reasonable time by a court of law had been
breached;
- That R's respective constitutional rights to be released
from detention on reasonable terms and conditions pending trial had
been breached; and
- That the respective detentions in prison were unlawful
and/or amounted to oppression and that R should be released pending
trial.
The applicants relied on s 29 of the CF and specifically subsection
(3), which entitles a person to have their case determined within a
reasonable time, as well as the presumption of innocence in s 28(1).
The Attorney General raised the issue of national security as
justifying the continued close detention of R and others. The fact that
R and others were facing charges of trying to overthrow the commander
in the unsuccessful mutiny, coupled with the petition, content and
objective, tended to show that R's release would provide an additional
element of risk to those already existing in the community.
Issues
- Whether the 30-day limitation on applying for a remedy
under the constitution was constitutional.
• Whether R could rely on the HCR for the relief they were seeking?
- Whether R had been granted a trial within a reasonable time?
- Was national security a justifiable reason for the
continued detention?
Decision
The 30-day rule was an improper limitation on the right to a remedy
under the CF. The court found that given the circumstances surrounding
the case, together with the court's views on the limitation period
expressed above, R fell within the HCR.
R in these proceedings had only filed their motion some 22 months after
the incidents for which they were charged. The 30-day limitation period
appeared insurmountable. Unreasonable delay due to the prosecution gave
rise to injustice. The ability to comply with the 30-day rule would
therefore have been beyond the control of an applicant.
The rights of the individual as protected under the bill of rights,
including rights protected under s 29, could not be compromised by the
imposition of conditions that were unreasonable or unjustifiable in a
free and democratic society. Statutory provisions such as those in Ru1e
3(2) imposing a 30-day limitation period for applications to the court
could not be allowed to remain unless valid grounds were advanced to
support the period.
Therefore in the court's view, the time limitation of 30 days within
which to bring an application was neither reasonable nor justifiable.
The state had not discharged the onus of proving that the limitation
placed on the rights of R, which necessitated their continuing
detention, was in the national interest or in the interest of national
security. In all the circumstances therefore, the Court found that the
continuing detention under 'close arrest' of the applicants for over 24
months without being brought to trial was in breach of their
constitutional rights.
Comment
While the issue of security was significant, the rights of the
applicants needed to be considered. They were also entitled to the
rights guaranteed in the CF as non-military citizens. To make an
argument in terms of national security, there had to be a clear
connection between the issue and R. Until that was established, and
that the threat was one which could be established in the
circumstances, the balance would favour human rights. It was also
significant that a considerable passage of time had elapsed during
which R had been held in custody. (The offence of misprision of treason
is committed where a person knows that treason is being planned or
committed and does not report it as soon as he can to a justice of the
peace or other authority. The offender does not need to consent to the
treason; mere knowledge is enough.)
RELIGION
RELIGION / CUSTOM /
DISCRIMINATION
Right to freedom of religion
subordinate to the cohesiveness of Tuvaluan society, as reflected in
constitutional recognition of Tuvaluan values and culture.
TEONEA v PULE O KAUPULE
&
NANUMAGA FALEKAUPULE
Law considered
Constitution of Tuvalu (CT)
Falekaupule Act (FA)
Facts
The applicant (T) sought various declarations from the court to allow T
to establish a new religious denomination. T had introduced and
registered the Tuvalu Brethren Church with himself as pastor and church
leader. An earlier decision of the Nanumaga
Falekaupule resolved to ban the introduction or spreading
of new religions on Nanumaga Island. Attempts by T to broadcast
messages on the radio were blocked by the Board of Tuvalu Media
Corporation, the government-owned media station. The Nanumaga Falekaupule
(F) is the island council and the Pule
o Kaupule are the council members.
F felt that the introduction of new faiths had tended to break up the
cohesiveness of the community, especially where adherents to the new
denominations refused to perform communal obligations because they were
contrary to their beliefs. F's resolution stated that new religions
were to be prohibited. F further decided that T should be banished from
his own island for his safety.
T sought the following declarations and orders:
- The decision by F hindered T's freedom of belief and
worship guaranteed under s 23(1) of the CT;
- The decision by F also prohibited T from exercising freedom
of expression, which breached s 24(1), and freedom of association,
which was contrary to s 25(1) of the CT;
- T's freedom of movement had been infringed when he was
banished from the island of Nanumaga; and
- T claimed that the decision was discriminatory and contrary
to s 27(1) of the CT, which stated that discrimination referred to the
treatment of different people in different ways because of, among other
things, their different religious beliefs, and therefore he was also
being discriminated against within the meaning of the CT.
Several sections of the CT (ss 23 to 25 and 29) provide that certain
rights are subject to 'Tuvaluan values, culture and tradition and
respect for human dignity'.
Issues
- Was freedom of religion subordinate to Tuvaluan culture
even if both
values were recognised in the CT?
- Whether F had breached the rights of T in considering the
effects that
a new denomination would have on the interests of the public.
Decision
The court declined to make the declarations sought by T, taking into
account the role of F in Tuvalu society and its function in preserving
social and cultural cohesion. There was a higher public interest that
justified the discriminatory nature of F's resolution because the
rights allegedly breached were subject to Tuvaluan values under s 27 of
the CT.
The CT was the supreme law and all other laws were to be interpreted
and applied subject to it. F relied on special provisions in the law
concerning the preservation of Tuvaluan values and customs as well as
the requirement for protection of the rights of those who might be
affected by the enforcement by another group of their rights.
The role of traditional leaders had already been recognised in the case
of Alama v Tefesa
[1987] SPLR 385, in that the authority of the traditional leaders
required them to make decisions to guide their people and look after
their welfare. The FA did not formalise the powers, duties and
obligations of F. Its traditional role of decision-making and the
manner in which it was done was untouched. However, an innovation
introduced by the FA was the making of by-laws subject to the
provisions of the CT. Resolutions made in relation to the general
management of the community were not by-laws and were unaffected by the
CT.
The resolution of F was in accordance with its traditional role and did
not involve the exercise of any power under the FA. There was clear
evidence that failure to act would allow a situation that would be
divisive and threatening to traditional values. As a result, F was
entitled to consider imposing such restrictions on T's rights, which
was justifiable discrimination.
Comment
Although T's rights were clearly breached, the court recognised a
higher obligation in the public interest to safeguard the tradition and
culture of Namumaga. However, international conventions as well as the
CT guarantee freedom of religion, expression, belief and movement.
Although these rights are not absolute, it is the duty of the party
limiting the right to justify the reason for doing so. In this case,
traditional and cultural rights were guaranteed by the CT. There was a
need to balance community interests with individual rights, and to
recognise the challenges small communities face in seeking to
accommodate the two. The pendulum may often shift in one direction or
the other depending on particular circumstances. From a purely human
rights perspective, advocates may have concerns about
this decision and the disadvantage suffered by T. What must be
remembered is that rights exist in a context and have to be considered
against that background.
RULE OF LAW
RULE OF LAW / AMNESTY
Amnesty not available to an
accused charged with murder under an Amnesty Act after unlawful removal
of a government for criminal acts committed in violation of
international humanitarian laws and human rights violation or abuses.
R v SU'U & ORS
International instruments
and law considered
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
International Covenant on Cultural and Political Rights (ICCPR)
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Amnesty Act 2000 (AA)
Penal Code [Cap 26] Revised edition 1997 (PC)
Criminal Procedure Code [Cap 7] (CPC)
Facts
This case arose out of political events emanating from the illegal
removal of Prime Minister Ulufa'alu in June 2000 by civilian military
forces battling for land and other resources. Two civilian militia
groups based on ethnic lines were pitted against each other. They were
the Malaita Eagle Force (MEF) from Malaita and the Isatabu Freedom
Movement (IFM) from Guadalcanal, in Guadalcanal.
S and others were charged with murder and attempted murder under s 20
of the PC. Each of the accused had the right, before being required to
plead to the information in the usual way, to enter a plea of autrefois acquit or
convict or pardon, under s 255 of the CPC.
S and others were members of the MEF who allegedly killed Francis Sale
while the victim was preparing food with friends.
S and others claimed immunity from prosecution under the AA 2000, which
was passed by parliament.
Issue
Whether S and others were immune from prosecution under the AA.
Decision
The court held that S and others were not immune from prosecution. The
amnesty or immunity from criminal prosecution referred to under the AA
did not apply to criminal acts that violated international humanitarian
law or to human rights violations or abuses. Where Francis Sale's life
was taken through an unlawful act, the accused in such a case could be
prosecuted and convicted of murder or manslaughter if found guilty by a
court of law.
The right to life was absolute. A killing amounted to murder or
manslaughter, which violated the right to life. Article 3 of the UDHR
proclaimed the right to life, liberty and security – a right to the
enjoyment of all other rights. Section 3(a) of the CSI gave every
person the right to life, liberty, security of the person and the
protection of the law. The right to life was an inalienable and
inviolable right under the CSI. That was further reinforced by
subsection
(5) of s 3 of the AA, which excluded from immunity persons who
committed criminal acts that violated human rights. This view was
supported by the ICCPR and its Optional Protocols, and the ICESCR.
As a result the accused were not immune from criminal prosecution. They
were required to plead to a charge of murder on the relevant date.
Comment
The amnesty and immunity conferred by the AA is not absolute. It does
not cover criminal acts that are characterised as being executed in
violation of international humanitarian law or human rights. The extent
of the protection afforded is determined on a case-by-case basis where
it is pleaded as a defence. The AA recognises the global applicability
of human rights in limiting amnesty consistent with international
standards. Although in this case the court confined itself to a
consideration of the UDHR, the fact that it made passing reference to
the other instruments cited is indicative of the globalisation of human
rights. Moreover, it was recognition that Solomon Islands was part of
the international community of nations. This was so despite the fact
that Solomon Islands had not ratified the ICCPR and its Optional
Protocols, which were specifically mentioned.
This was one of the first attempts by a Solomon Islands court to apply
non-ratified conventions. The three cases arising out of the same set
of facts signal a departure from traditional non-enforceability
approaches to international law in Solomon Islands and the growing
influence of international human rights law on domestic courts. Solomon
Islands does not have a provision similar to s 43(2) of the
Constitution of Fiji, which incorporates international law by
reference.
RULE OF LAW / DEMOCRACY
Application for constitutional
relief applies vertically rather than horizontally.
ULUFA'ALU v ATTORNEY GENERAL
& MALAITA EAGLE FORCE & ORS
Law considered
Constitution of Solomon Islands (CSI)
Facts
This case arose out of political events emanating from the illegal
removal of Prime Minister Ulufa'alu in June 2000 by civilian military
forces battling for land and other resources. Two civilian militia
groups based on ethnic lines were pitted against each other. They were
the Malaita Eagle Force (MEF) from Malaita and the Isatabu Freedom
Movement (IFM) from Guadalcanal, in Guadalcanal.
The applicant (U) sought a declaration that his resignation as Prime
Minister was not voluntary but made under duress and protest. As a
result of harassment, intimidation and threats issued against his
parliamentary supporters between 5 and 30 June 2000, the meeting of
Parliament on 30 June 2000 was perverted by S, D and N (the second,
third and fourth defendants) to the extent that no valid and
constitutional exercise of the power to elect a prime minister
occurred. The purported election of S on 30 June 2000 was therefore
invalid. U accordingly sought declarations to the effect that he was
entitled to continue as caretaker prime minister under s 34(4) of the
CSI until a valid meeting was convened to elect a new prime minister.
Issues
- Whether U had locus
standi in a representative capacity.
- Whether the matter was non-justiciable.
- Whether Chapter II (Bill of Rights) of the CSI applied
horizontally between citizens or only vertically between the citizen
and the state.
Decision
The court dismissed the application and found against U on all three
grounds
Under s 18 of the CSI, U could only institute proceedings in respect of
himself and no one else. U had no locus to bring an action for redress
in a representative or relator capacity. Those members of parliament
and their families who had been intimidated and harassed had equal
rights to come to court for redress. U had no fundamental right to be
protected as prime minister under the CSI. The rights protected were
his individual rights as set out in Chapter II.
Paragraph 10 of schedule 2 of the CSI was conclusive on the issue of
non-justiciability. It provided that any dispute arising out of or in
connection with any election meeting or the election of the prime
minister under the provision should be determined by the Governor
General. His determination was final and not justiciable. The alleged
threats that were received prior to 30 June 2000 were connected
thereto. If U had concerns about the validity of the meeting he should
have raised them with the Governor General. Paragraph 6(3) of Schedule
2 provided the election meeting should be in camera. U could
have raised his concerns then. By remaining silent he effectively
waived
his right to question the election process and acquiesced in the
result. He was therefore bound by it. As to the application of Chapter
II, it should be construed as applying on a vertical basis only. U
could therefore not proceed against S, D and R in the circumstances
because Chapter II of the CSI concerned the relationships between the
state and the individual.
