(ARTICLE 19/IFEX) - The following is a 29
March 2007 ARTICLE 19 press release:
ARTICLE 19 welcomes Tanzanian defamation proposals but urges reconsideration of
media regulation
ARTICLE 19 today released an analysis of the draft Media Services Bill of
Tanzania. This Bill was published in March 2007, and is expected to be
introduced in the Tanzanian Parliament in April of this year.
While ARTICLE 19 welcomes certain aspects of the Bill, such as the proposed new
defamation regime and provisions on the protection of journalists' confidential
sources, we are concerned that other parts are unnecessarily restrictive. We
are particularly concerned at the proposed regime for the licensing of all
journalists, and the registration regime for the media. Both go far beyond what
international law accepts as legitimate, and will hinder rather than help the
free flow of information in Tanzania.
ARTICLE 19's main recommendations include the following:
? The proposal that all journalists should hold a recognised professional or
academic qualification and be licensed by a central body violates international
law and should be removed from the draft Bill;
? The need for the proposed registration for the media regime should be
reconsidered, particularly in light of the fact that most if not all mass media
are already registered under Tanzanian company law. If a registration regime is
nevertheless found to be necessary, it should apply to true mass media outlets
only, be of a minimal nature and be administered by an independent body;
? The government should give self-regulation a chance to succeed for the print
media at least, and refrain from introducing a statutory regime;
? The proposal that all publishers should lodge a cash bond should be
abandoned.
Peter Noorlander, ARTICLE 19's Senior Legal Officer, said:
"Implementation of the defamation proposals in this Bill would bring
Tanzania in line with international standards in this field. We thoroughly
welcome them. We hope that the rest of the Bill is brought up to the same high
standard, so as to promote the development of a pluralistic and high quality
media that will deliver the public's right to know."
ARTICLE 19's Submission on the draft law is available at http://www.article19.org/pdfs/analysis/tanzania-media-services-bill.pdf
ARTICLE 19 is an independent human rights organisation that works globally to
protect and promote the right to freedom of expression. It takes its name from
Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human rights
Tanzanian newspapers accused of defamatory
reports
On 13 February 2009, the Tanzanian
minister of information, sports and culture ordered three newspapers to provide
reasons why they published what he calls "defamatory" news reports.
The newspapers in question are Taifa Letu, "Sema Usikize and Taifa
Tanzania.
The minister accused the three
newspapers of writing defamatory reports against three prominent figures,
namely Reginald Mengi, the executive chairman of IPP Media Limited and the
owner of a number of media organisations, Nazir Karamagi, the former minister
of energy and minerals, and a former unnamed prime minister.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while
Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The
former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour.
The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary
action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on
the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's
interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in]
Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public."
He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which
guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions
that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing
against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all
laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information.
MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on
the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this
matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the
minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations
of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour. The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in] Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public." He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information. MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
man Rights, which guarantees free speech
. Tanzanian newspapers accused of defamatory
reports
On 13 February 2009, the Tanzanian
minister of information, sports and culture ordered three newspapers to provide
reasons why they published what he calls "defamatory" news reports.
The newspapers in question are Taifa Letu, "Sema Usikize and Taifa
Tanzania.
The minister accused the three
newspapers of writing defamatory reports against three prominent figures,
namely Reginald Mengi, the executive chairman of IPP Media Limited and the
owner of a number of media organisations, Nazir Karamagi, the former minister
of energy and minerals, and a former unnamed prime minister.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while
Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The
former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour.
The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary
action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on
the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's
interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in]
Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public."
He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which
guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions
that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing
against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all
laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information.
MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on
the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this
matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the
minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations
of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
Tanzania: Court of Appeal
Temu
v Tanzania Revenue Authority (72 of 2002) [2004] TZCA 34 (27 October 2004)
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour. The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in] Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public." He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information. MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
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THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT ARUSHA
(CORAM: RAMADHANI J. A.; NSEKELA, J. A.; And
KAJI, J. A.) CIVIL APPEAL NO. 72 OF
2002
BETWEEN
STELLA TEMU ... APPELLANT
AND
TANZANIA REVENUE AUTHORITY ... RESPONDENT
(Appeal from the Judgment of the High Court of
Tanzania at
Arusha) (Rutakanqwa,
J.) dated the 22th day of November, 2001
in
Civil Appeal No. 1 of 1999
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
RAMADHANI J.A.:
The appellant, Stella
Temu, is a lawyer by training and was employed by the Ministry of Finance
(hereinafter referred to in short as MOF) in the taxation department. Some time
in 1996 the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) became fully operational and was
charged with the collection of taxes. Stella, like others, was taken to TRA
from MOF. She was given by TRA a letter, Exh. P 1, of 17th June,
1996, titled "Kuajiriwa na Mamlaka ya Mapato Tanzania", which reads,
in relevant parts, as follows:
2.
... Hivyo wafanyakazi
wote wa sasa wa Idara za Kodi chini ya Wizara ya Fedha wanatakiwa kuajiriwa
upya kwa masharti ya Mamlaka ya Mapato.
3.
Kwa kuzingatia maelezo
chini ya aya ya pili hapo juu, nafurahi kukujulisha kuwa imeamuliwa uajiriwe
katika Mamlaka ya Mapato tangu tarehe 1 Julai, 1996.
Hata hivyo utakuwa katika kipindi cha majaribio
(probation) kwa muda wa mwaka mmoja tangu tarehe ya kukubali ajira hii. Endapo
utendaji wako wa kazi na tabia yako vitaonekena kukidhi matakwa ya ajira ndani
ya Mamlaka, utathibitishwa kazini.
Stella accepted the offer by her letter dated 16th
July, 1996, Exh. P. 3, which reads in the relevant part:
Nachukua fursa hii kukuarifu kuwa nimekubali
uteuzi huo kwa masharti yaliyoelezwa na mengine yatakayoamuliwa na Bodi ya
Wakurugenzi.
On 16 June, 1997 she was given another letter,
Exh. P 5, titled
"Kutokuthibitishwa
Kazini Katika Mamlaka ya Mapato Tanzania" and reads, in relevant parts, as
follows:
... Katika barua hiyo tulikueleza pamoja na
mambo mengine kuwa utakuwa katika kipindi cha majaribio kwa muda wa mwaka mmoja
kuanzia tarehe 1 Julai, 1996 hadi tarehe 30 Juni, 1997. Kutokana na tathmini
tuliyofanya katika kipindi cha majaribio, tunasikitika kukujulisha kuwa
hautathibitishwa kazini.
Kufuatana na maelekezo na uamuzi wa Serikali,
TRA inakurudisha Wizara ya Fedha kuanzia tarehe 1/7/1997. Tafadhali wasiliana
na Katibu Mkuu kwa maelekezo zaidi.
Stella decided not to report to MOF but over a
year later, on 6tn January, 1999, she filed a suit against TRA
alleging wrongful termination of employment, that the termination was not done
by a competent authority, that she was not given the right to be heard, that
the letter of termination, Exh. P. 5, was defamatory, and that no reasons were
given to her for the termination.
The matter landed before
RUTAKANGWA, J. who framed five issues for trial and we paraphrase them as
follows:
Was there termination of employment? Was Stella
given a hearing before she was terminated?
iii. Was the termination ordered by a competent
authority?
iv. Was Stella entitled
to be given reasons for the
termination?
termination?
v. What reliefs are the parties entitled to?
RUTAKANGWA, J. found that Stella's employment
was terminated by a competent authority but that she was not given a hearing
before the decision was taken and that she was entitled to know the reasons for
the termination but that was not done. However, the learned judge was of the
decided opinion, based on the evidence of Patience Minga, DW 2, who was the
immediate boss of Stella, that she would not have been confirmed in the
employment even if she had been heard because of her irresponsible attitude.
For the same reason the learned judge found that Stella was not defamed and,
therefore, declined to grant her damages instead he gave her general damages of
shs. 2,000,000/= "for the wrongful termination of her probationary
employment".
Stella is aggrieved with that judgment and has
preferred this appeal having four grounds. Before us she was represented by Mr.
Malamsha, learned counsel, while TRA had the services of Mr. Rugaiya, learned
advocate. Briefly the four grounds were that the learned trial judge erred by:
i. Not annulling the termination and ordering
reinstatement.
ii. Framing new issues suo motu for which
there were neither
evidence nor submissions.
evidence nor submissions.
iii. Granting reliefs not prayed for.
iv. Subjecting the appellant to double jeopardy
of wrongful
termination by the respondent and termination by the court.
termination by the respondent and termination by the court.
Mr. Malamsha decided to combine grounds one and
three and argued grounds two and four separately.
Before we go into the grounds of appeal and the
submissions of the learned counsel, we think we need to appraise the evidence
which is on record and make up our own findings on certain important issues.
We do this under Rule 34
(1) which provides as follows:
(l) On any appeal from the decision of the High
Court acting in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, the Court may -
(a) re-appraise the evidence and draw inferences
of fact;
There are two matters of fact which we want to
make findings on: One, what was the status of Stella vis a vis TRA: was she
employed by TRA or was she seconded by MOF pending confirmation by TRA? Two,
and following from one, what did Exh. 5 do: did it terminate the employment of
Stella with TRA or did it decline to confirm Stella? Most of our questions to
the two counsel revolved around these two points of fact.
We have no doubts in our minds that Stella was
an employee of MOF and that it was Exh P 1 which moved her to TRA. The question
is what was the nature of this movement? Was she seconded to TRA or was she now
an employee of TRA and that she had severed all relations with MOF? Admittedly,
the word "seconded" was not used in Exh. P 1 or Exh. P 5.
However, Mr. Rugaiya referred us to Exh. D. 2,
"Waraka wa Utumishi Na. 7 wa Mwaka 1995", that is,
"Establishment Circular No. 7 of 1995", issued on 01 December, 1995.
That Circular prescribes three categories of services under which a Government
employee could work for a parastatal or a Government Agency: There is
secondment under paragraph 3. Then there is attachment under paragraph 8, and
thirdly, there is what we will refer to as "departmental transfer" or
as is termed in the Circular "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja". The second
mode, attachment, that is, assigning an employee to a parastatal for a
specified period of time after which the officer goes back to the parent
ministry, does not concern us here. The other two types are relevant here and
we shall reproduce the applicable portions in Kiswahili.
Secondment is provided
in paragraph 3 as follows:
3. Utaratibu wa Kuazimwa (Secondment):
Pale inapokusudiwa na inapoamliwa kumpeleka
mtumishi wa Serikali kwenye Shirika la Umma kwa minajili ya kumhamishia huko
moja kwa moja, mtumishi huyo baada ya kufuata utaratibu wa Waraka huu
atahamishiwa kwenye Shirika moja kwa moja. Hata hivyo mtumishi huyo atapaswa
kuwa katika muda wa majaribio (trial period) kwa kipindi cha miezi kumi na
miwili (12). Kipindi hicho kitakapokwisha, Shirika litapaswa kuamua kama
litamchukua mhusika kama mtumishi wake wa kudumu au la. Ikiwa atachukuliwa,
basi atafuata masharti yaliyomo katika Waraka huu. Iwapo Shirika litaamua
kutomchukuwa, mhusika atarejeshwa alikotoka bila ya kuchelewa. Endapo kipindi
hicho kitakuwa kimepita na Shirika halikuchukua hatua zozote za kumchukua au
kumrejesha, na kama mhusika hatakuwa ameomba kurudi alikotoka, itachukuliwa
kwamba ameingia katika utumishi wa kudumu wa Shirika.
Two things are obvious to us here: One, the
initiative of moving an employee from a ministry to a parastatal is of the
parastatal itself, which under paragraph 4 is required to make an application
to the Central Establishment. There was no such application here and we think
it was because all employees connected with taxation and custom duties were
seconded to TRA from MOF. Nevertheless, the initiative in this case came from
TRA who wrote Exh. P 1 offering employment to Stella in TRA. The second thing
is that an employee so seconded is taken on probation for one year. This is
what was contained in Exh. P 1.
The import of paragraph 3 is driven home by the
provisions of paragraph 11 which gives the third category of service, that is,
departmental transfer or "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja":
11. Utaratibu wa Uhamisho wa Moja kwa Moja:
Uhamisho wa moja kwa moja kutoka Serikalini
kwenda Shirika la Umma hufanyika baada ya mtumishi aliyeazimwa kumaliza muda
wake wa kuazimwa kama ilivyoelezwa katika ibara ya [3] hapo juu. Aidha mtumishi
anapojiunga na Shirika la Umma kutokana na uteuzi wa Serikali, mtumishi huyo
hujiunga na Shirika linalohusika moja kwa moja bila ya kuwa na muda wa
majaribio kwanza. Kwa madhumuni ya Waraka huu, uteuzi wa Serikali ni pamoja
na:-
11.1 Uteuzi unaotokana na Idara ya Serikali kuwa
Shirika la Umma.