Comment
This case unequivocally endorses the orthodox view that human rights
only apply vertically to bind the state vis-à-vis its citizens and not
horizontally, i.e. between individuals and between non- government
entities and individuals in the private sector. It also cited
authorities from the Privy Council and other jurisdictions to reinforce
this approach. In the absence of express provisions, the rights were to
be construed as applying vertically only. (See the summary of Loumia v DPP
discussed in detail earlier in this volume.) The contrary argument is
that if the organs of state (i.e. the executive, parliament and the
judiciary) are bound by bill of rights provisions, then they
correspondingly have a duty to uphold and apply those rights in the
discharge of their functions and responsibilities. Compare this
situation with the Canada
Trust case14,
where the terms of a private trust were
struck down as offending human rights, and with Khumalo& Ors v Holomisa
(South Africa) reported in Part II of this volume, where the court held
that the right to free speech had to be applied horizontally in the
light of its critical significance and the potential for abuse by
parties other than (and as well as) the state.
RULE OF LAW /
INDEPENDENCE OF DPP
Institution of criminal
proceedings by parties other than the Director of Public Prosecutions
is illegal.
KHERA & ORS v FIJI
INDEPENDENT
COMMISSION AGAINST CORRUPTION
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Winter J |
Criminal Case No. HBM 034 of 2007 |
|
17 August 2007 |
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Criminal Procedure Code (CPC)
Facts
This case arose out of the post coup
d'etat events of 5 December 2006. The military/interim
administration of Commodore V Bainimarama established a Fiji
Independent Commission Against Corruption (FICAC) by decree under
Promulgation No.11 of 2007. FICAC then attempted to prosecute an
alleged murder. It was alleged that K murdered Kamlesh Narandass Nand
in September 2006. It was further alleged that K was aided and abetted
by those named in the complaint.
FICAC sought more time to file information and provide disclosures. It
was argued that its authority was drawn from s 2A (1) and (2) of the
FICAC Promulgation, which allowed it to investigate and prosecute
offences whether committed before or after its creation.
Issue
Did FICAC have the authority to proceed and request an extension of
time to file information and provide disclosures, i.e. did FICAC have
legitimacy and therefore power to prosecute the murder?
Decision
The court declined the application, remanded K and others on bail and
remitted the case to the Magistrate's Court. It was held further that
the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), under s 114(4) of the CF,
was the only constitutional officer with the authority to:
- institute and conduct
criminal proceedings;
- take over criminal
proceedings that have been instituted by another person or authority;
and
- discontinue
at any stage before judgment is delivered, criminal proceedings
instituted or conducted by the Director of Public Prosecutions or
another person or authority.
Under s 233 of the CPC, only the DPP could file information in the High
Court. FICAC drew its powers from Promulgation No.11 of 2007 published
five months after the military takeover of the government.
Apart from the constitutional difficulty, there was a procedural one as
well. In usual circumstances, the DPP commenced proceedings in the
Magistrate's Court. There, the expedited process for preliminary
hearings triggered a series of events that ensured the DPP disclosed
all relevant material, files and information within the statutory
period.
Comment
The decision underscores the importance of constitutional safeguards as
a check on arbitrariness and the improper use of power. FICAC was
established by promulgation (prima
facie illegal) and given wide reaching powers of search,
seizure and prosecution to combat corruption. However, little thought
was given to harmonising those provisions with the functions and duties
of the DPP as the appropriate authority under the CF to institute
criminal
proceedings. Given the CF was asserted to be still intact, the powers
vested in the DPP overrode those of FICAC. This was clearly an
oversight in drafting the attempted legislation. It also reflected
confusion on the part of FICAC in attempting to pursue what was clearly
a criminal case rather than one of corrupt practices.
RULE OF LAW / EMERGENCY
POWERS / LIBERTY
Freedom of liberty under the
constitution cannot be extinguished unless through certain limitations
regarded as reasonable and justifiable in a free and democratic society.
IN RE NIKHIL NAIDU
Supreme Court |
Fiji Islands |
Rooney J |
[1987] 33 FLR 100 |
|
17 July 1987 |
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji 1970
Public Emergency Regulations 1987 (PER)
Facts
This case followed the military coup
d'etat of Lt Col Rabuka in 1987,
during a time in which the constitution was suspended and Fiji was
under military rule. The applicant, a female lawyer, applied under the
CF for a writ of habeas
corpus in respect of the detention of her
brother-in-law, Nikhil Naidu (NN). NN had surrendered himself
voluntarily to the police on 9 July 1987 after having learnt that the
police wished to interview him. The applicant was unable to ascertain
the reason for NN's detention. NN was being detained under s 17 of the
PER after an anonymous phone call was made to the authorities that a
bomb had been placed on an aircraft leaving for Auckland. NN was
arrested along with 16 others, all of whom worked for Sedgwick (Fiji)
Limited to which the call was traced. NN was detained until trial even
though there were no charges laid against him.
The police, as respondents, were of the view that they had the right to
detain NN under s 17 of the PER. Despite the fact that they had
insufficient evidence to charge NN, the police wanted NN in custody so
that his house could be searched for evidence linking him to the
telephone call.
Issue
Whether the detention of NN by the police under the authority of the
PER was legal in light of his right to liberty under the CF 1970.
Decision
The court ordered that NN be released forthwith. The police could not
under the PER arrest and detain persons with impunity; the right to
personal liberty granted by the constitution
still existed. The court noted that a proclamation had proclaimed a
period of public emergency. The PER under s 17 gave power to the police
to detain suspected persons; however, the guidelines were set out in R
v Halliday (1917) AC 260.
The onus was on the police to prove that the arrest and detainment of
NN was lawful. There was no reasonable suspicion on which to arrest NN
and it was the duty of the arresting officers to give reasons for the
detention of NN. Section 16(c) of the CF (1970) was designed for the
protection of detained persons and read:
… shall as soon as practicable
and in any case not more than seven days after the commencement of his
detention, be furnished with a statement in writing, in a language he
understands, specifying in detail the grounds upon which he is
detained.
The police admitted that the said constitutional requirement was not
complied with, even though it was reasonably practicable. The court
observed that although there were some inroads made into the right of
personal liberty, to the extent that a law existed authorising the
detaining of persons during a period of public emergency, the measures
taken should be reasonably justifiable for the purpose of dealing with
the situation that existed in Fiji at that time. The PER did not
extinguish people's constitutional rights. Subject to lawful
exceptions, the right to personal freedom remained. Section 5(2) of the
constitution required that a person who was arrested or detained should
be informed as soon as reasonably practical, in a language that he
understood, of the reasons for his arrest or detention. This re-stated
the common law and was a mandatory condition of arrest. Even if
circumstances existed that may have excused it, it was still the duty
of the person conducting the arrest to give the information at the
first reasonable opportunity after the arrest.
Comment
Despite this case being an 'old case', it has been included in this
volume due to its significance in light of recent events in Tonga,
Solomon Islands and Fiji. In a free and democratic society, limitation
of a certain right should only be permitted where it is absolutely
necessary. In this case, the limitations on NN were not necessary and
the police could have used other means during their period of
investigation. Certain procedures that were reasonably practicable were
not followed by the respondents. The proclamation of a public emergency
does not give the authorities power to limit certain rights according
to their discretion. As long as the CF exists, the right to personal
liberty should be enjoyed by all persons.
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
SEXUAL HARASSMENT /
UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Woman dismissed after continuous
sexual harassment may sue in tort law for unlawful dismissal and
damages.
KATEA v NIUTAO KAUPULE &
SATUPA
Law considered
Common law
Facts
The plaintiff (K) sought damages for the tort of sexual assault and
breach of her constitutional rights against the defendants (NK and S).
K was a married woman from Funafuti married to a man in Niutao. The
Niutao Kaupule (NK) is a traditional local island council. Each island
in Tuvalu has an island council; the NK is the council for the island
for Niutao.
K was appointed as a clerk for the NK and her superior was the second
defendant (S). In 2001, S began making sexual advances towards K. As
time passed, he asked K for sexual intercourse. Another colleague
witnessed these advances in which K angrily told S to leave her alone.
The harassment continued to the extent that S approached K at home
asking her for sexual intercourse, which was also witnessed by a male
neighbour. Late in 2002, K was allowed Christmas leave only after she
consented to have sexual intercourse with S upon her return. After her
leave she told S that there was no possible way she would agree. In
2003, after she had taken two days off to look after her sick daughter,
K received a letter of dismissal from S for lack of competence.
The defendants filed a joint statement of defence denying all the
allegations of sexual harassment, but admitted to improper procedure in
the termination of K's employment.
Issue
Was the dismissal of K fair according to law?
Decision
The court held that there was enough evidence to prove the sexual
assault and that the defendants were liable for unfair dismissal.
Although the civil standard of proof was based on a balance of
probabilities, the gravity of the allegation required a higher degree
of probability than many civil claims. However, the evidence by K
satisfied the standard of
proof. The tort protected an individual not only from physical harm,
but also from any interference with his or her person that was
offensive to a person's reasonable sense of honour and dignity. This
was far more than simply an attack on K's dignity, although that in
itself was an important factor. It continued for a very long period of
time and S's actions were clearly an abuse of his position. The true
reason for K's dismissal was her continued refusal to succumb to the
advances and threats of S, notwithstanding the threat of dismissal. K
had worked in the same post with virtually no complaints about
competence. The allegation made in dismissing her was unfair.
Consequently, both the NK and S were liable for assault and for
unlawful dismissal. Damages were to be assessed subsequently.
Comment
The court dealt with the issue purely in terms of the tort of assault
and unfair dismissal. There is no formal civil or criminal offence of
sexual harassment in Tuvalu. The case is indicative of the increasing
confidence of Tuvalu women in pursuing legal remedies in cases of
sexual harassment. The constitutional arguments were not considered,
the applicable law being sufficient to cover the situation. A
constitutional argument could have been advanced using the CT and CEDAW
in a similar manner to that advanced in the Vishaka case.15 Tuvalu has
ratified CEDAW.
There remains a residual reluctance to apply human rights principles
and standards to cases that more readily fit into general law. Compare
this with Vishaka's
case, where the Supreme Court of India relied on
the Indian Constitution and international human rights instruments to
formulate sexual harassment guidelines in the workplace where there was
a lacuna in the law. In Chopra's
case, discussed in Part II of this
volume, the argument was also initially framed in tort. When the case
reached the Supreme Court, it upheld the appeal against the offender's
reinstatement in terms of the violation of the rights of the
complainant under the Indian Constitution.
SPEECH
SPEECH / DISCRIMINATION
Freedom of expression includes
the freedom to communicate those expressions to others.
• Restricting access to free media on the grounds of political belief
is unconstitutional.
EFI v ATTORNEY GENERAL
Law considered
Constitution of Samoa (CS)
Government Proceedings Act 1974 (GPA)
Facts
The plaintiff (E) was the leader of the opposition. E claimed that the
state was denying him access to the state-owned television station,
radio and newspaper. Therefore his right to free speech was being
violated by the state. The government argued that E would use the
state-owned media to make anti-government statements. E claimed that he
had every right to use media owned by the state and to make whatever
statements he chose to make. Any restriction would be a breach of
freedom of expression and of his right to be treated equally under the
CS despite his political views. E also argued that the government put
pressure on privately owned media to deny him access to private sector
media.
The Attorney General, representing the state, responded that the right
of E to express his ideas had not been infringed because he could have
used non-state owned media. The state claimed that it reserved the
right to determine who was allowed access to the government media. The
Attorney General also said that the government had an existing policy
of exercising 'caution with those who stir up the country'. On these
bases, E was refused access to express his political views through the
government media.
E sought an order to lift the ban on his use of the government media.
Issue
Having regard to articles 13 (protecting free speech) and 15
(protecting non- discrimination) of the CS, were the actions of the
state infringing E's constitutional rights?
Decision
The court held that the restricted access to the government media was a
breach of E's right to free speech and non-discrimination, contrary to
articles 13 and 15 of the CS. It ordered the lifting of the restriction
upon E or any member of his party from having access to government
media. The common law amplified that the right to free speech included
the freedom to distribute information. This included the freedom to
propagate ideas and that freedom was secured by freedom of circulation.
Television was a powerful medium for communication of ideas. Freedom of
expression therefore included the freedom to use such a medium.
A need for the authority's consent before one could use such a medium
was a hindrance to that freedom. The efficacy of representative
government depended also on free communication of such matters between
all persons, groups and other bodies of communication. Therefore
freedom of communication was akin to, if not identical with, freedom of
speech and expression conferred and preserved in the CS.
Emphasis was placed on article 15(1), which states that all persons
were equal before the law and article 15(2). Read together, this meant
that the state could not subject E to any restriction on the grounds of
political opinion. Any restriction would be discriminatory against E.
Comment
The court upheld freedom of communication in relation to public
officers and political discussion as guaranteed by articles 13 and 15
of the CS. It drew parallels with the matai (chiefly)
system and the Fono
(village council), which had 'fostered and developed the roles of
people having the opportunity to become aware of important public
issues and to learn about their leaders' purpose in relation to them'.
There was recognition of the fact that the dissemination of ideas was
critical in a democracy and that any attempt to limit this right on the
basis of state prerogative was invalid. This was a salutary lesson for
those in authority because the apparatus of the state belongs to the
people and, together with its powers, is held in trust for them and
exercised on their behalf for the public good.
Editors' note: In this
case the court took judicial notice of Hansard statements recording the
views of the Prime Minister (also Minister for Broadcasting at the
relevant time) during parliamentary debate. The court said these
statements could be brought in as 'insight into the PM's state of mind
about the issue'.
SPEECH / DISCRIMINATION
Criticism of the judiciary by a
lawyer in these circumstances was within right to freedom of expression.
INTERIM ATTORNEY GENERAL v
DRAUNIDALO
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Coventry J |
Miscellaneous Action No. 0053 of 2007 |
|
20 November 2007 |
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Facts
This case arose out of the coup
d'etat of 5 December 2006 in which the Republic of Fiji
Military Forces removed the elected Government of Laisenia Qarase. The
Interim Attorney General (IAG) sought an order of committal in contempt
proceedings brought 'in the public interest' against the respondent
(D), the Vice-President of the Fiji Law Society (FLS) and a member of
the FLS Council. D had said inter
alia in a television interview that: 'The confidence of lawyers in
the judicial system, let alone the public, is shattered.'
After a directions hearing, the parties filed affidavits and the matter
was listed for hearing. Although the IAG had asserted he was bringing
the suit partly at the instigation of senior members of the profession,
only one affidavit in support by an officer from his chambers was
filed. D for her part was able to rely on several affidavits from
various members of the profession. Subsequently, the IAG sought to
withdraw the application ‘in the public interest' although there was no
material change in circumstances.
Issues
- Was there a proper basis for discontinuance of the contempt
proceedings against D?
- Should indemnity costs be awarded to D?
- Was D able to criticise the judiciary in these
circumstances by exercising her right to free speech guaranteed under
the CF?
Decision
Leave was granted to withdraw the proceedings. However the proceedings
were brought and discontinued for ‘an ulterior purpose' and the justice
of the case required indemnity costs. There was nothing to show D was
doing anything other than exercising her right to freedom of
expression. Indemnity costs were assessed at F$20,000.
The IAG was irresponsible in bringing these proceedings given that on
14 May 2007, when D made her comments, there was a genuine and
responsible debate concerning the administration of justice in Fiji.
All the facts deposed to in the affidavit filed on behalf of D laid the
foundation for the comments she allegedly made and, under the Chaudhry
test formulated by the Fiji Court of Appeal, would be ‘fair comment'.
They would have been known to the IAG or could have with reason and
diligence been ascertained. However, he was unable to advance any
arguments to meet the defence of ‘fair comment'.
There was a delay in bringing the proceedings to a conclusion and the
IAG should have acted expeditiously given the nature and seriousness of
the proceedings. As for the proceedings themselves, it was difficult to
understand how it was in the public interest to bring contempt of court
proceedings against D, and with no material change it was in the public
interest to discontinue.
For his part, the IAG's criticism of the President of the Court of
Appeal as published on 11 June 2007 clearly implied improper motives on
the part of a senior judge. It was beyond understanding how the IAG
could put D at risk of a fine and imprisonment when he had used
stronger words a few days earlier. Given the constitutional right to
freedom of expression and the Chaudhry test case, a proper assessment
of the case before instituting proceedings would have determined there
was little chance of success.
Comment
While the action of the case deals with procedural matters concerning
leave to withdraw and award of indemnity costs, its real significance
lies in its wider implications for free speech and the exercise of a
court's discretion to punish for contempt. Against the background of a
military coup and non-elected regime, the court embarked on a careful
and detailed examination of the applicant's motives in instituting
proceedings. Given constitutional safeguards about freedom of
expression and judicial conformity on issues, as well as the actual
context of the case, it was able to establish the respondent was within
her right to make the remarks she did. The court had no hesitation in
awarding indemnity costs against the applicant in light of the
institution of these proceedings.
SPEECH / MEDIA FREEDOM
Restrictive law dealing with
media freedom of expression was unconstitutional.
TAIONE v KINGDOM OF TONGA
Law considered
Constitution of Tonga (Amendment) Act 2003 (CT)
Media Operators Act 2003 (MOA)
Newspaper Act 2003 (NA)
Facts
The publishers of Taini
‘o Tonga (TOT) challenged the constitutionality of the
Newspaper Act 2003 (NA) and the Media Operators Act 2003 (MOA), both of
which allowed cabinet ministers to identify and list certain
publications as seditious.
Clause 7 of the 1875 Constitution gave generous protection to the media
and journalistic opinion providing that:
No law shall be enacted to
restrict this liberty. There shall be freedom of speech and of the
press forever but nothing in this clause shall be held to outweigh the
law of defamation, official secrets or the laws for the protection of
the King and the Royal Family.
To ensure that these acts above would not be ruled unconstitutional by
the judiciary, the government took an unprecedented measure by amending
clause 7 of the constitution through the Constitution of Tonga
(Amendment) Act 2003 (CT). The Constitution Amendment Act added the
following provisions:
7. (1) It shall be lawful for
all people to speak, write and print their opinions and no law shall
ever be enacted to restrict this liberty. There shall be freedom of
speech and of the press forever but nothing in this clause shall be
held to outweigh the law for slander or the laws for the protection of
the King and the Royal Family.
(2) It shall be lawful,
in addition to the exceptions set out in sub-clause (1), to enact such
laws as are considered necessary or expedient in the public interest,
national security, public order, morality, cultural traditions of the
Kingdom, privileges of the Legislative Assembly and to provide for
contempt of Court and the commission of any offence.
(3) It shall be lawful
to enact laws to regulate the operation of any media.
Nearly one year after these three acts were passed, Taione, Akilisi
Pohiva and around 150 other plaintiffs challenged their validity by way
of judicial review, or alternatively, that the legislation in its
attempt to limit liberty was inconsistent with clause 79 of the
Constitution, which outlined the proper procedures for amending the CT.
The Supreme Court adopted the following guidelines:
This court must –
- first pay
proper attention to the words actually used in context;
- avoid doing
so literally or rigidly;
- look also at
the whole Constitution;
- consider
further the background circumstances when the Constitution was granted
in 1875;
- bear in mind
established principles of international laws;
- finally, be
flexible to allow for changing circumstances.
The Crown argued that the concept of freedom of speech was peculiar to
Tongan culture and that poto
(codes of appropriate behaviour) was essential for maintaining Tongan
values of group paramountcy over the individual. Ultimately this was
for the benefit of social cohesion. The Crown also argued that media
restrictions were necessary to preserve a balance between the right of
media to comment and ethical journalism.
The Crown also said that the court had no right to review the
Constitution Amendment Act because only the parliament had powers to
decide if an amendment affected laws of liberty. They then argued that
the entrenchment clause was not absolute and that the Constitution
Amendment Act was compliant with the previous clause 7 because it only
limited speech where exceptions had previously applied.
Issues
- Were the procedures implemented in enacting the
Constitution Amendment Act consistent with those called for by clause
79 of the Constitution? And if so, did the entrenching provision of
clause 79 prohibit this particular amendment because it affected the
laws of liberty?
- Was it the intentions of the founders of the Tongan
Constitution to entrench the values of Tongan culture or was it the
intention to invest Tonga with a modern western style constitution and
to uphold democratic values?
Decision
Rejecting the Crown's arguments, the court held that parts of the new
clause 7(2) of the TC were inconsistent with the entrenching clauses 7
and 79 and were void in terms of clause
82. Clause 7(3) was not inconsistent and so was valid provided it was
subject to the implied term ‘… necessary in terms of pressing social
need'. They were no more than proportionate to the legitimate aim being
pursued and did not involve prior restraint of freedom of expression.
Ultimately it was the court's sole responsibility to interpret and
apply the constitution and determine if the legislature had acted
within its boundaries. Citing cases from the United States, Zimbabwe,
Jamaica and Britain, as well as referral to international sources of
common law, widened the jurisprudence of Tonga in allowing an array of
potential legal sources to be considered. This was a departure from
previous Tongan judicial opinion,
which had rejected the use of American law. Cited also were Voltaire,
the poems of John Milton and Blackstone in his Commentaries on the Laws of
England.
The use of common law outside of Tonga was justified with referral to
King George Tupou
I. It was the King's intention to adopt the greatest freedoms enjoyed
by all ‘Christian civilised peoples', and to achieve this goal, he had
utilised the Constitutions of New South Wales and Hawaii.
The fact that the court was to some extent rejecting the argument that
Tongan cultural values should override ‘foreign' values was addressed:
Nor am I able to accept that
freedom of speech is simply a western notion, as I believe it is now a
principle accepted or valued in many places throughout the world: one
only has to look at countries where it is an issue to see that now it
is no longer espoused by western people alone.
The court then looked to the language of the entrenchment clause:
It shall be lawful for the
Legislative Assembly to discuss amendments to the Constitution provided
that such amendments shall not affect the law of liberty, the
succession to the Throne and the titles and hereditary estates of the
nobles.
The court interpreted this clause to strictly prevent any amendments to
the constitution except those consistent with the TC. Thus, the Tongan
legislature had powers to enact laws only according to the terms of
clause 79. Clause 79 entrenched provisions in relation to liberty and
so the legislature could only make laws affecting liberty under the
powers granted by the constitution.
Comment
The Government of Tonga has tried on other occasions to restrain the
right to free speech. It has violated this right by imprisoning
journalists and other ‘critics of government' from the early 1990s.
This case found that freedom of speech was protected under clause 7 of
the constitution and that Acts which sought to amend the entrenched
right to liberty were unconstitutional unless there were extreme
circumstances threatening the safety and security of Tongans. Attempts
to uphold the amendments in terms of Tongan tradition and culture were
rejected by the court. It pointed to the reformist initiatives and
intentions of George Tupou I in promulgating the constitution in the
late nineteenth century. The principle of judicial review was also
clearly stated as a principle of Tongan common law.
SPEECH / MOVEMENT /
DISCRIMINATION
Military government ordered not
to interfere with right to free speech, movement and assembly of a
human rights activist.
HEFFERNAN v
BAINIMARAMA, RFMF
& AG
Law considered
Constitution of Fiji (CF)
Court of Appeal Rules
Facts
This case arose out of the
coup d'etat of 5 December 2006 in which the Republic of
Fiji Military Forces removed the elected government of Laisenia Qarase.
The defendants (B and others) applied for a stay order pending appeal
on an earlier order granted to the plaintiff (H). H, who was the
director of a human rights NGO, had expressed her concern about the
actions of the first and second defendants. Following her public
statements criticising the regime, she was taken involuntarily to the
police station, questioned and held without charge.
On 20 April 2007, the court issued an interlocutory injunction that
restrained B from further interfering directly or indirectly with H's
freedom of speech, assembly and movement. The same order was extended
to H's legal advisers. The arguments were technical but had a bearing
on H's human rights. H submitted that the interlocutory decision was
not a judgment capable of being stayed as there were no coercive orders
behind it. Therefore the decision appealed from did not require the
defendants to do anything.
Issue
Could the defendants apply for a stay on an interlocutory decision that
did not require B to take positive steps and further protect the rights
of the plaintiff?
Decision
The court refused the stay order. It had made no final orders against
B. The orders given on April were interlocutory orders. Fiji's Court of
Appeal sitting dates was also considered. Unlike other jurisdictions,
Fiji did not have a full-time Court of Appeal. The appeal, if heard,
would require an uncertain period of waiting time, resulting in further
delay in the hearing of the matter. Furthermore, B was not required to
take any positive steps from the earlier decision. It only prevented B
from interfering with the plaintiff's rights. There were no predictable
harmful effects of the decision on the defendants, especially as they
had stated that they had no desire to intervene in H's rights.
Comment
Although ultimately a technical argument, the court gave clear and
compelling directions regarding H's rights to speech and free movement
at a time when travel bans were being imposed against human rights
activists and anyone being outspoken or criticising the regime. The
court properly confined itself to the facts of H's case but it was also
fully conversant with the prevailing political climate in which public
dissent was discouraged. The role of the courts in such circumstances
assumes critical importance where ordinary avenues of accountability
available under an elected government are absent. At the time of
publication, those wishing to travel abroad were required to pay a $12
fee to the Department of Immigration to determine whether they were on
the travel blacklist.
TORTURE
TORTURE / MILITARY FORCES
/ DAMAGES
Amount of damages for a tort of
assault in a case involving torture by soldiers could take into account
the behaviour of the military forces.