It is abundantly plain to us that in this
"uhamisho wa moja kwa moja" the initiative is from the Government and
then there is no probation period. As we have already observed, Exh. P 1 was
written to Stella by TRA and not by the Government and then Stella's engagement
with TRA was prefaced by probation of one year. Therefore, Stella's engagement
with TRA was NOT "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja" but was secondment.
After the one year period of probation TRA could retain Stella, that is,
confirm her engagement or TRA could decide not to confirm her engagement, which
is what it did vide Exh. P 5. In that case Stella was to report back to her
former employer, MOF. Likewise, Stella could have decided, after the expiry of
the probation period, not to work for TRA and in that case, too, she would have
returned to MOF.
The position explained above is confirmed by
Exh. D. 3, a letter from the Central Establishment to TRA dated 11th
November, 1998, which said in relevant parts as follows:
Napenda kukutaarifu kuwa utaratibu ambao umekuwa
unatumika katika kuwahamisha watumishi wa Serikali, katika Idara ambazo
zimebadilishwa kuwa Wakala wa Serikali (Agencies) ni kuwapa kibali cha kuazimwa
katika kipindi cha mwaka mmoja na katika kipindi hicho mwajiri anawajibika
kulipa Hazina asilimia 25 ya mishahara yao kwa madhumuni ya kuhifadhi pensheni
zao. Baada ya kipindi cha mwaka mmoja kumalizika inabidi waajiriwa hao pamoja
na mwajiri kufanya uamuzi wa kuendelea au kutokuendelea na kazi katika Taasisi
hiyo. Watumishi ambao hawapendelei kuendelea na kazi au wameshindwa kutimiza
masharti inabidi warudishwe kwa mwajiri wao kutafutiwa nafasi nyingine ya kazi
kama ipo au kupungunzwa kazini.
The final piece of evidence supporting the fact
that Stella was seconded to TRA was the fact that she was on 19th
August, 1996, promoted from Finance Management Officer Grade III to Finance
Management Officer Grade I according to the letter to her from MOF, Exh. P. 2.
At that time Stella was with TRA where her engagement started from 01st
July, 1996. We asked Mr. Malamsha how could that happen if Stella was a
permanent employee of TRA. How could MOF promote a person who is not their
employee? Mr. Malamsha merely said that the process of promotion was in the
pipeline when Stella was transferred to TRA. That is not a satisfactory answer.
Even if that were so, MOF knew that she was no longer their employee. The
letter was sent to her through TRA. Our interpretation of that fact is that MOF
promoted Stella because she was still their employee, that she was merely
seconded to TRA, and that her continued stay there depended on confirmation
after the probation period.
So, our conclusion is that Stella was seconded
to TRA and that she continued being an employee of MOF. So, Exh. P. 5, did
not terminate her employment but did not confirm her engagement with TRA and
that she was to go back to MOF. So, grounds one and three which were
consolidated and which sought to fault the learned judge for not ordering the
reinstatement of Stella is dismissed. We agree with Mr. Rugaiya that if there
was no termination there could not be reinstatement. Equally, ground four of
appeal that Stella was subject to double jeopardy of termination TRA and also
by the court order is misconceived and is dismissed as was properly submitted by
Mr. Rugaiya.
What remains now is ground two that the learned
judge suo motu framed issues at the time of composing the judgment and
thereby denied Stella the opportunity to call evidence in rebuttal. Mr.
Malamsha complained of the discussion of defamation by the learned judge. We
agree with Mr. Rugaiya entirely that though defamation was not framed as an
issue, and that was the fault of both advocates at the trial, the pleadings
contained defamation. Even Stella in her examination-in-chief said:
When I received this letter of non-confirmation,
I believed that I had failed to perform my duties efficiently and I was defamed
thereby as a trained lawyer. My employment record as well as my reputation were
tarnished. Because of that I am praying for damages to clear my name and
record. I am therefore praying to be paid Tshs. 50,000,000/= as general
damages.
Surely, the learned judge could not pretend that
the question of defamation was not before him just because no issue was framed
on defamation. In fact this Court has decided in one appeal, following a
decision of the former East African Court of Appeal, that a court must decide a
matter which it has allowed to be argued before it even if the matter is not
contained in the pleadings. We dismiss this ground.
The learned judge found that Stella had a right
to be heard but that she was not. Also he made a finding that she was entitled
to know the reasons for the non-confirmation which again she was not given. Was
the learned judge right? These two matters could not be subject to the appeal,
and there was also no cross-appeal. However, we intend to use section 4 (2) of
the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979, as amended by Act No. 17 of 1993, and
revise the proceedings. That section provides as follows:
For all purposes of and incidental to the
hearing and determination of any appeal in the exercise of the jurisdiction
conferred upon it by this Act, the Court of Appeal shall, in addition to any
other power, authority and jurisdiction conferred by this Act, have the power
of revision and the power, authority and jurisdiction vested in the Court from
which the appeal is brought.
The learned judge followed a number of
authorities in arriving at those two holdings. The main authority relied upon
is of the High Court of Australia in O'Rourke v. Miller [1980] LRC (Const.) 654. Unfortunately it has not been possible for us to lay our hands on
that law report in Arusha. However, that decision, in turn, relied on Chief
Constable of Northern Wales Police v. Evans [1982] UKHL 10; [1982] 3 All ER 141, which we have been able to obtain. In both of these cases a
police constable was employed but was placed under probation during which time
the constable was dismissed without being heard and without being given
reasons.
At page 151 Lord BRIGHTMAN said:
My Lords, before I conclude this unhappy story,
I must turn to the statutory provision. Regulation 16 of the Police Regulations
1971, which I need not quote 'erbatim, provides that during his period of
probation the force, the services of a constable may be dispensed with at any
time if the chief officer of police considers: (1) that he is not fitted,
physically or mentally, to perform the duties of his office; or (2) that he is
not likely to become an efficient constable; or (3) that he is not likely to
become a well conducted constable.
It is plain from the wording of the regulation
that the power of a chief officer of police to dispense with the services of a
person accepted as a probationer constable is to be exercised, and exercised
only, after due consideration and determination of the specified questions. It
is not a discretion that may be exercised arbitrarily and without
accountability.
The present case is distinguishable. In the case
cited there was a specific provision of law spelling out the
"checklist", as it were, for dismissing. In the present case there is
no such provision at all. Stella referred to performance appraisal forms but on
cross-examination she answered Mr. Rugaiya that "I do not know if these
forms were not in existence when I was in the service of TRA". It was up
to Stella to show that the forms were in use at her time and that in her case
they were not used when considering her confirmation. In any case the forms are
for employees and we have already made a finding that Stella was not an
employee of TRA.
Lord BRIGHTMAN observed further on page 154 that
I turn secondly to the proper purpose of the
remedy of judicial review, what it is and what it is not. In my opinion the law
was correctly stated in the speech of Lord Evershed ([1963] 2 All ER 66 at 91[1963] UKHL 2; , [1964] AC 40 at 96). His was a dissenting judgment but the dissent was not
concerned with this point. Lord Evershed referred to-
'a danger of usurpation of power on the part of
the courts ... under the pretext of having regard to the principles of natural
justice ... I do observe again that it is not the decision as such which is
liable to review; it is only the circumstances in which the decision was
reached, and particularly in such a case as the present the need for giving to
the party dismissed an opportunity for putting his case.'
That was the case of Ridge v. Baldwin and
Others where the appellant had been a police constable since 1925 and rose
to the rank of Chief Constable. He was prosecuted together with two others for
some offences but he was acquitted. However, the trial judge made some comments
which prompted the watch committee to discuss him and unanimously dismissed him
in March 1958 without giving him a hearing. Lord EVERSHED held that the chief
constable was entitled to a hearing. But Stella here was not an employee of
TRA.
Lord BRIGHTMAN had the same holding when he said
on page 154:
Judicial review is concerned, not with the
decision, but with the decision-making process. Unless that restriction on the
power of the court is observed, the court will in my view, under the guise of
preventing the abuse of power, be itself guilty of usurping power.
I leave these preliminary observations in order
to consider the judgments in the Court of Appeal. It was accepted by each
member of the court that the case fell within the third of Lord Reid's
categories; that the respondent was entitled to a fair hearing; and that he had
not had one.
In the present case, however, we are of the
opinion that there was no right of a hearing because there was no termination
but it was merely a non-confirmation while Stella remained in the employment of
the MOF. It is our decided opinion that probation is a practical interview. We
do not think that the right to be heard and to be given reasons extends even
where a person is told that he/she has failed an interview.
With that finding then
comes the question of remedies: is Stella entitled to any damages? The learned
judge said this:
I will accordingly award the plaintiff two
million (2 million) Tanzanian shillings as nominal general damages for the
wrongful termination of her probationary employment with the defendant.
The wrongful termination was because of
"the breach of the audi alteram rule and failure to give reasons
for the non-confirmation by the committee". As we are of the decided view
that those two requirements do not apply, we, therefore, quash the decision of
the learned judge of granting two million shillings.
We wish to make two observations before we
conclude this judgment. One, Exh. D. 2, "Waraka wa Utumishi Na. 7 wa Mwaka
1995", that is, "Establishment Circular No. 7 of 1995", was in
existence when TRA wrote the letter to Stella, Exh. P. 1, offering her
probationary service, TRA should have referred to that Circular in that letter
and should have used the terminology contained therein, we would have been
saved all this problem. Two, Stella ought to have reported to MOF as directed
and matters would have been different. In fact by not reporting she absconded
from world
So, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
At this 27th
day of October 2004.
A. S. L. RAMADHANI
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
H. R. NSEKELA
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
S. N. KAJI
JUSTICE O
2
Tanzania -- Rev. Christopher Mtikila v. the Attorney
General, Civil Case No. 5 of 1993 (High Court of Tanzania) (Ruling)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF TANZANIA
AT DODOMA
CIVIL CASE NO. 5 OF 1993
(unreported)
REV. CHRISTOPHER MTIKILA . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . PLAINTIFF
Versus
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . DEFENDANT
RULING
LUGAKINGIRA, J.
This was an
unusual petition. In its content and depends it constitutes several petitions
in one which range from challenges to the validity of divers laws to the
protection of the Constitution and legality. The petitioner, the Rev.
Christopher Mtikila, is a human rights campaigner-cum-political activist and
was represented by learned counsel Mr. Ikumimit-Mbarat who was assisted by Mr.
Richard Rweyongoza. The respondent Attorney General was represented by Mr.
Kipenka Msememba Mussa a Senior State Attorney. I wish to commend them all for
the industry and brilliance that went into the preparation and presentation of
arguments.
The petition
originally raised very diverse issues, many of them usher political in flavour
and substance, and this prompted Mr. Musasa [sic] to raise a litany of
preliminary objections which the Court resolved in the early stages of the
proceeding. The objectives were grounded in questions of the petitions locus
standi, cause of action and justiciabilty of some of the issues. At the end of
the day a number of matters were struck out and issues were then framed for the
survivours [sic]. In view of the character of the petition which had to be
amended several times it is better to paraphrase these issues rather than
merely . . . . . . . . . . . . them.
The first
issue is a general one and is tied up with the second and fifth issues. It
seeks to establish generally whether the fundamental rights guaranteed in Part
III, Chapter One of the Constitution of the United Republic, 1977 are
immutable. The inquiry is prompted by a set of amendments to the Constitution
vide the Eight Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 (No. 4). The Act amends
Articles 39, 67 and 77 in a manner which appears to infringe the right of
participation in national public affairs which is guaranteed in subpart (1)
thereof. To put it differently, the problem posed in the first issue is whether
the amendments to the Constitution were validly made and, if not, whether they
can be declared void pursuant to the provisions of Art. 64(5).
The second
issue turns on the provisions of ss. 8, 9, 10 and 15 of the Political Parties
Act, 1992 (No. 5) which was enacted pursuant to the amendment to Art. 20. These
provisions are alleged to inhibit the formation of political parties and
therefore to infringe the freedom of association. I am called upon to declare
them unconstitutional and void. The fifth issue arises from the amendment to
Articles 39, 67 and 77 as well as s. 39 of the Legal Authorities (Elections)
Act, 1979. These amendments renders [sic] it impossible for independent
candidates to contest presidential, parliamentary or local council elections. I
am again called upon to remedy the situation.