SINGH v PONIJESE,
ATTORNEY
GENERAL & ORS
High Court |
Fiji Islands |
Coventry J |
Civil Action No. 0371 of 1993 |
|
4 September 2007 |
Law considered
Common law
Facts
On 24 October 1990, three years after the military coup d'etat of Lt
Col Rabuka, with an interim government in place, Dr Singh (S) was
kidnapped by five serving soldiers of the Republic of Fiji Military
Forces (RFMF). The soldiers were members of the Special Operations
Security Unit (SOSU). The unit's purpose was to ‘collect and collate
information about anyone or anything likely to destabilise the
country'. S had allegedly taken part in the public burning of the new
military-promulgated 1990 Constitution a few days earlier.
S was taken by the defendant soldiers of the RFMF to a remote spot. A
hood was placed over his head and tied tightly, making it difficult for
him to breathe. He was tied to a tree and beaten. He was unable to
breathe properly. Later a vehicle tyre was burnt close to him and he
was told that ‘we will roast you alive'. At some stage as darkness fell
he was unhooded, untied and his hands were placed over the roots of a
tree. His hands and fingers were then
beaten by a metal pipe. He was beaten, questioned and tortured for a
total of 12 hours. He was then abandoned and left to find his own way
home.
On 22 November 1990, the soldiers pleaded guilty, were sentenced to 12
months' imprisonment each, suspended for 15 months and had to pay a
fine of $340 each. The leadership of the RFMF offered no apology and
said that these actions were not authorised and that S was charged with
sedition, a charge later withdrawn. At November 2006, there was still
no apology under the new (and present) leadership; four of the five
defendants were still serving soldiers in the RFMF.
On 25 June 1993, S commenced proceedings seeking general, special and
exemplary damages. Judgment by default was entered subsequently and on
1 November 2006, judgment was given for S. Assessment of damages was
delivered on 4 September 2007.
Issue
What was the amount of damages to be awarded and on what basis?
Decision
The court awarded F$250,000, comprised of $75,000 for pain and
suffering, $75,000 for loss of career and $100,000 for exemplary
damages. Loss of career was treated as special damages and interest was
to run from 24 October 1990 at 2.5 per cent. Interest for the
compensatory and exemplary awards was set at 5 per cent from the date
of judgment.
The trauma S suffered, as well as the memories of the episode, recovery
from post traumatic stress disorder and the effect on his relationship
with his family, were all considered in assessing the award for pain
and suffering.
Damages for loss of career were considered in terms of detriment to S's
career. The assault closed off his career options at the University of
the South Pacific for several years. Further, for several years
afterwards the apprehension he felt as a result of his experiences
precluded any return home to Fiji. Assessing the sum in broad terms,
the court awarded the same amounts as for pain and suffering,
suggesting some equivalence
Exemplary damages were awarded for punishing, arbitrary, oppressive or
unconstitutional action by servants of the state. They were meant to
uphold and respect the rule of law. The actions of the first five
defendants were oppressive, arbitrary and unconstitutional. The
military was vicariously liable in the circumstances. No apology was
offered and nor was disciplinary action taken. The policy
considerations that Commanders and senior officers were to have proper
control of those under their command at all times, and that human
rights and the rule of law were upheld, had to be reflected in the
award.
Comment
Although S's human rights were clearly breached, his claim was dealt
with purely in tort. S deliberately filed his claim under tort and not
under human rights law, which generally attracts lesser damages. S also
rejected the involvement of the Fiji Human Rights Commission, as did
the court in a separate order. In making the award, it was the court's
stated intention to take into account the reprehensible conduct of
officers of the state. The justification for the amount assessed under
exemplary damages was driven by the imperative
to check the power of the state by making it accountable for its
officers' actions. Reference was made to upholding human rights and the
rule of law.
Interestingly, while the separate judgment dated 1 November 2006
justifying the liability of the state made no reference to human
rights, it was raised by the court itself collaterally in assessing
exemplary damages in this case. Part of the reason for finding the
state's conduct so heinous, and assessing damages accordingly, was the
blatant manner in which S's rights had been violated. Thus, although
the action was brought in tort, the court used the language of human
rights to legitimise the amount of damages awarded, which it asserted
in tortuous terms.
This case is a salutary reminder of the need for a strong bill of
rights, for international human rights standards to be maintained, and
for a vibrant and vigilant human rights NGO community to monitor
standards at all times.
PART
II: INTERNATIONAL CASES REFERRING TO CONSTITUTIONAL
BILLS OF RIGHTS, HUMAN RIGHTS CONVENTIONS, STANDARDS AND PRINCIPLES
DISCRIMINATION
DISCRIMINATION / NATIONAL
ORIGIN
Interpretation of human rights
undertaken in the light of international principles and experience as
contained in the relevant conventions and covenants.
NORTHERN REGIONAL HEALTH
AUTHORITY v
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
High Court |
New Zealand |
Cartwright J |
(1998) 2 NZLR 218; (2007) 2 CHRLD 192 |
International instruments
and law considered
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
(CERD)
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
Bill of Rights Act 1990 (BRA)
Human Rights Act 1993 (HRA)
Health and Disability Services Act 1993 (HDSA)
Facts
The plaintiff regional health authority (P) was concerned about the
increase in the number of general practitioners and their
over-concentration in some areas. P limited the issue of s 51 notices,
which regulated the P's formation of contractual relations with general
practitioners, to only general practitioners with undergraduate medical
qualifications obtained from a New Zealand university. The Human Rights
Commission claimed that the s 51 notice policy constituted indirect
discrimination on the grounds of national origin contrary to s 19 of
the BRA. It also infringed the right to freedom from unlawful
discrimination contrary to s 22(1)(a) and (b) of the HRA by virtue of
the operation of s 65 of that act, which prohibited indirect
discrimination.
Issue
Whether the s 51 notice policy constituted indirect discrimination
against medical practitioners who had not qualified in New Zealand.
Decision
The court declared the s 51 notice unlawful for the following reasons:
- That it was a crude instrument with which to limit the
number of general practitioners and their over concentration. There was
no good reason for the policy, based on objectively justified factors
which were unrelated to any prohibited ground of discrimination;
- While s 19 of the BRA did not explicitly mention indirect
discrimination, it had to be read broadly and against the framework of
international conventions that the country had ratified such as CERD,
which defined discrimination as including any distinction that was
discriminatory in purpose or effect, thus encompassing indirect
discrimination;
- That while the s 51 notice policy did not explicitly
discriminate against foreign- trained medical practitioners based on
their national origin, the majority of those who were entitled to
practice in New Zealand as of right were of New Zealand origin.
Therefore it could readily be inferred that those otherwise entitled to
practice in the country but who were excluded by reason of the notice
policy were of non- New Zealand origin. Consequently, the policy had
the effect of treating the second group differently.
Comment
The interpretation of human rights legislation should be read liberally
in light of international principles and experience as stated in the
relevant conventions, particularly where they form the basis for
domestic legislation. In applying the relevant principles, the courts
examine the context and consequences of legislation to determine
whether the particular principles have been breached. The process
involves looking beyond the legal structures to ascertain whether there
has been differential treatment, and if so, whether that is justifiable
where a breach of human rights on the basis of discrimination or
discriminatory protection is claimed. There is also a recognition that
indirect discrimination is a more insidious and prevalent practice. To
that end, the courts are inclined to adopt a more assertive approach to
the issue as was adopted in this case.
FREE
SPEECH
FREE SPEECH /
APPLICABILITY OF RIGHTS
Defence of reasonable publication
establishes a proper balance with the right to freedom of expression.
Rights may be enforceable
horizontally as well as vertically.
KHUMALO & ORS v HOLOMISA
Constitutional Court |
South Africa |
Chaskalson CJ, Langa DCJ, |
[2002] ZACC 12; 2002 (5) SA 401 |
Ackermann, Goldstone, Kriegler, Madala, |
14 June 2002 |
Ngcobo, Sachs & O'Regan JJ, |
|
Du Plessis & Skweyiya AJJ |
|
Law considered
Constitution of South Africa (CSA)
Rules of the Constitution Court (RCC)
Facts
K and N were sued by H, a well-known South African politician and
leader of a political party, for defamation arising out of the
publication of an article in their newspaper which stated inter alia
that H was involved with a gang of bank robbers and that he was under
police investigation. The applicants relied on s 16 of the CSA
protecting the right to freedom of expression. Alternatively, they
cited the common law, asserting that it should be developed to promote
the spirit, purport and objects of the bill of rights as contemplated
by s 39(2) of the CSA. They claimed the contents were matters of public
interest. H's failure to allege that the statement was false (he was
not required to do so by the common law of defamation) rendered the
claim invalid as it failed to disclose a cause of action.
The High Court dismissed their application and they sought leave to
appeal, requiring inter
alia the Constitutional Court to consider the
constitutionality of the law of defamation and whether the right to
free expression had direct horizontal application as contemplated by s
8(2) of the CSA. They also required consideration of whether it was in
the interests of justice to hear an appeal pursuant to s 167(6) of the
CSA, on a technical issue to do with a ‘decision on a constitutional
matter' as contemplated by Rule 18 of the RCC.
Issues
- Whether it was in the best interests of justice to hear the
appeal against the dismissal of an exception by the High Court and
whether such a dismissal constituted a ‘decision on a constitutional
matter'?
- Whether the right to freedom of expression had horizontal
application (i.e. did the right apply only as against the state or to
private citizens and corporations such as the newspaper as well.)
Decision
The application for leave to appeal was granted, but the appeal was
dismissed by the court holding that:
- as contemplated by rule 18 of the RCC, this was clearly a
‘decision on a constitutional matter' and it was also in the best
interest of justice to hear the appeal as the outcome of the appeal
determined the manner in which the trial would be conducted in the High
Court; the issue raised in the exception was of great public interest;
there was a need to answer the question on whether the CSA required
development of the law of defamation;
- the right to freedom of expression was of direct
horizontal application given the intensity of the freedom, coupled with
the potential invasion of that right which could be occasioned by
others apart from the state or the organs of the state;
- it must be realised that it was often a difficult and
sometimes impossible task to determine the truth or falsity of a
particular statement and this could cause a chilling effect on the
publication of information. However, such an effect was considerably
reduced when the defence of reasonable publication existed. It allowed
the defendants to rebut the unlawfulness of their action by
establishing that whilst the publication was defamatory, it was
nevertheless reasonable in all the circumstances. A proper balance
between freedom of expression and the value of human dignity was
established by this defence and further allowed the common law of
defamation to be consistent with the provisions of the CSA;
- in determining whether publication was reasonable, regard
would be had to:
• the individual's interest in protecting his or her reputation in the
context of the constitutional commitment to human dignity;
• the individual's
interest in privacy. In that regard, there could be no doubt that
persons in public office had a diminished right to privacy, though
their right to dignity persists; and
• the crucial role played by the press in fostering a transparent and
open democracy.
Comment
The court considered the right to freedom of expression in the light of
the law of defamation and concluded that it was not absolute. The
limits of the right were provided by the defence of reasonable
publication. There had to be an appropriate balance between freedom of
expression and the value of human dignity. This right was to be applied
horizontally in the light of its critical significance and the
potential for abuse by parties other than (and as well as) the state.
Freedom of expression will be considered according to the context in
which it is exercised. The full and complete exercise of this and other
freedoms and rights requires both vertical and horizontal application.
This is because rights and freedoms can be abused or infringed by
parties other than the state. If one were to limit the exercise to
rights to a vertical application, then the actions of others apart from
the state would not be subject to scrutiny.
There is some confusion in Pacific Island courts about the application
of horizontal and vertical rights. Solomon Island courts have ruled
inconsistently in the matter (see Ulufa'alu
and Kelly
cases in Part I of this volume).
RELIGION
RELIGION / CHILDREN /
EDUCATION
Child's right to education and
freedom of religion as a Rastafarian had to be respected by the school.
GRANT & ANOR v THE
PRINCIPAL,
JOHN A CUMBER PRIMARY SCHOOL & ORS
Court of Appeal |
Cayman Islands |
Zacca P, |
(2001) 3 CHRLD 138; [2001] CILR 78 |
Georges & Collett JJA |
|
Law considered
Education Law (1997 Revision)
Facts
In the Cayman Islands, education was compulsory until 16 years of age
under the Education Law (1997 Revision). The Education Council (EC),
which oversees public education, could expel a pupil if he or she
‘commits an act which is of such a nature that his presence in the
school is likely to have a detrimental effect on the other pupils of
the school or on the school'. There was no alternative sanction to
expulsion, and readmission to any other school was subject to the EC's
approval.
G and his son, S, were committed adherents of the Rastafarian faith, in
which males did not cut their hair. The third respondent, EC, refused
G's application to register S at a government primary school on the
basis that his Rastafarian dreadlocks would contravene school rules.