In the third
issue the petition takes on ss. 5 (2), 13, 25, and 37-47 of the Newspapers Act,
1976 (No. 3). Section 5(2) empowers the Minister responsible for matters
relating to newspapers to exclude any newspaper from the operation of any of
the provisions relating to the registration of newspapers. Section 13 empowers
the Minister to require any publisher of a newspaper to execute and register a
bond in the office of the Registrar of Newspapers. Section 25 empowers the
Minister to order cessation of publication of any newspaper. Sections 37-47 are
concerned with defamation and the punishment for libel. Finally, the petition
takes on para 12 (1) of Government Notice No. 166 of 1977 which empowers the
Registrar to refuse registration of a newspaper. It is contended that all these
provisions are arbitrary and liable to abuse and constitute an infringement to
the freedom of expression which is guaranteed under Art. 10 (1).
A fourth
issue turns on the freedom of peaceful assembly and public expression and
questions the constitutionality of ss. 4, 41, 42 and 43 of the Police Force
Ordinance, Cap. 322, as well as s. 11 (1) and (2) of the Political Parties Act.
These provisions make it necessary for permits to be obtained in order to hold
meetings or organise processions and also provide for police duties in relation
thereto. In the sixth and final issue a declaration is sought on the
constitutionality of the appointment of Zanzibaris to non-Union posts on the
Mainland.
In my ruling
in the preliminary questions I reserved for consideration at this stage the
questions of locus standi, cause of action and justiciability and I will
proceed to do so before considering the matters set out above.
Arguing
the question of locus standi, no doubt with a mind to the common law orthodox
position, Mr. Mussa submitted that the petitioner had to show a sufficient
interest in the outcome. He considered this to be implied in Art. 30 (3) of the
Constitution. In his view the petitioner had to demonstrate a greater personal
interest than that of the general public, and cited the Nigerian case of Thomas
& Ors. v. Olufosoye (1986) LRC (const) 639 in support of his argument. In
that case it was held by the Court of Appeal that under s. 6 (6) (b) of the
1979 Nigerian Constitution it was necessary for the appellants to establish a
sufficient interest in maintaining the action and this should be a personal
interest over and above that of the general public. Ademola, J.C.A. said, at p.
650:
It is also the law as laid down in the (Adesanya) case that, to entitle a person to invoke judicial power, he must show that either his personal interest will immediately be or has been adversely affected by the action or that he has sustained or is in immediate danger of sustaining an injury to himself and which interest injury is over and above that of the general public.
It is also the law as laid down in the (Adesanya) case that, to entitle a person to invoke judicial power, he must show that either his personal interest will immediately be or has been adversely affected by the action or that he has sustained or is in immediate danger of sustaining an injury to himself and which interest injury is over and above that of the general public.
Basing on
this, Mr. Mussa went on to assert that the crucial factor in the petition was
the petitioner himself and not the contents of the petition. Furthermore, he
contended that Art. 26 (2) of the Constitution did not in itself confer locus
standi and appeared to read the provision as if it were not independent in
itself.
In response
Mr. Mbezi argued that standing was certainly conferred on the petitioner by
Art. 26 (2) and that personal interest (or injury) did not have to be disclosed
in that context. He maintained that the alleged illegality of the laws was
sufficient to justify the petition under that provision. Mr. Mbezi further
stated that the petitioner acquired locus standi under Art. 30 (3) as well and
referred to the dispersal of his meeting under the provisions of the Police
Force Ordinance, the refusal to register his party under the provisions of the
Political Parties Act an the banning of Michapo and Cheka newspapers (his
alleged mouthpieces) as sufficiently demonstrating the petitioner`s interest
within the contemplation of Art. 30 (3). Mr. Mbezi further argued that in view
of the provisions of Art. 64 (5) the Court could be moved into action by any
petitioner.
I have given
due consideration to the contending arguments and feel called upon to deal with
the subject at some length. The status of a litigant in administrative law is a
crucial factor and it has assumed an added dimension in constitutional law in
the wake of written constitutions. In the English common law the litigant`s
locus standi was the handmaid of judicial review of administrative actions.
Whenever a private individual challenged the decision of an administrative body
the question always arose whether that individual had sufficient interest in
the decision to justify the court`s intervention. Hence, it is stated in Wade
and Phillips, Constitutional Law (1965 : 672):
In
administrative law it is necessary for a complainant to have a peculiar
grievance which is not suffered in common with the rest of the public.
The turning
point in England came with the procedural reforms in judicial review vide s. 31
of the Supreme Court Act, 1983, which was to lead in the course of the 1980s to
the recognition of the existence of public law as a distinct sphere from
private law. In other parts of the Commonwealth, notably India and Canada, a
similar but imperceptible development came to manifest itself in the doctrine
of public interest litigation. Traditionally, common law confines standing to litigate
in protection of public rights to the Attorney General and this was reaffirmed
by the House of Lords in Guriet v. Union of Post Office Workers (1978) AC 435,
and the Attorney General`s discretion in such cases may be exercised at the
instance of an individual. But before even the enactment of the Supreme Court
Act, a liberal view on standing was already taking shape and a generous
approach to the issue was already considered desirable. This is illustrated by
these words of Lord Dipleck in IRC v. National Federation of Self-Employed and
Small Businesses Ltd. (1981) 2 A11 E.R. 93, 107:
It would, in
my view, be a grave lacuna in our system of public law if a pressure group,
like the federation or even a single spirited taxpayer, were prevented by
outdated technical rules of locus standi from bringing the matter to the
attention of the a [sic] court to vindicate the rule of law and get the
unlawful conduct stopped.
Yet more
contemporary developments indicate that in England judges are beginning to
acknowledge the possible appearance of apparent "busy-bodies" where
public interest litigation is concerned. The late Raymond Blackburn, a lawyer
and former Member of Parliament, litigated several public interest questions in
which he evidently had no greater interest than the other members of the
public. In [missing character(s)] v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner, ex parte
Blackburn, (1968) 2 QB 118, he challenged police policy in not enforcing the
gaming or obscenity laws, and in Blackburn v. Attorney General, (1971) 2 A11
E.R. 1380, he challenged Government policy in joining the European Community.
The
developments in Canada have been no less breathtaking and we there find more
generous standing rules applied than elsewhere in the older Commonwealth. This
has been largely facilitated by the existence of a written constitution and the
incorporation of a charter of basic rights. The taxpayer is the central figure
in the Canadian approach. In Thorson v. A.G. of Canada, ([illegible date])
[illegible number] 1 SCR 138, a taxpayer was allowed by a majority to challenge
the constitutionality of the Official Languages Act. Laskin, J., of speaking
for the majority, contemplated ". . . . . . . whether a question of
constitutionality should be immunised from judicial review by denying standing
to anyone to challenge the impugned statute." It was observed that
standing in constitutional cases was a matter for the exercise of judicial
discretion. In the case of Nova Scotia Board of Censors v. McNeil,
(197[illegible digit]) [illegible digit] SRC 265, the Supreme Court again
granted standing to a taxpayer to challenge the validity of a provincial Act
regulating film and theatre shows. This position is also illustrated in
Minister of Justice v. Dorowaki (1981) 2 SCR [illegible] where the majority
granted standing to a taxpayer impugning federal legislation allowing abortion,
and ruled:
. . . . . .
. to establish status as a plaintiff in a suit seeking a declaration that the
legislation is invalid, if there is a serious issue of invalidity, a person
need only to show that he is affected by it directly or that he has a genuine
interest as a citizen in the validity of the legislation and that there is no
other and that there is no other and effective manner in which the issue may be
brought before the Court.
The Canadian
Supreme Court has in fact extended the liberalising affect of these judgments
beyond constitutional cases.
Finally, it
is important to revisit the Nigerian position. What was said in Thomas was not
merely an expression of the seeming inflexibility of s. 6 (6) (b) of the 1979
Nigerian Constitution but it was also a product of the colonial heritage. Soon
after the attainment of independence Nigerian courts found themselves having to
determine when and under what circumstances will a litigant be accorded
standing to challenge the constitutionality of a statute or to ask for a
judicial review. In Olawayin v. A.G. of Northern Nigeria (1961) A11 N.L.R. 269,
the plaintiff had challenged the constitutionality of a law which prohibited
children from engaging in political activities. The trial court dismissed the
claim on the ground that no right of the plaintiff was alleged to have been
infringed and that it would be contrary to public principle to make the
declaration asked for in vacuo. He appealed to the Federal Supreme Court which
dismissed the appeal on the same ground of absence of sufficient interest. In a
classic restatement of the orthodox common law approach, Unsworth, F.J. said,
at p. 274:
There was no
suggestion that the appellant was in imminent danger of coming into conflict
with the law or that there has been any real or direct interference with his
normal business or other activities . . . the appellant [needed] to show that
he had a sufficient interest to sustain a claim . . . to hold that there was an
interest here would amount to saying that a private individual obtains an
interest by the mere enactment of a law which may in future come in conflict.
Curiously,
the Nigerian courts remained stuck in that position even when the 1979
Constitution suggested a way out with the clause —
Any person
who alleges that any of the provisions of this chapter has been, is being or is
likely to be contravened in any State in relation to him may apply to a High
Court in that State for redress.
This is
illustrated in the much criticised decision in Adesanya v. President of Nigeria
& Anor. (1981) 1 A11 N.L.R.I. In that case the appellant brought action
challenging the appointment by the President of the second respondent to the
chairmanship of the Federal Electoral Commission. The latter was at the time
the Chief Judge of Dendel State and was, therefore disqualified from being
appointed a member of the Commission. When the matter came up for final
disposal before the Supreme Court it was unanimously held that the appellant
had no locus standi to bring the action on the ground that he had not
demonstrated the appointment and subsequent confirmation by the Senate of the
second respondent had in any way infringed his civil rights and obligations.
Significantly, though, Fatayi-Williams, C.J.N. who delivered the leading
judgment had these interesting remarks to make (at p. 20):
I take
significant cognisance of the fact that Nigeria is a developing country with a
multi-ethnic society and a written Federal Constitution, where rumourmongering
is the pastime of the market places and the construction sites. To deny any
member of such a society who is aware or believes, or is led to believe, that
there has been an infraction of any of the provisions of our Constitution, or
that any law passed by any of [our? the?] Legislative Houses, whether Federal
or State, is unconstitutional, access to a Court of law to air his grievance on
the flimsy excuse of lack of sufficient interest is to provide a ready recipe
for organised disenchantment with the judicial process.
There was
unfavourable reaction from the public and the profession to the
Adesanyadecision and the ambivalence of the Chief Justice in the above passage
provided more ammunition. Henceforth many of the Nigerian courts preferred to
use the broad and liberal part of the judgment of the Chief Justice. Therefore,
in Chief Isagba v. Alege (1981) 2 NCLR 424, Omerun [?], J. accorded standing to
a plaintiff by holding that any Nigerian taxpayer had sufficient interest in
the observance of the provisions of the Constitution by any organ of the State
or the agency. And in A.G. of Dendel State v. A.G. of Nigeria) ([illegible]) 3
NCLRI, 88, Obaseki, J.S.C., who was a party to the decision in Odesany, came
around to say:
The
constitution has opened the gates to the courts by its provisions and there can
be no justifiable reasons for closing the gates against those who do not want
to be governed by a law enacted NOT in accordance with the provisions of the
constitution.
The shift in
Nigeria was sealed in Adediran v. Interland Transport Ltd. (1991) 9 NWLR 155
where Karibi-Whyte, J.S.C. said:
. . . . the
restriction imposed at common law on the right of action . . . is inconsistent
with the provisions of s. 6 (6) (b) of the Constitution, 1979 and to that I
think the high constitutional policy involved in s. 6 (6) (b) is the removal of
the obstacles erected by the common law requirements against individuals
bringing actions before the court against the government and its institutions .
. .
It was
necessary to treat the subject to this length in order to demonstrate that Mr.
Mussa`s appreciation of locus standi in the context of constitutional
litigation no longer hold good. The notion of personal interest, personal injury
or sufficient interest over and above the interest of the general public has
more to do with private law as distinct from public law. In matters of public
interest litigation this Court will not deny standing to a genuine and bona
fide litigant even where he has no personal interest in the matter. This
position also accords with the decision in Benazir Bhutto v. Federation of
Pakistan, PLD 1988 SC 46, where it was held by the Supreme Court that the
traditional rule of locus standi can be dispensed with and procedure available
in public interest litigation can be made use of if the petition is brought to
the court by a person acting bona fide.
The
relevance of public interest litigation in Tanzania cannot be over-emphasized.
Having regard to our socio-economic conditions, this development promises more
hope to our people than any other strategy currently in place. First of all,
illiteracy is still rampant. We were recently told that Tanzania is second in
Africa in wiping out illiteracy but that is statistical juggling which is not
reflected on the ground. If we were that literate it would have been
unnecessary for Hanang District Council to pass bye-laws for compulsory adult
education which were recently published as Government Notice No. 191 of 1994.
By reason of this illiteracy a greater part of the population is unaware of
their rights, let alone how the same can be realised. Secondly, Tanzanians are
massively poor. Our ranking in the world on the basis of per capita income has
persistently been the source of embarrassment. Public interest litigation is a
sophisticated mechanism which requires professional handling. By reason of
limited resources the vast majority of our people cannot afford to engage
lawyers even where they were aware of the infringement of their rights an the
perversion of the Constitution. Other factors could be listed but perhaps the
most painful of all is that over the years since independence Tanzanians have
developed a culture of apathy and silence. This, in large measure, is a product
of institutionalized mono-party politics which in its repressive dimension,
like detention without trial, supped up initiative and guts. The people found
contentment in being receivers without being seekers. Our leaders very well
recognise this, and with the emergence of transparency in governance they have
not hesitated to affirm it. When the National Assembly was debating Hon. J.S.
Warioba`s private motion on the desirability of a referendum before some
features of the Constitution were tampered with, Hon. Sukwa Said Sukwa, after
two interruptions by his colleagues, continued and said (Parliamentary Debates,
26.8.94):
Mheshimiwa
Spika, nilisema kwamba tatizo la nchi yetu sio wananchi. Lazima tukubali hili
kwa kweli, tatizo ni sisi viongozi. Kama sisi viongozi tutakubaliana, wananchi
hawana matatizo. Mimi nina bakika Mheshimiwa Spika. Kama viongo [illegible]
Tanzania wote, wa pande zote mbili wa Zanzibar na wa Tanzania Bara, tutakubali
kusema kosho Serikali moja, basi itakuwa kesho, na wananchi watafanya maandamano
kuunga mkono. Maana wananchi wetu hawana tatizo. Kwa nini tunawapolekea hili
tatizo? Nasema tatizo ni sis viongozi.
Given all
these and other circumstances, if there should spring up a public-spirited
individual and seek the Court`s intervention against legislation or actions
that pervert the Constitution, the Court, as guardian and trustee of the
Constitution and what it stands for, is under an obligation to rise up to the
occasion and grant him standing. The present petitioner is such an individual.
These
principles find expression in our Constitution. It is apparent from the scheme
of Part III, Chapter One of the Constitution that every person in Tanzania is
vested with a double capacity: the capacity as an individual and the capacity
as a member of the community. In his former capacity he enjoys all the basic
rights set out in Art. 12 to Art 25; in the latter capacity he is bounden to
discharge duties towards the community as indicated in Art. 25 to Art. 28. This
scheme reflects the modern trend in constitutionalism which recognises the
pre-eminence of the community in the formulation of the constitution. It is
recognised that rights are correlative with functions: we have them that we may
make our contribution to the social end. Our Constitution goes further to
emphasize the two capacities by equipping the individual with a double standing
to sue. In the first place he is vested with standing by Art. 30 (3) which
states:
(3) Where
any person alleges that any provision of this Part of this Chapter or any law
involving a basic right or duty has been, is being or is likely to be
contravened in relation to him in any part of the United Republic, he may,
without prejudice to any other action or remedy lawfully available to him in
respect of the same matter, institute proceedings for relief in the High Court.
This
provision, in my view, caters for both personal and public interest litigation
for at times the two may prove inseparable. A person who sues because he
desires to be an independent parliamentary candidate where the system does not
so allow necessarily shoulders the burden for the public. It is also important
to note that under this provision action lies where a person`s right "has
been, is being or is likely to be contravened." These are plain and clear
words which admit of no controversy. Standing is therefore available under the
Constitution even where contravention of a basic right is reasonably
apprehended. The case of Thomas, and in asmuch [sic] as it was decided in
deference to the much criticised decision in Adesanya, has no relevance in the
context of the Constitution. In the upshot it is not correct to say, as Mr.
Mussa suggested, that the petitioner has no locus standi because he cannot show
that his rights have already been infringed. In my view he is within the
purview of Art. 30 (3) is there is in existence a law the operation of which is
likely to contravene his basic rights.
Standing is
additionally conferred by Art. 26 (2), and this states:
(2) Every
person is entitled, subject to the procedure provided for by the law, to
institute proceedings for the protection of the Constitution and legality.
Mr. Mussa
suggested that this provision has to be read with Art. 30 (3) and cannot be
used in lieu of the latter. With respect, I cannot agree. It is a cardinal rule
of statutory and constitutional interpretation that every provision stands
independent of the other and has a special [?] function to perform unless the
contrary intention appears. There is nothing in Art. 26 (2) or elsewhere to link
it to Art. 30 (3). The only linkage is to Art. 30 (4) and this is one of
procedure rather than substance. Clause (4) empowers Parliament to make
provision for the procedure relating to institution of proceedings under the
article. It has not done so to date but that does not mean that the court is
hamstrung. In D.P.P. v. Daudi Pete [?], Criminal Appeal No. 28 of 1990
(unreported), the Court of Appeal stated in that ". . . . until the
Parliament legislates under sub- article (4) the enforcement of the Basic
Rights, Freedoms and duties may be affected under the procedure and practice
that is available in the High Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction, depending on the nature of the remedy sought." I hold Art.
26 (2) to be an independent and additional source of standing which can be
invoked by a litigant depending on the nature of his claim. Under this
provision, too, and having regard to the objective thereof — the protection of
the Constitution and legality — a proceeding may be instituted to challenge
either the validity of a law which appears to be inconsistent to the
Constitution or the law of the land. Personal interest is not an ingredient in
this provision; it is tailored for the cummunity and falls under the sub-title
"Duties to the Society." It occurs to me, therefore, that Art. 26 (2)
enacts into our Constitution the doctrine of public interest litigation. It is
then not in logic or foreign precedent that we have to go for this doctrine; it
is already with us in our own Constitution.
I hasten to
emphasize, however, that standing will be granted on the basis of public
interest litigation where the petition is bona fide and [evidently?] for the
public good and where the Court can provide an effective remedy. This point is
underscored in People Union of Democratic Rights v. Minister of Home Affairs,
AIR 1985 Do hi 268, where it was stated that "public interest
litigation" meant nothing more than what it stated, namely, it is a
litigation in the interest of the public. It is not the type of litigation
which is meant to satisfy the curiosity of the people, but it is a litigation
which is instituted with a desire that the court would be able to give
effective relief to the whole or a section of the society. It is emphasized in
the case that the condition which must be fulfilled before public interest
litigation is entertained by the court is that the court should be in a
position to give effective and complete relief. If no effective or complete
relief can be granted, the court should not entertain public interest
litigation. I gave serious consideration to the matters raised in this petition
and the prayers connected therewith and I was persuaded that in quite a number
of areas the public interest overwhelmed what appeared to be a private factor.
I therefore allowed arguments to proceed on the issues reviewed above. But in
the light of those arguments and what is stated in this paragraph, it may be
necessary to reconsider the position of one issue at the appropriate stage
later. Meanwhile I will turn to dispose of the question of cause of action.
Cause of
action is not a problem in this petition. Mr. Mussa seemed to suggest, but I
respectfully disagree, that in order for cause of action to arise an event
injurious to the rights of the petitioner must have taken place. In my view,
where the issue is whether a law is unconstitutional the court looks at the law
itself but not at how it works. The following passage from Chitaley [ao] , The
Constitution of India (1970 : 686), citing Prahalad Je v. State, 1990 Orissa
157, is to the point:
In order to
determine whether a particular law is repugnant or inconsistent with the
Fundamental Rights it is the provisions of the Act that must be looked at and
not the manner in which the power under the provision is actually exercised.
Inconsistency or repugnancy does not depend upon the exercise of the power by
virtue of the provisions in the Act but on the nature of the provisions
themselves.
I agree and
do not wish to add anything more. In this petition the dispute is over the
validity of various laws and this, in my view, constitutes the necessary cause
of action. A situation could certainly arise where the cause of action would
depend upon actual exercise of power. Such a situation is exemplified in this
petition where the constitutionality of the appointment of Zanzibaris to
non-union positions on the Mainland is questioned. In that context it is the
appointments themselves that constitute the cause of action, but that has to do
with the validity of the action rather than a law. There now remains the
question of justiciability of the claims but since that has more to do with the
first of the issues, I will not turn to consider them.
The first
issue seeks to determine the immutability of basic rights enacted in the Constitution.
This turns on the power of the Parliament to amend the provisions providing for
these rights. Specifically, what is at issue are the amendments to Art. 20 and
Art. 39 of the Constitution vide the Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992.
In its original form Art. 20 read as follows:
20. (1)
Subject to the laws of the land, every person is entitled to freedom of
peaceful assembly, association and public expression, that is to say, the right
to assemble freely and peaceably, to associate with other persons and, in
particular, to form or belong to organisations or associations formed for the
purposes of protecting or furthering his or any other interests.
(2) Subject
to the relevant laws of the land, a person shall not be compelled to belong to
any association.
In its
amended form clause (1) remains unaffected, hence the rights and freedoms spelt
out therein remain as before. Our interest in this petition centres on the
freedom of association which, under the present multi-party system, includes the
formation of political parties. Clause (2) was also unaffected by the amendment
save that it now became clause (4). In between there are new clauses (2) and
(3) which it is necessary to set out in full. (The translation from Kiswahili
is partly my own and partly adapted).
(2) Without
prejudice to subsection (1) no political party shall qualify for registration
if by its constitution and policy —
(a) it aims
to advocate or further the interests of —
(i) any religious belief of [sic] group;
(ii) any tribal, ethnic or racial group;
(iii) only a specific area within any part of the United Republic;
(i) any religious belief of [sic] group;
(ii) any tribal, ethnic or racial group;
(iii) only a specific area within any part of the United Republic;
(b) it
advocates the breaking up of the Union constituting the United Republic:
(c) it
accepts or advocates the use of force or violence as a means of attaining its
political objectives;
(d) it
advocates or aims to carry on its political activities exclusively in one part
of the United Republic; or
(e) it does
not allow periodic and democratic elections of its leadership.
(3)
Parliament may enact legislation prescribing conditions which will ensure
compliance by political parties with the provisions of subsection ( 2 ) by
relations to the people`s freedom and right of association and assembly.
Pursuant to
clause (3), Parliament enacted the Political Parties Act of [ 92] providing for
the registration of political parties and other matters. Clause (2) above was
lifted in its entirety and re-enacted as s. 9 (2) of the Act. In addition s. 8
of the Act provided for a two-stage registration — provisional and full
registration. Provisional registration is done upon fulfilment of the
conditions prescribed in s. 9; full registration is effected after fulfilment
of the conditions in s. 10 which reads:
10 — No
political party shall be qualified to be fully registered unless —
(a) it has
been provisionally registered;
(b) it has
obtained not less than two hundred members who are qualified to be registered
as voters for the purpose of parliamentary elections from each of at least ten
Regions of the United Republic out of which at least two Regions are in
Tanzania, Zanzibar being one Region each from Zanzibar and [Pe_ts_] and
(c) it has
submitted the names of the national leadership of the party and such leadership
draws its members from both Tanzania-Zanzibar and Tanzania Mainland;
(d) it has
submitted to the Registrar the location of its head offices within the United
Republic and a postal address to which communications may be sent.
It is
contended by the petitioner that ss. 8, 9 and 10 of the Political Parties Act
are in the conditions on the formation of political parties and thereby
inhibiting enjoyment of the freedom of in Art. 20(1). It is further contended
that Art. 20(2) and [sections derive? are for the] therefore to Art. 20(2) and
(3) ss. 8, 9, 10 and 13 of the Political Parties Act.
On the other
hand, Art. 39 previously provided as follows:
39. No
person shall be eligible for election to the office of President of the United
Republic unless he —
(a) has
attained the age of forty years; and
(b) is
qualified for election as a Member of the National Assembly or of the
(Zanzibar) House of Representatives.