After G protested and sent S to school anyway, the matter was referred
to the EC on a number of occasions between 1994 and 1996. On each
occasion the EC refused to admit S because of his hairstyle. In
December 1995, the EC upheld the school principal's (the first
respondent) decision to expel S. In 1996, G applied for judicial review
of the decision on the basis of his son's right to a primary education
and freedom of religion, but the application was dismissed in 1999. G
appealed.
Issue
Whether to allow the appeal for judicial review based on S's right to a
primary education and his freedom of religion.
Decision
The court allowed the appeal, quashed the decision and held the
Rastafarian faith was a religion because the two essential attributes
of faith and worship were present. Further, that the use of marijuana
in Rastafarian ceremonies should not undermine this religious status
even though it was illegal in the Cayman Islands. To hold otherwise
would imply that Rastafarianism only qualified as a religion in those
countries where the use of marijuana was permitted. The EC's concern
that it might be seen to be ‘soft' on drugs if it permitted S to
attend, or that putative association of Rastafarianism with drugs would
be detrimental to the school and other pupils, was irrelevant. There
was no evidence that S or his parents used drugs or would seek to
promote their use by other pupils.
Dreadlocks were also integral to the practice of the Rastafarian faith
and were powerful evidence of the observance of the religious
principles on which S had been raised. Other students would not suffer
prejudice because of his dress or appearance. However, he would be
prejudiced if he was removed from school as he would be deprived of an
education at the only primary school he could attend. The nature and
the extent of freedom of religion were not absolute and had to be
exercised within the bounds of appropriate legal restrictions. The
criteria for challenging the decision to expel S was that of
‘Wednesbury unreasonableness', which had a subjective application.
International conventions could only be used if they had been
incorporated into domestic law either through statute or a bill of
rights.
Editors'note: In English common
law, ‘Wednesbury unreasonableness'is unreasonableness of an
administrative decision that is so extreme that courts may intervene to
correct it. The principle was formulated in Associated Provincial
Picture Houses v Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KB 223, where the
court stated that it would only intervene to correct a bad
administrative decision on the grounds of its unreasonableness if the
decision was, as articulated in Council of Civil Service Unions v
Minister for the Civil Service (the GCHQ case) [1985] AC 374, 410 per
Lord Diplock, ‘So outrageous in its defiance of logic or accepted moral
standards that no sensible person who had applied his mind to the
question to be decided could have arrived at it'.
Comment
Even though international conventions were not recognised as none had
been incorporated into domestic law, the court upheld the appellant's
right to religion and the right to education. It did so on the basis of
the principles of judicial review by considering the decision to expel
S in terms of ‘Wednesbury unreasonableness'. The approach taken was to
examine the tenets of Rastafarianism and having concluded it was a
religion, whether S's adherence to it was sufficient to justify his
expulsion. Considering all the circumstances, the decision was
unreasonable and a violation of S's rights. While adopting an
enlightened stance, the court also endorsed the traditional position
regarding conventions and treaties (i.e. they could only be applied if
incorporated in domestic law either through statute or the bill of
rights).
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
SEXUAL HARASSMENT /
UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Right to gender equality; the
actions of a supervisor constituted sexual harassment deserving of
dismissal from employment.
Sexual harassment did not
have to consist of actual physical contact.
APPAREL EXPORT PROMOTION
COUNCIL
v CHOPRA
Supreme Court |
India |
Anand CJI, Khare J |
[1999] INSC 7 |
|
20 January 1999 |
International instruments
and law considered
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
Convention on the Elimination on All Forms of Discrimination Against
Women (CEDAW)
Beijing Declaration (BD)
Constitution of India (CI)
Facts
A female employee (X) claimed that she was sexually harassed by the
chair of the Apparel Export Promotion Council, Chopra (C). C took X to
the business centre of a hotel to work with him and sexually harassed
her at various places within the hotel, including the lift, despite
being warned on several occasions by X. X filed a complaint and an
enquiry officer (EO) was appointed by the director of the Council to
investigate. The EO concluded that X was molested by C. The Council's
Disciplinary Authority dismissed C. C challenged the dismissal before
several internal tribunals and thereafter in the courts. Eventually the
matter came before the highest appeal court, the Supreme Court of
India. At an earlier stage, a single judge of the High Court had
ordered C's reinstatement on the basis that C had tried to molest X but
had not in fact succeeded. Hearing of C's possible re-instatement, the
female employees of the council felt agitated and filed an application
seeking intervention in pending proceedings.
Issues
- Whether sexual harassment constituted a ground for
dismissal?
- Did sexual harassment have to consist of actual physical
contact?
- Was sexual harassment a recognisable legal principle in
Indian law?
- What was the nature of sexual harassment in the workplace?
Decision
The court allowed the intervention, found the appeal was fair, set
aside the order of the High Court and restored the punishment of the
Disciplinary Authority. It criticised the High Court for its approach,
including its treatment of the sexual harassment claim as a criminal
matter rather than a civil matter in terms of evidence.
It was wrong to say that molestation could not have taken place unless
there was actual physical contact. Even if there had been no touching,
it did not mean that there had been no objectionable overtures with
sexual overtones. C's actions were conduct which ‘is against moral
sanctions and which did not withstand the test of decency and modesty
and which
projected unwelcome sexual advances'. Any action or gesture, whether
directly or by implication, that had the tendency to outrage the
modesty of a female, fell within the general concept of sexual
harassment.
Vishaka v State of
Rajasthan16 was
cited. In Vishaka, the Supreme Court noted
that the present civil and criminal laws did not adequately provide for
protection of women from sexual harassment and that enactment of such
legislation would take considerable time. It suggested a definition of
sexual harassment as including such unwelcome sexually determined
behaviour (whether directly or by implication) as: (a) physical contact
and advances; (b) a demand or request for sexual favours; (c) sexually
coloured remarks; (d) showing pornography; (e) any other unwelcome
physical, verbal or non-verbal conduct of a sexual nature. It was
discriminatory, for instance, when a woman had reasonable grounds to
believe that her objection would disadvantage her in connection to her
employment.
The offence of sexual harassment was tied to the fundamental right to
gender equality and the right to life and liberty as two of the most
precious fundamental rights guaranteed by the CI. CEDAW and ICESCR both
required that important steps be taken to prevent discrimination
against women. Article 7 of the CI recognised women's right to fair
conditions of work. These international instruments required India to
gender sensitise its law and the courts were under an obligation to
ensure that the messages of international instruments were not allowed
to be ‘drowned'.
Comment
This case was instituted as a tort, not as a breach of human rights in
the CI. (See Singh v
Ponijese, Attorney General & Ors in Part I of this
volume where a similar strategy was adopted.) C had challenged his
dismissal as unlawful and had sought reinstatement and back pay.
However, the court, following Vishaka,
applied human rights principles and said that the right to gender
equality guaranteed in the CI implied a right to be free from sexual
harassment. In observing that there need not be any physical contact,
there was recognition that sexual harassment extended beyond that to
any conduct that trespassed acceptable limits. This response was
elicited by the decision in the High Court, which found there was no
such conduct capable of being sexual harassment. It had also reached
that conclusion on the basis of treating the evidence in criminal
terms, i.e. as beyond reasonable doubt. The Supreme Court emphasised
that this being a civil matter, the standard of proof of evidence was
on the balance of probabilities.
PART
III: INTERNATIONAL HIV HUMAN RIGHTS CASES17
CHILDREN
CHILDREN / EDUCATION
Dismissal of case against school
for deferring application for enrolment of child living with HIV upheld.
PERREIRA v THE BUCCLEUCH
MONTESSORI
PRE-SCHOOL AND PRIMARY (PTY) LTD & ORS
High Court |
South Africa |
Mailula J |
Case No. 4377/02 |
|
21 October 2003 |
Law considered
Constitution of South Africa (CSA)
Facts
P applied to enrol her foster daughter at the defendant school (S), a
private pre-school and primary school in January 2001 when there were
three vacancies. At the time of application, P informed the school
principal that her daughter, then two and a half years of age, was
living with HIV. P believed it was in the best interests of her child
for the school to be aware of her medical condition.
P was subsequently told that a teachers' meeting had taken place to
discuss her foster daughter's enrolment. Serious concerns had been
expressed about the school's readiness to deal with HIV-positive
students and about the risk of HIV transmission in the school setting.
S told P that it wanted to defer her application until her foster
daughter was three years old and ‘past the biting stage'.
P alleged discrimination by S. S, the Minister of Education and the
Minister of Social Development were named as respondents. (No relief
was sought against the ministers, save for costs in the event that they
opposed the application, which they did not.)
17. These cases are directly extracted and modified from UNAIDS Best
Practice Collection, Courting Rights: Case Studies in Litigating the
Human Rights of People Living with HIV (Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal
Network/ UNAIDS: Geneva, 2006).
P sought an order declaring that S had engaged in discriminatory and
unlawful conduct, contrary to the CSA, in refusing to enrol her
daughter.
Issues
- Was the action of S in denying the child access to the
school justifiable discrimination?
- Was the deferment of enrolment justifiable?
Decision
Dismissing the application, the court found that the principal's
suggestion that the child's enrolment be deferred:
… did not constitute a final
decision. It is clear on the objective facts that the first defendant
[Buccleuch Montessori School] was still prepared to consider the
application for the enrolment of the minor child. In the result I am of
the view that the first respondent had not taken a decision to exclude
the minor child from the school simply because of her HIV status.
Accordingly the application ought to be dismissed with costs.
P filed an appeal against the judgment, although later decided not to
proceed.
Comment
The judgment was disappointing in its approach to the question of
unfair discrimination because it failed to deal with the implications
of the school's deferral of P's application to enrol her foster
daughter. There was no guidance as to the basis on which such deferment
could take place, how long an application could be deferred and what
steps a school teacher needed to take to accommodate children with HIV.
Indeed, the concerns about possible HIV transmission expressed by the
school were not reasonable, given the very small risk of transmission.
As such, it amounted to what should be understood as unfair
discrimination contrary to law. The judgment also left uncertain the
acceptability of the other justification put forward by the school –
namely, that it was ill-equipped to handle a child with HIV.
DISCRIMINATION
DISCRIMINATION / DEFENCE
FORCES
Exclusion of HIV-positive man
from defence force is discriminatory.
NANDITUME v MINISTER OF DEFENCE
Labour Court |
Namibia |
Levy AJ |
[2002] AHRLR (NaLC 2000) |
|
10 May 2000 |
International instruments
and law considered
Labour Act 1992 (LA)
Guidelines for the Implementation of a National Code on HIV/AIDS in
Employment Defence Act
Facts
Under the Defence Act, recruits to the Namibian Defence Force (NDF)
were required to undergo a medical examination. The applicant (N)
sought to enlist in 1996. As part of that process, he was tested for
HIV. Two weeks later, he was informed by an NDF medical officer that he
had tested positive and, as a result, would not be accepted by the
force. A comprehensive medical report completed one month later, showed
that he was otherwise in good health and the examining physician
explicitly agreed N did not have any medical condition that would be
likely to interfere with the proper performance of his duty as a
government service official. His HIV-positive status was the sole basis
for his exclusion from enlistment in the NDF.
N argued that the NDF had breached the 1992 Labour Act (s 107), which
prohibited discrimination in employment ‘in an unfair manner' and also
prohibited discrimination on the grounds of disability. The NDF
admitted that it had rejected N solely on the grounds that he was
HIV-positive, but denied that this amounted to unfair discrimination.
It admitted that there were military personnel in the NDF who were
HIV-positive because HIV testing was not part of the recruitment
process when the NDF was established, and also because some personnel
may have acquired HIV after enlistment.
Issue
Was the applicant's HIV status sufficient to deny him employment in the
defence forces?
Decision
The court held that the NDF was guilty of unfair discrimination.
However, more expanded HIV-related testing was ordered as part of the
medical examination of recruits and it permitted the exclusion from the
NDF of applicants who failed to meet certain thresholds on CD4 levels
and the viral load test.18 N was ordered to undergo these additional
tests, and the NDF was ordered to enlist N if he met these
requirements.
In addition to the provisions of the LA, regard was had to the
Guidelines for the Implementation of a National Code on HIV/AIDS in
Employment issued by the government in 1998. Although the guidelines
did not have the force of law, they were instructive. In particular,
reliance was placed on the instruction that there should not be
pre-employment tests for HIV and that employees should be given ‘the
normal medical tests of current fitness for work and these tests should
not include testing for HIV'.
In addition, the guidelines
directed that employees with HIV ‘should work under normal conditions
so long as they are fit to do so and if they can no longer do so, they
should be offered alternative employment without prejudice to their
benefits'.
An HIV test alone would not determine a recruit's fitness to serve in
the forces, noting that: ‘If the military does not and will not do
[testing for CD4 count and viral load] then the HIV test should also be
abandoned. It will not achieve the purpose for which medical
examinations are held'. Accordingly, HIV status was not a reasonable
criterion on which to exclude a person from enlisting in the armed
forces and an HIV test alone did not indicate the person's current
state of fitness for the job.