As amended
by the Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act, the [ above] paragraphs are
maintained but [numbered] (b) and (a) . There is added new paragraphs (a) and
(d) which state (my translation);
(a) is a
citizen of the United Republic by birth;
(d) is a
member of and sponsored by a political party.
The
requirement for membership of and sponsorship by a political party is extended
to candicacy for the National Assembly in Art. 67 and Art. 77 as well as for
local councils in s. 39 of the Local Authorities (Elections) Act. 1979 as
amended by the Local Authorities (Elections) (Amendment) Act, 1992 (No. 7), s.
9. The petitioner contends that the requirement for membership of and sponsorship
by a political party abridges the right to participate in national public
affairs granted by Art. 21(1) which states: —
(1) Every
citizen of the United Republic is entitled to take part in the government of
the country, either directly or through freely chosen representatives, in
accordance with procedure provided by or under the law.
I am
therefore called upon to strike out para (d) in Art. 39 and wherever else the
requirement for membership of and sponsorship by a political party occurs.
As stated earlier
the issue of immutability turns on Parliament`s power to amend the
Constitution. In assessing this power it on [sic] is appropriate to recall, in
the first place, that fundamental rights are not gifts from the state. They
inhere in a person by reason of his birth and are therefore prior to the State
and the law. In our times one method of judging the character of a government
is to look at the extent to which it recognises and protects human rights. The
raison d`etre for any government is its ability to secure the welfare of the
governed. Its claim to allegiance of the governed has be [sic?] in terms of
what that allegiance is to serve. Allegiance has [to be] correlative with
rights. Modern constitutions like our own have enacted fundamental rights in
their provisions. This does not mean that the rights are thereby created;
rather it is evidence of their recognition and the intention that they should
be enforceable in a court of law. It can therefore be argued that the very
decision to translate fundamental rights into a written code is by itself a
restraint upon the powers of Parliament to act arbitrarily. As aptly observed
by Chief Justice Nasim Hassan Shah in Muhammad Nawaz Sharif v. President of
Pakistan, PLD 1993 SC 473, 557,
Fundamental
Rights in essence are restraints on the arbitrary exercise of power by the
State in relation to any activity than an individual can engage. Although
constitutional guarantees are often couched in permissive terminology, in
essence they impose limitations on the power of the State to restrict such
activities. Moreover, Basic or Fundamental Rights of individuals which
presently stand formally incorporated in the modern constitutional documents
derive their lineage from and are traceable to the ancient Natural Law.
Our
Constitution confers on Parliament very wide powers of amendment but these
powers are by no means unlimited. These powers are to be found in Art. 93(1)
and (2) and it is necessary to set out the relevant parts.
98 — (1)
Parliament may enact legislation altering any provision of this Constitution .
. . (emphasis added)
(2) For the
purposes of construing the provisions of sub- section (1), references to
alteration of any provision of this Constitution or of any law include
references to the amendment or modification, of those provisions, suspension or
repeal and replacement of the provisions or the re-enactment or modification in
the application of those provisions.
These powers
are evidently wide. It has to be accepted, in the first place, that Parliament
has power to amend even those provisions providing for basic human rights.
Secondly, that power is not confined to a small sphere. It extends to
modification of those provisions, suspension or repeal and replacement of same,
re-enactment or modification in the application thereof. Drastic as some of
these terms may sound, I still do not believe that they authorise abrogation
from the Constitution of these rights. The provisions of Art. 98 should be read
in the light of the clawback [?] clauses in Art. 30(2) and 31. The former reads
as follows: —
(2) It is
hereby declared that no provision contained in this Part of this Constitution,
which stipulates the basic human rights, freedoms and duties, shall be be [sic]
construed as invalidating any existing law or prohibiting the enactment of any
law or the doing of any lawful act under such law, making provision for —
(a) ensuring that the rights and freedoms of others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the individual rights and freedoms;
(a) ensuring that the rights and freedoms of others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the individual rights and freedoms;
(b) ensuring
the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public morality, public
health, rural and urban development planning, the development planning, the
development and utilisation of mineral resources or the development or
utilisation of any other property in such manner as to pr the public benefit;
(c) ensuring
the execution of the judgment or order of a court given or made in any civil or
criminal proceeding;
(d) the
protection of the reputation, rights and freedoms of others or the private
lives of persons involved in any court proceedings, prohibiting the disclosure
of confidential information, or the safeguarding of the dignity, authority and
independence of the courts;
(e) imposing
restrictions, supervision and control over the establishment, management and
operation of tion and private companies in the country; or
(f) enabling
any other thing to be done which promotes, enhances or protects the national
interest generally.
Art. 31, on
the other hand, empowers Parliament, notwithstanding the provisions of Art.
30(2), to legislate for measures departing from the provisions of Art. 14
(Right to live) and Art. 15 (Right to personal freedom) during periods of
emergency, or in ordinary times in relation to individuals who are believed to
be conducting themselves in a manner that compromises national security. We may
refer to Art. 97(1) which provides in part —
(1) subject
to the other provisions of this Constitution, the legislative power of
Parliament shall be exercised through the National Assembly . . .
Reading all
these provisions together, it occurs to me that Parliament`s power in relation
to the amendment of the provisions under Part III of Chapter One of the
Constitution can only be exercised within the limits of Art. 30(2) and Art. 31.
Hence, even if it is a suspension, or a repeal and replacement it must be
justifiable within the scope of the two provisions. I have therefore come to
the conclusion, and Mr. Mussa concedes, that Parliament`s power of amendment
are not unlimited. It should be recognised, on the other hand, that society can
never be static. New times bring with them new needs and aspirations. Society`s
perception of basic human rights is therefore bound to change according to
changed circumstances, and that makes it imperative for Parliament to have
power to alter every provision of the Constitution. What remains immutable,
therefore, is the ethic of human rights but not the letter by which they are
expressed.
We turn to
consider whether the amendments complained of were not within the
constitutional limits, beginning with Art. 20 (2) and (3). The former does not
abrogate or abridge beyond the purview of Art. (2) the right of association guaranteed
under Art. 22 (3). It merely lays down the conditions a political party has to
fulfil before registration and all these conditions are within the parameters
of Act. [sic] 30(2). The conditions are clearly aimed at the promotion and
enhancement of public safety, public order and national cohesion. There cannot
be any such thing as absolute or uncontrolled liberty wholly freedom [sic]
restraint, for that would lead to anarchy and disorder. Indeed, in a young
country lke ours, nothing could be more suicidal than to licence prties based
on tribe, race or religion. The problem with Art. (3) is even less apparent. It
is an enabling provision giving Parliament power to enact a law for the
registration of political parties and for ensuring compliance with Art. 20(2)
by these parties. It does not expressly tell Parliament what to write in that
law. I am satisfied and hold that Art. 20(2) and (3) were validly . . . . . .
There remains, however, the provisions of the Political Parties let which fall
for comment under the second issue. Next is Art. 39 and allied articles and
provisions relating to presidential, parliamentary and local council
candidates. Once again, I am unfortunate in . . . . . . say that these
amendments were within the powers of Parliament. They do not abrogate but
merely modify the application of Art. 21(1) by providing that participation in
national public affairs shall be through political under Art. 98(2). I also
think that the amendments are within the ambit of Art. 7(2) if public order be
taken as having supplied the inspiration. These amendments were, therefore,
validly made. It should be understood, however, that I am at this juncture
talking of validity in strict legal terms; the amendments are otherwise not
free from difficulties and there are dealt with under the fifth issue.
The Court`s
power to declare a law void is founded in Art. 64(5). Having held that the
impugned constitutional amendments were validly made, I do not have to consider
whether such amendments are "law" within the meaning of the article.
I have read in this connection the interesting arguments in the cases of
Golaknath v. State of Punjab (1967) 2 SCR 762 and Kesav anda v. State of Keral
(1973) Supp. SCR1, but in view of the decision I have reached, I am unable to take
advantage of them.
The second
issue questions the constitutionality of ss. 8, 9, 10, and 15 of the Political
Parties Act. Much effort had gone into this matter when I was obliged to admit
that the trial of this issue should have been stayed. Last year the petitioner
filed at the Dar es Salaam registry of this Court an application for orders of
certiorari and mandamus. That was Miscellaneous Civil Cause No. 67 of 1993, the
applicants being himself and the Democratic Party and the respondents being the
Attorney General and the Registrar of Political Parties. The grounds for the
application were that the Registrar was biased in refusing to register the
Democratic Party and that the Political Parties Act (apparently the whole of
it) was unconstitutional and void. He was praying for orders to quash the
Registrar`s decision and to direct him to reconsider the Democratic Party`s
application according to law. The application was heard and subsequently
dismissed by Maina, J. on 14 December 1993. Two days later the petitioner
lodged a notice of appeal. There is now pending before the Court of Appeal a
Civil Appeal No. 24 of 1994, in which the first ground of appeal states: —
The learned
judge erred in law in failing to hold that section 8 and 10 of the Political
Parties Act, 1992, Act No. 5 of 1992 are violative of article 13 (6)(a) of the
Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania and therefore null and void on
the ground that they do not provide for fair hearing before the Second
Respondent`s to refuse full registration of a political party.
The
memorandum concludes: —
It is
proposed to ask the Court for the following orders:
(i) an order
striking out sections 8, 10 and 16 of the Political Parties Act, 1992.
In the
present petition I am confronted with the same prayer with slight variation,
namely, to strike out ss. 8, 9, 10 and 15 of the same Act. In other words a
suit in which the matter in issue is substantially in issue in another suit
between the same parties is pending in another court in the country. It seems
also that the Dar es Salaam suit was instituted earlier because the record of
this petition shows that its trial was being put off to await the outcome of
the former. In these proceedings we do not have a prescribed procedure but we
have invariably invoked and been guided by the provisions of the Civil
Procedure Code, 1966. Section 8 of the Code provides thus: —
8. No court
shall proceed with the trial of any suit in which the matter in issue is also
directly or substantially in issue in a previously instituted suit between the
same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim
litigating under the same title where such suit is pending in the same or any
other court in Tanganyika having jurisdiction to grant the relief claimed.
This provision
is in parimateria with s. 10 of the Indian Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. MULLA
observes in relation to the latter that the object is to prevent courts of
concurrent jurisdiction from simultaneously trying two parallel suits in
respect of the same matter in issue. It goes on to claim, citing a 1919 obscure
authority, that the section enacts merely a rule of procedure and a decree
passed in contravention of it is not a nullity and cannot be disregarded in
execution proceedings. I think, however, that this might be true where the
subsequent suit is decided without knowledge of the existence of the previous
suit.
It is the
pendency of the previously instituted suit that constitutes a bar to the trial
of the subsequent suit. The word "suit" has been held to include
"appeal": see Raj Spinning Mills v. A.G. King Ltd. (1954) A. Punj.
113. The "matter in issue" in the provision has also been construed
as having reference to the entire subject matter in controversy between the
parties and not merely one or more of the several issues: see Hariram v. Hazi
Mohamed (1954)Allahabad 141. The same position was stated by the Court of
Appeal of Eastern Africa in Jadva Krson v. Harman Singh Bhogal (1953) 20 EACA
74 when they were considering s. 6 of Kenya Civil Procedure Ordinance which is
again in parimateria with our s. 8. The case before me is, of course, a
novelty. Like the eye of a butterfly, it is a composite of several petitions
wrapped up into one. When considering the expression "matter in
issue" one has to consider each issue independently for they have no
relationship. There is not one subject matter in controversy between the
parties but several. In these circumstances the second issue is severable as it
could, indeed have been tried in a separate suit. In the circumstances of this
case "matter in issue" must be taken to be matter in issue in each of
the six issues framed and I am satisfied that the same matter is in issue in
the appeal pending before the Court of Appeal.
In Jinnat
Bibi v. Howeah Jute Mills Co. Ltd., AIR 1932 Cal. 751, it was held that the
provisions of s. 10 of the Indian Code were mandatory and left no discretion to
the courts in respect of the stay of suits when circumstances are such as to
invoke the operation of that section. It was further held that one test of the
application of the [sic] to a particular case ins whether on the final decision
being reached in the previous suit such decision would operate as res
judicatain the subsequent suit. Indian decisions are certainly not binding on this
Court, but they deserve the greatest respect where they expound a provision
which was previously our own and which remains in pari materia with our own.
The Indian
Code of Civil Procedure was in application in Tanganyika until 1966 and s. 10
thereof is in pari materia with our s. 8. It is therefore not only in courtesy
but also in common sense that I consider myself entitled to rely on these
decisions. In so doing, I hold that the provisions of s. 8 of our Code are
mandatory and provide no room for discretion in circumstances where it is
invokable. It is invokable in the instant case. Moreover, there is no doubt
that the final decision in the pending appeal would operate as res judicata in
the instant petition. The question is not whether I am in a position to decide
the matter ahead of the Court of Appeal; courts of law are not racecourses. The
point is that I am bound to stop in my tracks and let the previous suit proceed
to finality because the decision on the matter in issue would operate as res
judicata on the same matter in the suit before me. I will therefore stay the
[decision on] the second issue until the outcome of Civil Appeal No. 24 of
1994.
In the third
issue the Court is invited to pronounce on the constitutionality of ss. 5 (2),
13, 25, 37-47 of the Newspapers Act, 1976 and para. 12 of G.N. No. 166 of 1977.
I have two observations to make in this connection. First, it must be realised
that the constitutionality of a provision or statute is not found in what could
happen in its operation but in what it actually provides for. Where a provision
is reasonable and valid the mere possibility of its being abused in actual
operation will not make it invalid: Collector of Customs (Madras) v. N.S.
Chetty, AIR 1962 SC 316. It seems to me, with respect, that much of what was
said against the above provisions reflected generally on what could happen in
their operation rather than on what they actually provided for. I was generally
referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Kukutia ale Pumbum v. Attorney
General, Civil Appeal No. 32 of 1992 (unreported), but I think that case covers
a different situation — the situation where a person was deprived of his right
to sue unless he was permitted to do so by the defendant (the Government). The
provisions complained of however, are administrative and implementational and
their constitutionality can only be challenged if they were not within the
power of the Legislature to enact them.
Secondly,
and most importantly, have unfortunately come to doubt the petitioner`s
standing in this issue. As stated before, our Constitution confers a double
capacity on every person — his personal and his community capacities. Now, in
what capacity did the petitioner take up these provisions? It cannot be in his
personal capacity because there is nothing in the provisions or any of them
which is shown to have contravened, is contravening or is likely to contravene
his right to receive or impart information. The contravention has to be read in
the provisions themselves. It transpires that the petitioner`s complaint is in
fact founded on the banning of the "Michapo" and "Cheka"
newspapers vide Government Notice No. 8 of 1993. That is improper. The use or
misuse of the powers granted by s. 25, the relevant provision in that
connection, has nothing to do with the validity of that provision as such. What
would be relevant is whether Parliament had no power to grant those powers. As
for the misfortunes of "Michapo" and "Cheka" the doors were
open for the option of judicial review but it seems better options were found.
Can we alternatively say that this issue falls under public interest
litigation? I don`t think so either. As seen before, public interest litigation
is litigation in the interest of the public. In other words, the general public,
or section thereof, must be seen to be aggrieved by the state of the law and to
be desirous of redress. There could probably be provisions in the Newspaper Act
one could consider oppressive, unreasonable and even unconstitutional, but that
is beside the point; the point is that there is no evidence of public agitation
against that law. And by "public" I do not mean merely newspaper
editors but the Tanzanian public generally. Ironically, whatever ills this law
may be identified with appear to be overshadowed by the unprecedented upsurge
of private newspapers in recent years. As stated in Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing
Co. v. Bhamet Coal Ltd., AIR 1983 SC 239, courts are not authorised to make
disembodied pronouncements on serious and cloudy issues of constitutional
policy without battle lines being properly drawn. Judicial pronouncements
cannot be immaculate legal conceptions. It is but right that no important point
of law should be decided without a proper issue between parties properly ranged
on either side and a crossing of the swords. It is inexpedient for the Court to
delve into problems which do not arise and express opinion thereon. In the
premises I decline to pronounce on the third issue.
The fourth
issue brings us to the provisions of the Police Force Ordinance and the
Political Parties Act touching on assemblies and processions. Under s. 40 of
the former a permit is necessary to organise an assembly or procession in a
public place. The permit is grantable by the District Commissioner. Similarly,
political parties require a permit from the District Commissioner to hold
public meetings pursuant to the provisions of s. 11 (1) of the Political
Parties Act. Section 41 of the Ordinance empowers a police officer above the
rank of inspector or any magistrate to stop or prevent any assembly or
procession of the holding or continuance of it "is imminently likely to
cause a breach of the peace, or to prejudice the public safety . . ." The
police officer or magistrate may therefore give orders, including orders for
the dispersal of the assembly or procession. Section 42 defines what
constitutes an unlawful assembly or procession, namely an assembly or
procession not authorised by a permit, where one is required, or one held in
contravention of the conditions thereof or in disregard of orders by the police
or magistrate. Section 43 is the penal provision for disobediences, etc. These
provisions, i.e. ss. 41, 42 and 43, are imported into the Political Parties Act
vide s. 11 (2) thereof. It was argued for the petitioner that these provisions
are inconsistent with the freedom of peaceful assembly and public expression
which is guaranteed under Art. 20(1). Mr. Mussa, on the other hand, thought
they were all supervisory in character, intended to ensure peace and good order,
to the end that the rights and freedoms may be better enjoyed.
A better
approach to these provisions is to distinguish their functions. First of all,
there is the requirement for a permit grantable by the District Commissioner
and this falls under s. 40 of the Ordinance and (1) of the Act. Next there is
control of the meetings and processions and this falls under s. 41, the
exercise of that power being vested in the police and the magistracy. Finally,
we have the criminal law provisions in ss. 42 and e . In considering the
question of constitutionality these distinctions have to be kept in mind. : I
draw these distinctions also because not all meetings or processions require a
permit, yet all attract police and magisterial supervision. By virtue of G.N. No.
169 of 1958, religious processions as well as religious, [sic] social,
educational, entertainment and sporting assemblies do not require a permit; by
virtue of G.N. No. 98 of 1960 assemblies convened by rural local authorities
within the areas of their jurisdiction do not require a permit; and by virtue
[of] G.N. No. 237 of 1962 assemblies convened by Municipal or Town Councils
within the areas of their jurisdiction do not require permits either; but all
these events attract police and magisterial supervision. Let us now look at the
character of the three divisions in relation to the Constitution.
Section
40(2) provides in part: of (2) Any person who is desirous of convening,
collecting, forming, or organising any assembly or procession in any public
place, shall first make application for a permit in that behalf to the District
Commissioner . . . and if the District Commissioner is satisfied, having regard
to all the circumstances, . . . that the assembly or procession is not likely
to cause a breach of the peace . . . he shall, subject to the provisions of
sub-section (3), issue a permit . . .
Section 11
(1) of the Political Parties Act is to the same effect although it does not
expressly set out all that is in the above provision. These provisions may then
be contrasted with the provisions of Art. 20(1) which states in part:—
(1) Subject
to the laws of the land, every person is entitled to freedom of peaceful
assembly, association and public expression, that is to say, the right to
assemble freely and peaceably . . .
The
Constitution is the basic or paramount law of the land and cannot be overriden
by any other law. Where, as in the above provision, the enjoyment of a
constitutional right is "subject to the laws of the land." the
necessary implication is that those laws must be lawful laws. A law which seeks
to make the exercise of those rights subject to the permission of another
person cannot be consistent with the express provisions of the Constitution for
it makes the exercise illusory. In this class are s.40 of the Police Force
Ordinance and s.11 (1) of the Political Parties Act. Both provisions hijack the
right to peaceful assembly and procession guaranteed under the Constitution and
place it under the personal disposition of the District Commissioner. It is a
right which cannot be injoyed unless the District Commissioner permits. That is
precisely the position that was encountered in ole Pumbun where the right to
sue the Government could not be exercised with the permission of the
Government. The Court of Appeal was prompted to say: -
. . . a law
which seeks to limit or derogate from the basic right of the individual on
grounds of public interest will be saved by Article 30 (2) of the Constitution
only if it satisfies two essential requirements: First such a law must be
lawful in the sense that it is not arbitrary. It should make adequate
safeguards against arbitrary decision, and provide effective controls against
abuse by those in authority when using the law. Secondly, the limitation
imposed by such law must not be more than is reasonably necessary to achieve
the legitimate object. This is what is also known as the principle of
proportionality . . . If the law . . . does not meet both requirements, such
law is not saved by Article 30 (2) of the Constitution, is null and void.
Section 40 does not meet these requirements. It is in the absolute discretion
of the District Commissioner to determine the circumstances conducive to the
organisation of an assembly or procession; there is no adequate or any safeguards
against arbitrary exercise of that discretion and there is no mechanism for
challenging his decisions, except probably by way of judicial review which is
tortuous and unbeneficial for the purpose of assemblies and processions. I have
easily come to the conclusion that the requirement for a permit infringes the
freedom of peaceful assembly and procession and is therefore unconstitutional.
It is not irrelevant to add, either, that in the Tanzanian context this freedom
is rendered the more illusory by the stark truth that the power to grant
permits is vested in cadres of the ruling party.
Coming to s.
41, I am of the view that the provision does not operate to take away the right
to hold assemblies or processions. It only empowers the police and the magistracy
to step in for the preservation of peace and order. The provision is thus saved
by Art. 31(2) (b), it being in furtherance of the State`s normal functions of
ensuring public safety and public order and is reasonably justifiable in a
democratic society. As rightly remarked by Mr. Mussa the enjoyment of basic
human rights presupposes the existence of law and order. A provision like . 41
is therefore a necessary concomitant to the realisation of these rights.
Moreover, there is inherent in the provision a safeguard against arbitrary use.
It comes into play when the holding or continuance of an assembly or procession
"is imminently likely to cause a breach of the peace, or to prejudice the
public safety or the maintenance of public order or to be used for any unlawful
purpose," and therefore meets what is termed the "clear and present
danger" test. In Muhammad Nawaz Sharif cited earlier, Saleem Akhtar, J.
said, at pp. 832-833:—
Every
restriction (on basic rights) must pass the test of reasonableness and overriding
public interest. Restriction can be imposed and freedom . . . may be curtailed
provided it is justified by the "clear and present danger" test
enunciated in Saia v. New York (1948) 334 US 558 that the substantive evil must
be extremely serious and the degree of imminence extremely high.
Section 41,
in my view, is conditioned on a clear and present danger where the substantive
evil is extremely serious and the degree of imminence extremely high. A
situation befitting the application of the provision can be found in the
Guyanese case of C.R. Ramson v. Lloyed [sic] Barker and the Attorney General
(1983) 9 CLB 1211. That case arose from the dispersal of a political meeting by
the police. The plaintiff, an Attorney-at-Law, was standing near his motor car
parked by the roadside discussing with a colleague the methods used by the
police to disperse the crowd. A policeman came up, held the plaintiff by his
arm and asked him what he was doing there, and was told "that is my
business." Other policemen came up and surrounded the plaintiff, who was
then jabbed several times in the ribs with a baton by another policeman who
ordered him into the car. The plaintiff and his colleague then got into the car
unwillingly and drove away. The plaintiff later brought action alleging, inter
alia, an infringement of his right to freedom of assembly, expression and
movement. It was held by the Court of Appeal that there was no infringement of
the constitutional right to the freedom of assembly, expression or movement as
the action of the police was not directed towards a hindrance or deprevation
[sic] of these constitutional freedoms.
These
factors apart, it is equally apparent that the petitioner admits the legitimate
role of the police at assemblies and processions although, somehow, he does not
realise that this role is specially authorised by s. 41. Para 19 (h) of the
petition states in part:—
The court
should also declare that a citizen has right to convene a peaceful assembly or
public rally and the right to make a peaceful demonstration or procession
without a permit from anybody except that he should just inform the police
before doing so. (my emphasis).
I would not
wish to believe that by this prayer it is intended that the police should
attend assemblies and processions to applaud the actors and fold their arms in
the face of an imminent break down in law and order. I am satisfied that s. 41
is a valid provision.
Finally, ss.
42 and 43. The former defines an unlawful assembly or procession and the latter
punishes the same. Art. 30(2) (a) and (b) of the constitution empowers the
Legislature to enact legislation for ensuring that the rights and freedoms of
others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the
individual rights and freedoms and for ensuring public safety and public order.
This pwer [sic], in my vies [sic], includes the power to prescribe penalties
for criminal breaches. In other words, the penalties are necessarily
concomitant to the effective excercise [sic] of police and magisterial powers under
the other provisions. I consider the provisions valid as well.