Consequently, the court decided to order that no person should be
excluded from the NDF solely because of their HIV status if they were
otherwise fit and healthy, unless their CD4 count was below 200 and
their viral load exceeded 100,000.
Comment
The ruling set an important precedent by rejecting the NDF's policy of
simply excluding recruits based on their HIV status alone. It was not
rationally connected to the objective of assessing fitness for training
and service as a member of the NDF. However, in an attempt to address
this objective more directly, additional pre-employment tests for those
who were HIV-positive were ordered. It was asserted that CD4 and viral
load levels would serve as suitable indicators of fitness. On the face
of it, no consideration was given to whether insisting on such a
training prerequisite for any position within the NDF was itself
discriminatory because it created a barrier to suitable employment for
people with HIV (or other disabilities). For example, it could be the
case that an HIV- positive person could fulfil the duties of various
jobs within the NDF even if their CD4 count fell below 200 and/or their
viral load exceeded 100,000. On occasion, well- intended guidelines may
compound the situation if their implications are not carefully assessed
and considered.
DISCRIMINATION /
EMPLOYMENT
Employee immune from dismissal
for refusing compulsory HIV antibody test.
DIAU v BOTSWANA BUILDING SOCIETY
Industrial Court |
Botswana |
Dingake J |
2003 (2) BLR 409 (BwIC) |
|
19 December 2003 |
International instruments
and law considered
International Labour Organisation covenants
Constitutions of Canada, India, Namibia, Sri Lanka and South Africa
Constitution of Botswana (CB)
Employment Act (EA)
Facts
In a letter dated 18 February 2002, D was offered probationary
employment as a security assistant with the Botswana Building Society
(BBS). The letter stated that her employment was conditional on her
undergoing and passing a full medical examination conducted by a
physician selected and paid by BBS. D started work on 25 February 2002.
In a letter dated 27 August 2002, BBS told D that she was required to
submit a certified document regarding her HIV status as part of the
employment medical examination. In a letter dated 7 October 2002, D
refused to provide such a document. BBS then told her, in a letter
dated 19 October 2002, that she would not be offered permanent
employment. D initiated legal proceedings.
The plaintiff sought reinstatement and compensation for unfair
dismissal and humiliation. She also sought a declaration that her
rights under the EA and the CB had been violated.
Issue
Could an employee legitimately refuse a compulsory HIV test?
Decision
The court ordered the BBS to reinstate D and pay her compensation
equivalent to four months' salary. As D was found by the court to be ‘a
permanent employee' of the BBS at the time of dismissal, it was not
entitled to dismiss her without a valid reason. The court found that
the BBS had acted in a procedurally and substantively unfair way when
it terminated D; she was not subject to a fair procedure and was not
given a reason for her dismissal. D was dismissed because she refused
to undergo an HIV test. She was entitled to disobey the instruction to
undergo an HIV test as it was ‘irrational and unreasonable to the
extent that such a test could not be said to be related to the inherent
requirements of the job'.
The bill of rights in the CB applied to the BBS in the circumstances of
the case for two reasons. First, the CB was not intended by its framers
to be limited to organs of the state. Second, the CB should be given a
large and liberal interpretation, one which took into account the
realities of modern life. Accordingly, the bill of rights should be
applied to private entities where there was an exercise of superior
social or commercial power outside the traditional domain of the state.
In the employment setting, employees were in a comparable position
vis-à-vis their employer as individuals were to the power of the state.
The BBS had not acted in a discriminatory manner within the meaning of
the bill of rights, because it had not been proved that D had been
treated differently. In other words, it had not been proved that D was
dismissed because of the suspicion or perception that she may be
HIV-positive. However, the ground of HIV status or perceived HIV status
was one of the ‘unlisted' grounds on which the CB prohibited
discrimination.
D's right not to be subject to inhuman and degrading treatment had been
infringed: ‘To punish an individual for refusing to agree to a
violation of her privacy or bodily integrity is demeaning, undignified,
degrading and disrespectful to the intrinsic worth of being human'.
This conclusion was particularly warranted in the context of HIV,
‘where even the remotest suspicion of being HIV/AIDS [sic] can breed
intense prejudice, ostracisation and stigmatisation'.
Comment
From a human rights perspective, there are positive and negative
aspects to this decision. On the positive side, the decision affirms
the ‘horizontal' application of the CB to entities other than state
organs. According to the court, private actors who wield significant
economic and social power, and who therefore have a great deal of power
over the lives of individual citizens, are not beyond the reach of the
CB.
Another positive element was the court's willingness to view Botswana's
National HIV/ AIDS Policy to the extent that its provisions were
consistent with the values espoused by the CB, as an important
interpretive aid in its constitutional analysis. In examining
international human rights instruments, the constitutions of other
countries, HIV-related decisions from other countries and other
international sources of guidance on HIV (some of which reflect human
rights), an expansive approach was taken.
A significant negative aspect was the characterisation of the HIV test
as ‘compulsory post- employment testing', rather than compulsory
testing as a condition of employment. The respondent made a specific
written demand for a certified document of HIV status more than six
months after the applicant commenced employment. However, it was clear
from the evidence that the plaintiff's employment was conditional on
successful completion of a medical examination that included an HIV
test or certified document of HIV status. As a result, the decision did
not address whether HIV testing as a condition of employment was legal
under Botswana law.
A second related limitation was the narrow analysis of the question of
HIV-related discrimination. It is encouraging that discrimination based
on a person's real or perceived HIV-positive status is constitutionally
prohibited in Botswana. But its limited approach to the question of
demanding HIV testing as a condition of employment fell short of fully
protecting against such discrimination. It has been recognised in many
jurisdictions that such a demand amounts to prohibited discrimination
in employment similar to requiring information on a job candidate's
marital status, religion, sexual orientation, race or ethnicity.
Editors' note: this case
is important to the Pacific Islands for several reasons. D won on three
separate grounds – privacy, inhumane treatment and the loss of liberty
– despite the fact that the Botswana Constitution does not have HIV
status as a specific prohibited ground of discrimination. This is
similar to Pacific Island constitutions. Further, the court saw HIV
discrimination as an ‘unlisted' ground on which the CB prohibited
discrimination. A similar strategy can be adopted in the Pacific.
DISCRIMINATION /
EMPLOYMENT
Prohibition of HIV-based
discrimination by airline.
HOFFMANN v SOUTH AFRICAN AIRWAYS
Constitutional Court |
South Africa |
Ngcobo J |
[2000] ZACC 17; 2001 (1) SA 1 |
|
28 September 2000 |
International instruments
and law considered
Constitution of South Africa (CSA)
Employment Equity Act (EEA)
Facts
In September 1996, H applied for employment as a cabin attendant with
South African Airways (SAA). At the end of the interview process he was
found to be a suitable candidate for employment and underwent a
pre-employment medical examination including an HIV antibody test. He
was clinically fit and suitable for employment. The HIV antibody test
returned a positive result. Consequently, the medical report was
altered to read that H was unsuitable for employment because he was
HIV-positive.
SAA policy prohibited the employment of HIV-positive people as cabin
attendants. This prohibition was allegedly in place because cabin
attendants had to be fit for worldwide duty, which required them to be
vaccinated against yellow fever in accordance with National Department
of Health guidelines. SAA stated that HIV-positive persons may react
negatively to this vaccine. Further, SAA stated that HIV-positive
people were prone to contracting opportunistic infections and, as a
result, would not be able to perform required emergency and safety
procedures. Finally, SAA stated that the life expectancy of people who
were HIV-positive was too short to warrant the costs of training them.
SAA's policy did not exclude HIV-positive persons from all employment
with the airline, only from cabin crew positions.
SAA's medical expert gave evidence that only those persons whose CD4+
cell count had dropped below 300 cells/microlitre were prone to
medical, safety and occupational hazards. According to SAA's medical
expert, at the time of H's medical examination, there was nothing to
indicate that he had either reached the asymptomatic yet
immuno-suppressed stage of HIV infection or developed AIDS.
The AIDS Law Project, in its role as a friend of the court, provided
medical evidence to the Constitutional Court. That medical evidence,
with which the SAA expert concurred, demonstrated that an asymptomatic
HIV-positive person could perform the work of a cabin attendant. It
also demonstrated that even immuno-suppressed persons were not prone to
opportunistic infections and could be vaccinated against yellow fever
as long as their CD4+ cell counts were above a certain level.
Issue
Was it justifiable to deny employment on the basis of a person's HIV
status?
Decision
The court ordered SAA to offer to employ H as a cabin attendant. It was
also ordered to pay H's costs in both the High Court and Constitutional
Court.
On appeal, faced with the uncontroverted medical evidence, SAA conceded
that its practice of refusing to employ cabin attendants because of
their HIV-positive status was medically unjustified and was thus
unfair. Instead, it argued that its ‘true' policy was to refuse
employment to HIV-positive cabin attendants where their HIV infection
had progressed to a stage that SAA believed the person unsuitable for
employment. The legality of SAA's ‘true' policy was not considered
because it had not been dealt with by the High Court and was a more
appropriate case for the Labour Court.
The CSA applied to SAA since it was owned by a statutory body under the
control of the state. Relying solely on the right to equality under the
CSA (s 9), three basic enquiries were to be made:
- First, did the challenged law make a differentiation that
made a rational connection to a legitimate government purpose? Where
there was no rational connection, then s 9 had been breached.
- Second, where there was a rational connection, did the
differentiation amount to unfair discrimination?
- Third, if the differentiation did amount to unfair
discrimination (and if it was found in a law of general application),
could the differentiation be justified under a provision of the
constitution that permitted limitations on rights) (s 36).
SAA's employment practice was irrational; the fact that some
HIV-positive people might, under certain circumstances, be unsuitable
for employment as cabin attendants did not justify the exclusion of all
people living with HIV from those positions.
With respect to the second inquiry, SSA's policy discriminated unfairly
against H because of his HIV status. People living with HIV were one of
the most vulnerable groups in South African society; they faced
prejudice and stereotyping despite medical evidence about how HIV was
transmitted. Thus, any discrimination against HIV-positive people was a
‘fresh instance of stigmatisation' and an ‘assault on their dignity'.
Moreover, HIV-positive people enjoyed special protection from
discrimination under the EEA because of the impact of employment
discrimination on their ability to earn a living.
The commercial interests of SAA, given that other airlines had a
similar policy of excluding all HIV-positive people from being employed
as cabin attendants, were also considered. It was not legitimate
because it was based on fear, ignorance and stereotypes of supposed
dangers posed by HIV-positive people, regardless of their individual
circumstances: ‘the constitutional right of the appellant not to be
unfairly discriminated against cannot be determined by ill-informed
public perception of persons with HIV'.
Comment
The ruling affirms that the blanket exclusion of HIV-positive people
from employment infringes the constitutional guarantee of equality.
Individual job applicants should be evaluated in terms of their
individual circumstance, including their ability to perform the
essential duties of a job, rather than because they are HIV-positive.
In the words of the court, the decision validated the principle of ‘ubuntu' – a Zulu
word conveying the recognition of human worth and respect for the
dignity of every person. It also highlights the role of the courts in
providing relief for people living with HIV who seek to enforce their
rights.
Domestically, the court's reference to the EEA was also significant.
Relatively few employers are subject to the constitution. HIV-positive
South Africans who do not work for the state or state-owned businesses
must rely on the EEA for protection from discrimination in employment.
The court's analysis of discrimination in this case provided guidance
in deciding cases under the EEA.
Of interest is whether the court would have made the same
decision had the airline been privately owned, raising the issue of
horizontal application of rights, as between private (non-state)
citizens.
DISCRIMINATION /
EMPLOYMENT
Policy of refusing to hire people
living with HIV struck down.
MX v ZY
High Court of Judicature |
India |
Tipnis J |
AIR 1997 Bom 406 |
International instruments
and law considered
South Africa Code on HIV/AIDS and Employment
Constitution of India (CI)
Facts
MX sought a court order remedying company ZY's discriminatory decision
to deny him any further employment because of his HIV-positive status,
including inter alia quashing the company's discriminatory policies and
reinstating him with benefits and back wages. In 1986, MX was
interviewed by company ZY and employed as a casual labourer from that
point until about 1994. Company policy and practice required that
casual labourers sign a register and be placed on a waiting list. Those
determined to be medically fit were eventually employed on a permanent
basis. In 1990, MX was directed to attend a medical examination with a
doctor retained by the company. It included various tests, and nothing
adverse was detected. MX continued to be designated as a casual worker,
while he alleged that others off the waiting list both above and below
him in length of service, were appointed to regular employment
positions to fill vacancies.
In 1993, MX was again asked to undergo a medical exam, which included
an HIV test. MX tested HIV positive, but in all other respects was
deemed healthy. The examining physician certified that MX was fit for
duty as a labourer. Notwithstanding this medical assessment, ZY removed
MX from its waiting list of registered labourers.