At this
stage I will proceed to show the significance of the distinction I have been
making. I have held that the requirement for a permit is unconstitutional but
not the police- magisterial and penal role. The crucial question now is whether
these aspects can be severed. Severance is provided for under Art. 64(5) which
states that "any other law inconsistent with the provisions of the
Constitution . . . shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void." It
is therefore established that where the valid portion is severable from the
rest, that portion will be maintained provided it is sufficient to carry out
the purpose of the Act. Delivering the judgment of the Privy Council in A.G. of
Alberta v. A.G. of Canada (1946) AC 503 6, Viscount Simon said:
The real
question is whether what remains is so inextricably bound up with the part
declared invalid that what remains cannot independently survive, or, as it has
sometimes been put, whether on a fair review of the whole matter it can be
assumed that the Legislature would have enacted what survives without enacting
the part that is ultra vires at all.
I am in no
doubt whatsoever that the permit aspect can be expunged and expelled from the
law without prejudicing the rest. This is illustrated by the fact that the
supervisory aspects already operate independently where a permit is not
required. It is evident, therefore, that the Legislature could have enacted the
supervisory aspects without enacting the permit aspect. Having held, and I
repeat, that the requirement for a permit is unconstitutional and void, I
direct the provisions of s. 40 of the Police Force Ordinance and s. 11(1)(a) of
the Political Parties Act, and all provisions relating thereto and connected
therewith, shall henceforth be read as if all reference to a permit were
removed. It follows that from this momment [sic] it shall be lawful for any
person or body to convene, collect, form or organise and address an assembly or
procession in any public place without first having to obtain a permit from the
District Commissioner. Until the Legislature makes appropriate arrangements for
this purpose, it shall be sufficient for a notice of such assembly or
procession to be lodged with the police, being delivered a copy to the District
Commissioner for his information.
In reaching
this decision, I am certainly aware of the decision cited to me in C.Mtikila
& Ors. V.R. Criminal Appeal NO. 90 of 1992 (Dodoma Registry - Unreported).
In that case the present petitioner and others were charged before the District
Court of Dodoma with three counts, the first of which alleged "refusing to
desist from convening a meeting or assembly after being warned not to do so by
police officers contrary to sections 41 and 42 of the Police Force Ordinance,
Cap. 322." They were convicted and fined 500` each. They appealed to this
Court and it was contended, inter alia, that s. 41 was unconstitutional.
Mwalusanya. J. agreed and said: "I construe section 41 of the Police Force
Ordinance to be void. From now onwards this section is deleted from the Statute
Book." I am given to understand that an appeal has been lodged against
that decision.
The fact
that an appeal is pending naturally restrains me in my comments on that decision,
yet I cannot avoid to show, albeit briefly, why I find that decision difficult
to go by. The learned judge did not merely hold s. 41 to be unconstitutional;
he went further and held the entire trial to be a nullity. He said between pp.
23 and 25 of his judgment:
In my
judgment I find that the denial by the trial magistrate to have the appelants
have access to the documents they required for their defence was a fundamental
defect which is not curable … The error is so fundamental that it has rendered
the whole trial a nullity.
This is
significant indeed. It is established practice that that [sic] where a matter
can be disposed of without recourse to the Constitution, the Constitution
should not be involved at all. The Court will pronounce on the constitutionality
of a statute only when it is necessary for the decision of the case to do so:
Wahid Munwar Khan v. State AIR 1956 Hyd. 22. In that case a passage from
Coday`s Treatise on Constitutional Limitations was also cited in these terms:
In any case
where a constitutional question is raised, though it may be legitimately
presented by the record, yet if the record presents some other clear ground the
court may rest its judgment on that ground alone, if the other questions are
immaterial having regard to the view taken by the court.
The Supreme
Court of Zimbabwe expressed the same view in Minister of Home Affairs v. Bickle
& Ors (1985) LRC (Const) 755 where Geoges, C.J. said (at p. 750):
Courts will
not normally consider a constitutional question unless the existence of a
remedy depends upon it; if a remedy is available to an applicant under some
other legislative provision or on some other basis, whether legal to factual, a
court will usually decline to determine whether there has been, in addition, a
breach of the Declaration of Rights.
And here at
home the Court of Appeal had this to say in Attorney General v. W.K. Butambala,
Criminal Appeal NO. 37 of 1991 (unreported):
We need
hardly say that our Constitution is a serious and solemn document. We think
that invoking it and knocking down laws or portions of them should be reserved
for appropriate and really serious occasions.
The court
continued:
… it is not
desirable to reach a situation where we have "ambulance courts" which
go round looking for situations where we can invalidate statutes.
It is
evident that the appeal under reference could have been disposed of on the
ground that the trial was a nullity without going into the constitutionality of
s. 41. It is indeed curious that a trial which was adjudged a nullity could
still provide the basis for striking down s. 41. On these grounds and others, I
was unable to benefit from the decision of my learned brother.
The fifth
issue takes us back to the amendments to the Constitution and elsewhere which
make membership of and sponsorship by a political party mandatory for a person
to contest presidential, parliamentary or local authority elections. I hold
that the amendments was constitutionally valid but I reserved my position on
their practical implication until this stage. It is essential for the purpose
of the present exercise, and for case of reference, to set out side by side the
provisions of Art. 21 (1), Art. 20 (4) and Art. 39 (c), the last mentioned
being representative of allied amendments elsewhere. Art. 21 (1) reads as
follows:
(1) Every
citizen of the United Republic is entitled to take part in the government of
the country, either directly or throooough freely chosen representativrd, in
accordance with procedure provided by or under the law.
Art. 20 (4)
states (my translation):
(4) Without
prejudice to the relevant laws, no person shall be compelled to belong to any
party or organisation, or for any political party to be refused registration by
reason only of its ideology or philosophy.
And Art.
39(c) states (my translation):
39. No
person shall be eligible for election to the office of President of the United
Republic unless he -
(a) …; (b) …;
(c) is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
(a) …; (b) …;
(c) is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
As generally
understood the citizen`s right to participate in the government of his country
implies three consideration: the right to the franchise, meaning the right to
elect his representatives: the right to represent, meaning the right to be
elected to law making bodies; and the right to be chosen to a political office.
These three rights are, in my vies, epitomised in the provisions of Art. 21(1),
subject, of course, to the qualifications which expediency may dictate for the
exercise of these rights, e.g. literacy and age. But while accepting the
relevancy of such qualifications it has to be admitted in the first place that
the concept of basic human rights has utilitarian aspect to it: to whom are
these rights to be useful? Harold Laski (A Grammar of Politics, 1967: 92)
responds thus:
There is
only one possible answer. In any State the demands of each citizen for the
fulfilment of his best self must be taken as of equal worth; and the utility of
a right is therefore its value to all the members of the State. The rights, for
instance, of freedom of speach does not mean for those in authority, or for
members of some church or class. Freedom of speech is a right either equally
applicable to all citizens without distinction or not applicable at all.
These
remarks are no more applicable in political philosophy than they are in human
rights jurisprudence. The matter is brought into focus if we substitute the
right to participate in the government of one`s country for the freedom of
speech. The proposition would then be that the right to participate in the
government of one`s country is not reserved for those in authority, or for
members of some special class or groups, but it is a right either equally
applicable to all citizens without distinction or not applicable at all. This
utilitarian factor is writ large in Art. 21 (1) for it speaks of "every
citizen" being entitled to participate in the government of his country.
It could easily have said "Every member of a political party…," but
it did not, and this could not have been without cause. It will be recalled,
indeed, that the provision existed in its present terms ever since the
one-party era. At that time all political activity had to be conducted under
the auspices and control of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi, and it could have been
argued that this left no room for independent candidates. It is certainly this
notion which was at the base of Mr. Mussa`s submission to the effect that the
amendments did not take away the right for independent candidates for such
right never existed before. The argument is no doubt attractive, but, at least
with effect from July 1, 1992, Art. 21 (1) has to be read in a multi-party and
non- party context. That is what I can gather from Art. 20 (4) - previously
Art. 20 (2) - which was deliberately rephrased to accomodate [sic] both
situations. It is illogical for a law to provide that no person shall be
compelled to belong to a political party and in the same breath to provide that
no person shall run for office except through a political party. If it were the
intention of the Legislature to exclude non-party citizens from participating
in the government of their country, it could easily have done so vide the same
Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act by removing the generality in Art. 21 (1).
The
position, as I see it, is now this: By virtue of Art. 21 (1) every citizen is
entitled to participate in the government of the country, and by virtue of the
provisions of Art. 20 (4) such citizen does not have to be a member of any
polical party; yet by virtue of Art. 39(c) and others to that effect, no citizen
can run for office unless he is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
This is intriguing, I am aware that the exercise of the right under Art. 21(1)
has to be "in accordance with procedure provided by or under the
law," but I think that while participation through a political party is a
procedure, the exercise of the right of participation through a political party
only is not a procedure but an issue of substance. The message is: either you
belong to a political party or you have no right to participate. There is
additionally the dimension of free elections alluded to in Art. 21(). A citizen
may participate in the government "either directly or through freely
chosen representatives." It is contrary to every notion of free elections
if non-party citizens are compelled to vote for party candidates. In the midst
of this unusual dilemma I had to turn to the canons of statutory and
constitutional interpretation.
When the
framers of the Constitution declared the fundamental rights in Part III of Chapter
One thereof, they did not do so in vain, it must have been with the intention
that these rights should be exercisable. It is therefore established that the
provisions of the Constitution should always be given a generous and purposive
construction. In A.G. of Gambia v. Jobe(1985) LRC (Const) 556, 565, Lord
Diplock said:
A
constitution and in particular that part of it which protects and entrenches
fundamental rights and freedoms to which all persons in the State are to be
entitled, is to be given a generous and purposive construction.
This echoes
what was said earlier in British Coal Corporation v. The King (1935) AC 500,
518, to the effect that in interpreting a constitutent [sic] or organic status
the construction most beneficial to widest possible amplitude of its power must
be adopted. And not much later, in James v. Commonwealth of Australia (1935) AC
578, 614 Lord Wright, M.R. said:
It is true
that a Constitution must not be construed in any narrow and pedantic sense. The
words used are necessarily general, and their full import and true meaning can
often be appreciated when considered, as the years go on, in relative to the
vicissitudes of fast that from time to time emerge. It is not that the meaning
of the word changes, but the changing circumstances illustrate and illuminate
the full import of the meaning.
This
approach is directed principally at resolving difficulties which may be
inherent in a single provision. The strategy, according to these authorities,
is to approach the provision generously and liberally particularly where it
enacts a fundamental right. The case before me takes us a stage further. What
happens when a provision of the constitution enacting a fundamental right
appears to be in conflict with another provision in the Constitution? In that
case the principle of harmonisation has to be called in aid. The principle
holds that the entire Constitution has to be read as an integrated whole, and
no one particular provision destryoying [sic] the other but each sustaining the
other; see Muhammad Nawaz Sharif (above), p. 601. If the balancing act should
succeed, the Court is enjoined to give effect to all the contending provisions.
Otherwise, the court is enjoined to incline to the realisation of the
fundamental rights and may for that purpose disregard even the clear words of a
provision if their application would result in gross injustice. CHITALEY, p.
716, renders the position thus:
… it must be
remembered that the operation of any fundamental right may be excluded by any
other Article of the constitution or may be subject to an exception laid down
in some other Article. In such cases it is the duty of the Court to construe
the different Articles in the Constitution in such a way as to harmonise them
and try to give effect to all the Articles as far as possible, one of the
conflicting Articles will have to yield to the other.
These
propositions are by no means novel but are well known in common law
jurisdictions. They rest, above all, on the realisation that it is the
fundamental rights which are fundamental and not the restrictions. In the case
of Sture s.v. Crowninshield (1819) 4 Law Ed. 529, 550, Chief Justice Marshall
of the Supreme Court of the United States said:
Although the
spirit of an instrument, especially a Constitution, is to be respected not the
less than its letter, yet the spirit is to be collected chiefly form its words.
It would be dangerous in the extreme to infer from extrinsiz (sic)
circumstances that a case for for which the words of n instrument expressly
provide shall [its operation?]. Where words conflict with each other, where the
different clauses of an instrument bear upon each other and would be
inconsistent unless the natural and common words be varied, construction
becomes necessary, and a departure from the obvious meaning of words is
justifiable. But if in any case the plain meaning of a provision, not
contradicted by any other provision in the same instrument is to be
disregarded, because we believe the framers of that instrument could not intend
what they say, it must be one in which the absurdity and injustice of applying
the provision to the case would be so monstrous that all mankind would, without
hesitation, unite in rejecting the application.