MX wrote to ZY pointing out that he was fit to perform his job and that
he was the sole income earner. He also wrote to the director of health
services in the state government outlining his circumstances and
requesting intervention. The director wrote to ZY pointing out there
was no medical justification for refusing to employ MX and requesting
ZY to allow him to continue as a casual labourer. The director also
drew ZY's attention to the guidelines produced by the National AIDS
Control Programme, which stated that HIV- positive status was not an
acceptable basis for dismissal.
The HIV/AIDS Unit of the Lawyers Collective, an organisation providing
legal aid services, research and advocacy to people living with HIV
investigated the matter further. It discovered that ZY had issued
written circulars mandating the testing of current and prospective
employees for HIV. Those testing HIV-positive would not be hired and
current employees could be dismissed.
Issue
Was it justifiable to deny employment on the basis of a person's HIV
status?
Decision
The court granted the petition. It ordered that MZ be reinstated, that
he be taken into regular employment, if further medical examination
showed he was still fit, and awarded 40,000 rupees (or US $900) in
compensation for lost income.
It held:
[T]hat the impugned rule which
denies employment to the HIV-infected person merely on the ground of
his HIV status irrespective of his ability to perform the job
requirements and irrespective of the fact that he did not pose any
threat to others at the workplace is clearly arbitrary and unreasonable
and infringes the wholesome requirement of Article 14 as well as
Article 21 of the CI. Accordingly, we hold that the [employer's]
circular ... in so far as it directs that if the employee is found to
be HIV- positive by ELISA test, his services will be terminated is
unconstitutional, illegal and invalid and, therefore, is quashed.
The court also stressed the importance of non-discrimination in
responding to HIV/AIDS:
As is evident from the material
to which we have made detailed reference in the earlier part of this
judgment, the most important thing in respect of persons infected with
HIV is the requirement of community support, economic support and
non-discrimination of such persons. This is also necessary for
prevention and control of this terrible disease. Taking into
consideration the widespread and present threat of this disease in the
world in general and this country in particular, the state cannot be
permitted to condemn the victims of HIV infection, many of whom may be
truly unfortunate, to certain economic death. It is not in the general
public interest and is impermissible under the constitution. The
interests of the HIV-positive persons, the interests of the employer
and the interests of the society will have to be balanced in such a
case. If it means putting certain economic burdens on the state or the
public corporations or the society, they must bear the same in the
larger public interest.
Comment
This case set a very positive precedent in Indian law for the right of
people living with HIV to equality in employment. It is consistent with
widely accepted international human rights norms. Reference was made to
a number of policy statements from outside India on the issue of HIV
and employment – including a World Health Organisation policy
resolution passed by member states and the South African Code on
HIV/AIDS and Employment. The National HIV Testing Policy published in
1995 by the National AIDS Control Organisation, which falls under the
jurisdiction of the Indian Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, was
also cited. All of these provided clear guidance that mandatory HIV
testing in the employment context was irrational and unjustified, and
amounted to an infringement of human rights.
Regrettably, there was no explicit prohibition of pre-employment HIV
testing, a point made in several of the sources cited. In fact, the
judgment left the door open to such testing. In stating that the
petitioner might have to resubmit to medical tests to establish current
fitness for the position, the court made reference to such tests
‘including for HIV', even though it had declared his HIV status
irrelevant to the employment decision.
In passing, the petitioner's request for an order suppressing his
identity was also considered. Jurisprudence from the Supreme Court of
India and from Australian courts suggested that such an order was
appropriate and ‘in the interests of the administration of justice', in
light of the widespread societal stigma still attached to HIV and the
ostracism and discrimination experienced by people living with HIV.
In the present case, the company was a state-owned corporation. Whether
this would have been extended to a privately owned entity is an
interesting question. The debate over the ‘vertical' and ‘horizontal'
approach to the application of human rights, while evolving towards the
latter, is not yet settled.
HEALTH
HEALTH / DIGNITY
Former inmate awarded landmark
settlement after being infected with HIV in prison.
PW v SOUTH AFRICA DEPARTMENT
OF
CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
International instruments
and law considered
Constitution of South Africa (CSA)
Correctional Services Act 1994
Facts
PW was incarcerated at Pollsmoor Prison from November 1993 to December
1994. He repeatedly tested HIV-negative over most of this period. He
had a sexual relationship with an HIV-positive man while in prison. PW
was apparently unaware of his partner's HIV status at the time.
PW sued the South Africa Department of Correctional Services (DCS) in
1997. He had tested positive for HIV on 27 November 1994, shortly
before his release from prison. In court papers, PW alleged that the
prison authorities knew that sex among prisoners was ‘common' and that
a ‘material portion' of the prisoners were HIV-positive. PW further
alleged that the authorities did nothing to prevent sex between
prisoners nor did they provide
sexually active inmates with access to condoms to reduce the risk of
HIV infection. These
facts were admitted.
PW alleged negligence at common law and a breach of the Correctional
Services Act of 1959. He further argued that the DCS had violated his
rights under the constitution, in particular:
• his right to be detained
under conditions consistent with human
dignity, and to be provided with adequate medical treatment at state
expense;
• his right to freedom and security of the person;
• his right not to be subjected to torture of any kind, whether
physical, mental or emotional, and not to be subjected to cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment;
• his right to life; and
• his right to respect for and protection of his dignity.
Issue
Was the Department of Correctional Services liable for PW's status
given that he was a prisoner, and what constitutional and legal rights
had been violated?
Decision
Litigation was initiated in 1997 and an out-of-court settlement was
reached in February 2003, the terms of which were confidential. Media
reports stated that the plaintiff settled for 150,000 South African
rand (approximately US $25 000 at the time). It is known that the DCS
‘denied any liability' for PW's infection but admitted that prisoners
were not allowed to have condoms until 1996.
Comment
The case illustrates the use of litigation to hold a government
accountable for the impact of its policies and its actions on people's
health. In 1996, the Department of Correctional Services developed a
new policy on managing HIV and AIDS in prisons. In 2000, this policy
was supplemented by a Management Strategy on HIV/AIDS in Prisons. The
1993 WHO Guidelines on HIV Infection and AIDS in Prisons helped
influence the DCS to change its policy. PW's case and the obvious
possibility of legal liability appear to have played some role in
prompting a shift in policy.
In its written policy, the DCS made a commitment to provide HIV
education and condoms to prisoners ‘on the same basis as condoms are
provided in the community'. While this element of the policy is in
accordance with international guidelines providing for counselling
regarding HIV, not educating on the use of condoms and the dangers of
high-risk behaviour before condoms are made available were not. This
precondition has discouraged the use of condoms because privacy and
confidentiality are not assured.
HEALTH / PRISONERS
Medical treatment for
HIV-positive prisoners should be provided in prisons.
ODAFE & ORS v
ATTORNEY
GENERAL & ORS
High Court |
Nigeria |
Nwodo J |
Suit No.FHC/PH/CS/680/2003 |
International instruments
and laws considered
African Charter on Human and People's Rights (ACHPR)
UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (UNSMR)
Constitution of Nigeria (CN)
Prisons Act (PA)
Facts
The four plaintiffs were HIV-positive and were remand prisoners
awaiting trial for serious offences involving periods of between 2
years 4 months and 4 years 8 months. They made
the following applications:
a) That their continuous
detention and segregation amounted to breaches
of their rights to a fair hearing, dignity and to be free from
discrimination, as guaranteed by the CN;
b) That the failure of prison officials to provide them with proper
medical care and treatment amounted to inhuman and degrading treatment
contrary to s 34(1)(a) of the CN and article 5 of the ACHPR and a
breach of their right to life contrary to s3(1) of the CN;
c) That they had a right to proper medical treatment whilst in custody
pursuant to the requirement to respond to serious illness under ss 8(1)
and (3) of the PA, the prison regulations and the UNSMR; therefore they
should be relocated to a designated public hospital in order to receive
such treatment.
Issue
Whether the HIV status of prisoners entitled them to rights guaranteed
by the CN and international human rights law.
Decision
The court held that:
a) everyone, including
those prisoners awaiting trial, had a legal
right to seek redress for alleged breaches of their constitutional
rights pursuant to s 46(1) of the CN and to article 7 of the ACHPR. The
constitutional right to a fair hearing had been breached given the
length of time they had been held on remand. The CN provided that any
person arrested and detained upon reasonable suspicion of having
committed an offence should be arraigned before a court of law within a
reasonable time and, if not tried within two months from the date of
arrest or detention, should
be released on bail subject to any reasonable conditions.
b) that although HIV fell within the list of ‘serious illnesses' under
the PA, discrimination on the grounds of illness, virus or disease was
not covered by s 42(1) of the CN and therefore could not be invoked in
this case.
c) torture included mental or psychological trauma where a person's
mental state was so disturbed that he was prevented from thinking and
behaving as a rational human being. An average person diagnosed with
HIV would be greatly disturbed and live in perpetual fear of attack.
This combined with the fact that article 16 of the ACHPR provided for
every individual to enjoy the best attainable state of physical and
mental health, while the state had a corresponding duty to ensure they
received medical care and treatment when they were sick, created an
obligation on prison authorities to provide appropriate medical care
and treatment for prisoners who had HIV. Problems of overcrowding led
to a risk of the disease spreading and added weight to this duty, and
the continued failure to provide such treatment amounted to torture.
Applying Ubani v
Director SSS 1999 11 NWLR Pt.129, it was held that having
incorporated the ACHPR and its socio-economic rights, in particular the
right to health, into domestic law, the government must respect its
provisions. While recognising that the economic cost of providing
medical treatment was quite high, the state had failed in its
responsibility to all prison inmates, regardless of the offences they
had allegedly committed. In such circumstances they should be relocated
to a public hospital for treatment.
Comment
International instruments, and constitutional and legislative
provisions in respect of human rights standards impose obligations the
state must honour. Socio-economic rights are no exception; HIV-positive
prisoners on remand are entitled to have access to treatment on the
basis of the individual's right to enjoy the best attainable state of
physical and mental health. There is growing recognition that
international obligations as well as domestic enactments must be given
effect in some form.
Given the state of mind of the average person diagnosed with HIV, the
mental or psychological trauma suffered could be characterised as
torture. Taken together with the obligation under article 169 of the
ACHPR, the failure of the state to provide relief for prisoners living
with HIV (as in appropriate mental care treatment and as well as
reduction of overcrowding), according to the court, amounted to
torture. This is an expansive definition of torture and would probably
be the subject of intense scrutiny and debate. The concept of torture
being in essence self-inflicted, rather than inflicted by one party or
another, is an interesting proposition.
HEALTH / PRISONERS
Litigation occasioning change in
policy on condoms in prisons.
PRISONERS A-XX INCLUSIVE v
STATE
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
Supreme Court of New South
Wales |
Australia |
Meagher, Sheller & Powell JJA |
[1995] NSWSC 109 |
Law considered
Common law
Facts
Until the mid-1990s, the policy of the New South Wales (NSW) Department
of Corrective Services (like that of the majority of other Australian
state systems) was to oppose condom distribution. Although the
authorities were aware that sexual activity occurred in prisons,
reliance was placed on education as the primary HIV prevention measure.
While ultimately unsuccessful, this case placed pressure on the
government to change its policy.
Fifty inmates of NSW prisons through the Aboriginal Legal Service
sought a mandatory injunction to force the NSW Government to reform its
policies regarding condoms in prisons. The application sought:
• an order that the State
of NSW, through the Commissioner of
Corrective Services and the Director General of the Department of
Corrective Services, must permit the plaintiffs and other male
prisoners in NSW prisons to possess and use condoms;
• a declaration that the decision not to supply or permit the
possession or use of condoms by male prisoners was made in breach of
the duty of care owed by the State of NSW to the plaintiffs; and
• an order that the State of NSW supply, and permit the possession and
use of, condoms by the plaintiffs and other male prisoners in NSW
prisons.
Issue
• Was a prisoner entitled
to access to condoms without a doctor's
prescription to protect himself while in prison?
Decision
The court at first instance dismissed two of the three claims advanced
by the plaintiffs and ruled that the third claim had to be redrafted so
as to be brought solely on behalf of the aggrieved plaintiffs, rather
than as a class action on behalf of the larger group of prisoners.
The judge in the first case was unwilling to allow a challenge to the
‘policy decision' not to provide condoms in prisons, arguing that
judicial review of an issue involving ‘political considerations' would
lead to ‘political power [passing] from the parliament and the
electorate to the courts'. However, he continued, ‘different
considerations would apply if the prisoners claimed a breach of the
duty owed to them as individuals'. Although a policy decision in itself
might not be reviewable by the court, its effect – a breach of duty of
care owed to the prisoners – was.
If a duty of care were established, an injunction to restrain the tort
of negligence might, although novel, be available. However, the court
pointed out that there might be problems with proving a duty of care in
this case; it could be held that the prisoners were contributorily
negligent or that they voluntarily assumed the risk of being harmed.
The prisoners appealed the judge's decision, arguing they should be
able to:
• rely on the writ of habeas corpus;
• rely on the Magna Carta; and
• continue their proceedings as a class of 50 rather than amend their
pleadings and claims.
The NSW Court of Appeal upheld the judge's ruling and dismissed habeas
corpus arguments after canvassing British, Canadian and American
decisions. It also dismissed arguments premised on the contravention of
the Magna Carta. Finally, it dismissed the third ground of appeal,
concluding that the lower court's reasons involved a proper exercise of
discretion to ensure the case was managed efficiently.
Referring to the earlier decision, the court remarked:
His Honour saw no reason why in
an appropriate case the Court would not grant an injunction to restrain
the tort of negligence, even without proof of damage. Accordingly, if
the appellants were able to establish by evidence that the failure by
the Department to permit their use of condoms constituted a breach of
the duty of care owed to them, they might be entitled to injunctive
relief.
It further concluded:
What remains to be done is for
the appellants to apply to the Common Law Division to amend their
statement of claim in a way which accords with the judge's orders and
the conclusions I have reached.
Comment
The legal importance of this case lies in the fact that it provides
recognition, albeit limited, that a claim of negligence based on a duty
of care could be brought in the future. Although not commented on, the
possible extension of tort law in this manner is a true reflection of
the expanding and evolving application of human rights. International
guidelines reflecting public health concerns assist in establishing the
appropriate standard of care that should be met by prison officials in
responding to HIV. According to WHO's 1993 guidelines:
[A]II prisoners have the right
to receive health care, including preventative measures, equivalent to
that available in the community without discrimination, in particular
with respect to their legal status or nationality. […] Since
penetrative sexual intercourse occurs in prison, even when prohibited,
condoms should be made available to prisoners throughout the period of
detention.
This case brought about important policy changes in relation to condom
provisions for prisoners in NSW. In 1996, at least in part because of
the legal action, the state government decided to make condoms
available in all prisons after evaluation of an initial, successful
trial condom-distribution scheme in a few NSW prisons.
HEALTH / PRISONERS
Policy upheld of not allowing
prisoners condoms.
R v SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE
HOME DEPARTMENT EX PARTE GLEN FIELDING
High Court of Justice,
Queen's Bench Division |
United Kingdom |
Latham J |
[1999] EWHC Admin 641 |
|
5 July 1999 |
International instrument
and law considered
European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)
Facts
The applicant (F) was a gay man incarcerated in Littlehey Correctional
Facility, a government-run prison, where he was unable to obtain
condoms. His application for judicial review was contested by the Home
Department of the UK Government, which had jurisdiction over prisons.
The Home Department put forward a policy on condoms in prison in a 1995
letter instructing prison doctors that they were free ‘in the exercise
of their clinical judgment' to prescribe condoms for individual
prisoners. The letter noted that prisoners should not have access to
condoms except through the prison medical service. It went on to state
that the intent of the policy was to preserve health, particularly in
light of the risk of HIV transmission, and not to ‘encourage
homosexuality'. The letter added that the ‘burden of our legal advice
is in fact that there may be a legal risk in not providing condoms in
the relevant set of circumstances through a failure in the duty of
care', and that doctors should thus be encouraged to prescribe both
condoms and lubricants ‘when in their clinical judgment there is a
known risk of HIV infection as a result of HIV risky sexual behavior.'
While in Littlehey, F had managed to have condoms sent to him from
outside the prison, but they were confiscated and placed under the
control of the prison medical service, which refused F access to them.
He was later moved to a privately run prison, where he was provided
with condoms without difficulty. He was subsequently released, but
pursued the case seeking a change in the policy of providing condoms
only with a doctor's prescription.
Issue
• Was a prisoner entitled to access to condoms without a doctor's
prescription to protect himself while in prison?
Decision
The Home Department policy was upheld, that is, it was confirmed that
condoms would be available only though a prison doctor's prescription.
The medical director of Littlehey Prison may have misinterpreted the
Home Department policy on condoms, being ‘significantly more
restrictive … than a fair reading' of the policy would have warranted
in denying F access to condoms. As to F's case that the policy was
‘irrational' it was observed that ‘providing condoms on demand might
reasonably be seen to be an encouragement of homosexuality, and the
Prison Service was entitled to avoid a policy that might give this
impression'.
'[C]ondoms have uses other than those for which they were designed,'
and therefore some
level of control of condoms as a commodity should be the prerogative of
the Prison Service.
‘The mere fact that a person asserts that he wants a condom does not
mean that he is a genuine homosexual, nor does it mean that he is
necessarily intending to engage in penetrative or other dangerous
sexual activity, nor does it necessarily mean that he is in truth a
consenting party to whatever activity is anticipated'. Therefore,
whether the condom was requested for ‘genuine health reasons' was best
left to doctors.
F was entitled in principle to respect under the ECHR for his sexual
orientation ‘and its practical consequences' but the court noted that
unlike the majority of prisoners (presumably meaning heterosexuals),
‘imprisonment did not prevent him from expressing his sexuality at
all'. The real issue here was health, not the right to have sex.
The Home Department needed to formulate a clearer statement of its
policy to avoid overly restrictive interpretation of it, a view
reiterated by an appeal which upheld the ruling against F's complaint.
Comment
The UN International Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights recommend
the provision of condoms in prison. Lack of access to condoms for
prisoners appears to contradict one of the fundamental principles of
the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, i.e. that
prisoners have access to the same level of services as those outside
prisons. This equivalency principle was reiterated by the World Health
Organisation in its 1994 Guidelines on HIV Infection and AIDS in
Prisons, which also assert that ‘condoms should be made available to
prisoners throughout their period of detention'.19
Condoms are now considered an essential element of HIV prevention and
part of the ‘highest attainable standard of health' services guaranteed
in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(article 12), to which the UK is a party. The UN Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights, which is the expert body mandated to
monitor and promote states' compliance with the obligations under the
covenant, has issued a ‘General Comment' on the human right to health.
State parties are obliged to respect the right to health by ‘refraining
from denying or limiting equal access for all persons, including
prisoners or detainees, and refraining from ‘limiting access to
contraceptives and other means of maintaining sexual and reproductive
health'.20
The right of prisoners to confidentially obtain condoms or protect
their right to privacy is guaranteed by the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (article 17). Prescription by a doctor
limits that right in that a third party may withhold provision of
condoms. In addition to eroding prisoners' rights, it has serious
health implications for them.
HEALTH / PRISONERS /
SENTENCE
Compassionate reduction of
sentence for prisoners living with HIV.
R v LO CHI KEUNG; HKSAR v
VASQUEZ
TARAZONA JESUS JUAN
Court of Appeal, Hong Kong |
(1996) 3 HKCA 155 |
High Court of the Hong Kong Special |
(2001) 941 HKCU 1 |
|
Administrative Region Court of First Instance |
Facts
Hong Kong, a former British Colony, officially became a ‘Special
Administrative Region' of the People's Republic of China in 1997 with
the departure of the last British governor. It recognised the HIV
epidemic and took overt steps to develop policy in response. Thus, the
first of these two cases was heard in a Crown court and at a time when
antiretroviral therapy would not have been available to a prisoner in
Hong Kong.
In both cases, the applicants sought to have their sentences reduced on
compassionate grounds because they were HIV-positive. In the first
case, the 27-year-old applicant (L) had been convicted of an
arms-related offence and was serving an eight-year sentence in Stanley
Prison. In the second case, the applicant (J), a Chilean national, had
been convicted of conspiracy and false instruments offences (making a
false passport) and was serving a 13-month sentence at Stanley Prison,
concurrent with a sentence already being served.
Decision
In both cases the courts denied the request for a reduction of sentence
adopting a similar approach.
In the first case, though a letter from one of Stanley Prison's medical
officers confirmed the applicant's HIV status, the court noted there
was no evidence about whether L was near or at the terminal stage of
his disease and whether Stanley Prison could provide ‘suitable and
proper facilities' for his care. Leaving the door open for
reconsideration if L's status deteriorated, the court stated: ‘We can
find no justification for considering a reduction of the sentences
passed on the applicant on compassionate grounds … We rest assured that
the authority will closely monitor the applicant's condition so as to
permit special procedure for an early release of a man of his
affliction to be duly invoked'.
A similar observation was made in the decision in J's case, where it
was noted that deterioration in the state of health of the applicant
might warrant another look at his application. In this case, it was
observed that the J's ‘unfortunate medical condition' was one factor in
his case that provoked ‘human sympathy' but nevertheless there was a
duty to ‘deal reasonably firmly with crime' in sentencing decisions.
In HKSAR v Tsong Wai Kei
(2003) H KEC 1056, a similar approach was adopted where it was held
that the graver the crime, the greater the public interest – and the
greater the need to maintain a strict sentence. Drug trafficking was
cited as an example of an offence at the serious end of the spectrum.
The applicant had been convicted for drug trafficking but had applied
for reduction of an eight-year sentence on account of thyroid cancer.
Comment
Compassionate sentence reduction cases may be said to be less about
human rights than about humanitarian values. At the same time, there
was recognition of the likelihood of having to balance the gravity of
the crime with the prisoner's physical condition and deterioration.
Apart from humanitarian considerations, an inmate who is terminally ill
is still entitled to be treated with dignity as a human being. The
potential for advancing the law further in this direction is a
possibility.
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (article 7)
prohibits cruel and unusual punishment, which might be cited as grounds
in cases involving compassionate release for ill prisoners, though it
apparently was not used in these cases. The UN Standard Minimum Rules
for the Treatment of Prisoners does not directly address reduction of
sentences on compassionate grounds, but notes that medical officers
should report to prison directors whenever they consider ‘that a
prisoner's physical or mental health has been or will be injuriously
affected by continued imprisonment,' which suggests the possibility
that action may be taken in such circumstances. The UN International
Guidelines on HIV/AIDS
and Human Rights recommend that ‘compassionate early release of
prisoners living with AIDS should be considered,'21
but this is not a legally binding instrument.
1. Minister of State for
Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 128 ALR 353 featured
in 1 PHRLD 88-90.
2. Balelala v State [2004] FJCA
49 featured in 1 PHRLD 4-7.
3. Lafaialii & Ors v
Attorney General & Ors [2003] WSSC 8 featured in 1 PHRLD 71-77.
4. Fiji Human Rights Commission
Act 1999, section 17.
5. Vishaka v State of Rajasthan
(1997) 6 Supreme Court Cases 241 (India) featured in 1 PHRLD 92-93.
6. Minister of State for
Immigration & Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 128 ALR 353 featured
in 1 PHRLD 88-90.
7.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/htmlall/genevaconventions
8. The bulk of this information
is extracted from Jennifer Corrin Care, ‘Customary law and women's
rights in the Solomon Islands', Development Bulletin, No. 51, 20-22.
9. [2004] FJCA 49 featured in 1
PHRLD 4-7.
10. Ibid.
11. [2003] VUCA 27 featured in
1 PHRLD 12-13.
12. Pacific Regional Rights
Resource Team, The Big Seven: Human Rights Conventions and Judicial
Declarations (RRRT: Fiji, 2005).
13. [2001] FJCA 2 featured in 1
PHRLD 42-46.
14. Canada Trust v Ontario
Human Rights Commission (1990) 69 DLR (4th) 321 featured in 1 PHRLD
81-2.
15. Vishaka v State of
Rajasthan (1997) 6 Supreme Court Cases 241 (India) featured in 1 PHRLD
92-93.
16. (1997) 6 Supreme Court
Cases 241 (India) featured in 1 PHRLD 92-93.
17. These cases are directly
extracted and modified from UNAIDS Best Practice Collection, Courting
Rights: Case Studies in Litigating the Human Rights of People Living
with HIV (Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network/ UNAIDS: Geneva, 2006).
18. A CD4 cell count is a
measurement of the number of CD4 cells in a sample of blood. The CD4
count is one of the most useful indicators of the health of the immune
system and the progression of HIV/AIDS. A normal CD4 cell count is
between 500 and 1,400 cells/mm3 of blood, but an individual's CD4 count
can vary. In HIV- infected individuals, a CD4 count at or below 200
cells/mm3 is considered an AIDS-defining condition. A viral load test
measures the quantity of HIV RNA (ribonucleic acid) in the blood.
Results are reported as the number of copies of HIV RNA per ml of blood
plasma. (Source: http://aidsinfo.nih.gov/Glossary/
GlossaryDefaultCenterPage.aspx?MenuItem=AIDSinfoTools)
19. World Health Organisation.
Guidelines on HIV infection and AIDS in prisons (1993), 5.
20. UN Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights. The right to the highest attainable
standard of physical and mental health. (General Comment 14), UN Doc.
E/C.12/2000/4 (2000), paras 34 & 35.
21. HIV/AIDS and Human Rights:
International Guidelines. Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights & Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS, 1998, para 29 (e).
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