In the
instant petition, the following factors emerge. First, Art. 39(c) and allied
amendments are restrictions on the exercise of a fundamental right and not
fundamental in themselves. It is the fundamental rights, but not their
restrictions, that this Court is enjoined to guard jealously. Secondly, the
scheme of our Constitution contemplates the full excercise [sic] of the
fundamental rights enacted therein save as they may be limited in terms of the
provisions of Art. 30(2) and Art. 31(1). Although the amendments pass the test
of validity by virtue of the very wide definition of "alteration" in
Art. 98(2), it is only tenuously that they come within the ambit of Art. 30(2).
Thirdly, the literal application of the amendments could lead to monstrous and
nationally injurious results. It is believed that there are between three and
four million people in this country who subscribe to some political party,
leaving well over twenty millions a free decision in the government of their
country is unjust, monstrous and potentially calamitous. Fourth, it must be
said that any talk of "parties" at this juncture in the country`s
history cannot be serious. Apart from Chama cha Mapuaduzi whose presence is all
pervasive, the rest exist more in name than in practice. The amendments are
therefore capable of being abused to con i e the right of governing into the
hands of members of a class and to render illusory the emergence of a truly
democratic society. I do not wish to believe that that was the intention of the
Legislature. Finally, Art. 21(1) can in fact operate alongside Art. 39 and
allied amendments, without the latter`s exclusionary properties, there being
nothing strange in having party and independent candidates in any election.
For
everything I have endeavoured to state and notwithstanding the exclusionary
elements to that effect in Articles 39, 67 and 77 of the Constitution as well
as s. 39 of the Local Authorities (Elections) Act, 1979, I declare and direct
that it shall be lawful for independent candidates, along with candidates
sponsored by political parties, to contest presidential, parliamentary and
local council elections. This will not apply to the council elections due in a
few days.
We now come
to the sixth and final issue. A declaration is sought to the effect that it
unconstitutional for the President to appoint Zanzibaris to head non-union
ministries and departments on the Mainland. This matter invites a bit of the
union`s history. When Tanganyika and Zanzibar united in 1964 the Constitution
of the former was adopted as the interim Constitution of the United Republic,
modified as to provide for a separate government for Zanzibar in matters other
than those reserved to the union Government. At the same time the Government of
Tanganyika was abolished. The union operated under interim constitutions until
the promulgation of the 1977 Constitution.
Article 4(3)
of the Constitution provides for the division of governmental functions on the
basis of union and non-union matters. Authority in respect of all union matters
as well as non- union matters in and for the Mainland is vested in the Union
Government by Art. 34(1). Likewise all executive power of the United Republic
with respect to union matters and with respect to non-union matters in and for
the Mainland is vested in the President. He may exercise that power either directly
or through delegation to other persons holding office in the services of the
United Republic. The President is also empowered to constitute and abolish
offices and, pursuant to the provisions of Art. 36(2), he has power to appoint
persons to offices in the public services of the United Republic subject to the
other provisions of the Constitution. In the exercise of the functions of his
office the President has unfettered discretion apart from complying with the
provisions of the Constitution and the law. Article 55(1) additionally empowers
the President to appoint Ministers who "shall be responsible for such
offices as the President may from time to time . . . establish." He also
has power to appoint Regional Commissioners for regions in the Mainland. Zanzibar
retains its internal autonomy in respect of non-union matters falling on that
side.
It was
argued by Mr. Mbezi that the structure of the Constitution points to a dual
role for the Union Government, i.e. as a Government responsible for Union
Matters and as a Government responsible for non-Union Matters for and in the
Mainland. He also submitted that the division of union from non-union matters
could not have been done without a purpose. In his view non- union matters on
the Mainland have to be run by Mainlanders, and the fact that they are
constitutionally placed under the Union Government does not amount to their
unionisation. He therefore thinks that the appointment of Zanzibaris to run
these matters offends Art. 4(3). Mr. Mussa responded by pointing out that no
provision in the Constitution compelled the President not to appoint Zanzibaris
to such positions and that it would actually be discriminatory if he did not do
so. In his view the exercise of the power of appointment was a matter of policy
but not one founded on the Constitution.
The issue of
Zanzibaris in "Mainland" ministries is presently a matter of
considerable interest, and seems to derive more drive from the polarised
political situation which culminated in the ill-fated parliamentary notion for
a government of Tanganyika. But sentiments apart, one would certainly wish to
know the juridicial [sic] position of non-union matters in and for the
Mainland. The dualism factor asserted by Mr. Mbezi was recognised and
articulated by the Court of Appeal in Haji v. Nungu & Aner. (1907) LRC
(Const) 224 where Chief Justice Nyalali further stated (at p. 231) that in the
basic structure of the Constitution there are "matters which concern
exclusively that area which before the Union constituted what was then known as
Tanganyika…" He went on to say that "These matters under the scheme
of the Constitution fall under the exclusive domain of the Government of the
United Republic. The Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar has no jurisdiction
over these matters." Of course that case was concerned with a different
matter - the jurisdiction of the High Court of the United Republic in election
petitions - yet, even with that reference to the exclusive domain of the
Government of the United Republic over Tanganyika matters, I cannot read a
suggestion of the unionisation of those matters. There are various types of
constitutions which are classified as federal and ours could carry that
appellation in the absence of a standard or ideal type of a federal
constitution. It is not uncommon for such constitutions to enumerate the areas
reserved to the federated states, leaving the rest to the federal or central
government. The Founders of our Union could easily have done that. They could
have enumerated the spheres in which the Zanzibar Government would exercise
power and leave the rest to the Union Government. In that case the philosophy
of changu, changu; chako, chetu (mine is mine; yours is ours) would have made
considerable sense, for everything in and for the Mainland would have then been
a union matter. But that was carefully avoided. Instead the Constitution
enumerates union matters only and expressly declares the rest to be non-union;
and this is so, according to Art. 4(3), "For the purpose of the more
efficient discharge of public affairs… and for the effective division of
functions in relation to those affairs…" I think, with respect, there is
reason to insist on the significance of the division. It is occurs to me, that
the fact of the non-union matters in the Mainland could have the effect of
blurring that division.
That said,
however, it is difficult to draw the inference of unconstitutionality, which
the Court was called upon to draw, in relation to those appointments. The
provisions to which I have referred, notably Art. 36(2) and Art. 55(1), do not
limit the President in his choice of officers or Ministers or in their
disposition. The furthest we can go is to fall back to the words "subject
to the other provisions of this Constitution" in Art. 36 (2) and this
would lead to the division of union and non-union matter in Art. 4(3). It can
then be suggested that to keep the division effective there is an implied
invitation to keep Tanganyika matters Tanganyikan. A breach of the
Constitution, however, is such a grave and serious affair that it cannot be
arrived t by mere inferences, however attractive, and I apprehend that this
would require proof beyond reasonable doubt. I have therefore not found myself
in a position to make the declaration sought and I desist from doing so.
Tanzanian newspapers accused of defamatory
reports
On 13 February 2009, the Tanzanian
minister of information, sports and culture ordered three newspapers to provide
reasons why they published what he calls "defamatory" news reports.
The newspapers in question are Taifa Letu, "Sema Usikize and Taifa
Tanzania.
The minister accused the three
newspapers of writing defamatory reports against three prominent figures,
namely Reginald Mengi, the executive chairman of IPP Media Limited and the
owner of a number of media organisations, Nazir Karamagi, the former minister
of energy and minerals, and a former unnamed prime minister.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while
Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The
former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour.
The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary
action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on
the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's
interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in]
Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public."
He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which
guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions
that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing
against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all
laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information.
MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on
the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this
matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the
minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations
of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour. The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in] Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public." He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information. MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
man Rights, which guarantees free speech
. Tanzanian newspapers accused of defamatory
reports
On 13 February 2009, the Tanzanian
minister of information, sports and culture ordered three newspapers to provide
reasons why they published what he calls "defamatory" news reports.
The newspapers in question are Taifa Letu, "Sema Usikize and Taifa
Tanzania.
The minister accused the three
newspapers of writing defamatory reports against three prominent figures,
namely Reginald Mengi, the executive chairman of IPP Media Limited and the
owner of a number of media organisations, Nazir Karamagi, the former minister
of energy and minerals, and a former unnamed prime minister.
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while
Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The
former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour.
The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary
action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on
the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's
interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in]
Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public."
He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which
guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions
that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing
against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all
laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information.
MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on
the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this
matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the
minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations
of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
Tanzania: Court of Appeal
Temu
v Tanzania Revenue Authority (72 of 2002) [2004] TZCA 34 (27 October 2004)
The newspapers wrote that Mengi was involved with an underage girl while Karamagi was condemned for fooling around with another person's wife. The former prime minister is alleged to have engaged in untoward sexual behaviour. The minister has asked the newspapers' owners to justify why disciplinary action should not be taken against them.
Moreover, the government and other political groups have intensified attacks on the media in the past few days, expressing concern at what they called media's interference in parliamentary, judiciary and government privacy and business.
According to the speaker of National Assembly, "Media is interfering [in] Parliament's privacy, hence important decisions are put in [the] public." He quoted section. 114 (11) of the Parliamentary Standing Orders 2007, which guarantees privacy when standing committees are discussing matters and opinions that are about to be presented in parliament.
MISA-Tanzania has written to the speaker of the National Assembly appealing against the privacy provisions and has issued a press release to condemn all laws that violate freedom of expression and the right to information. MISA-Tanzania objects to the latest threat by the minister of information on the three newspapers. MISA-Tanzania is calling on the government to refer this matter to the Media Council of Tanzania for examination.
The Tanzanian government has taken similar actions in the past. In 2008, the minister of information shut down Mwanahalisi newspaper on allegations of defaming the president and other senior political figures.
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THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT ARUSHA
(CORAM: RAMADHANI J. A.; NSEKELA, J. A.; And
KAJI, J. A.) CIVIL APPEAL NO. 72 OF
2002
BETWEEN
STELLA TEMU ... APPELLANT
AND
TANZANIA REVENUE AUTHORITY ... RESPONDENT
(Appeal from the Judgment of the High Court of
Tanzania at
Arusha) (Rutakanqwa,
J.) dated the 22th day of November, 2001
in
Civil Appeal No. 1 of 1999
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
RAMADHANI J.A.:
The appellant, Stella
Temu, is a lawyer by training and was employed by the Ministry of Finance
(hereinafter referred to in short as MOF) in the taxation department. Some time
in 1996 the Tanzania Revenue Authority (TRA) became fully operational and was
charged with the collection of taxes. Stella, like others, was taken to TRA
from MOF. She was given by TRA a letter, Exh. P 1, of 17th June,
1996, titled "Kuajiriwa na Mamlaka ya Mapato Tanzania", which reads,
in relevant parts, as follows:
2.
... Hivyo wafanyakazi
wote wa sasa wa Idara za Kodi chini ya Wizara ya Fedha wanatakiwa kuajiriwa
upya kwa masharti ya Mamlaka ya Mapato.
3.
Kwa kuzingatia maelezo
chini ya aya ya pili hapo juu, nafurahi kukujulisha kuwa imeamuliwa uajiriwe
katika Mamlaka ya Mapato tangu tarehe 1 Julai, 1996.
Hata hivyo utakuwa katika kipindi cha majaribio
(probation) kwa muda wa mwaka mmoja tangu tarehe ya kukubali ajira hii. Endapo
utendaji wako wa kazi na tabia yako vitaonekena kukidhi matakwa ya ajira ndani
ya Mamlaka, utathibitishwa kazini.
Stella accepted the offer by her letter dated 16th
July, 1996, Exh. P. 3, which reads in the relevant part:
Nachukua fursa hii kukuarifu kuwa nimekubali
uteuzi huo kwa masharti yaliyoelezwa na mengine yatakayoamuliwa na Bodi ya
Wakurugenzi.
On 16 June, 1997 she was given another letter,
Exh. P 5, titled
"Kutokuthibitishwa
Kazini Katika Mamlaka ya Mapato Tanzania" and reads, in relevant parts, as
follows:
... Katika barua hiyo tulikueleza pamoja na
mambo mengine kuwa utakuwa katika kipindi cha majaribio kwa muda wa mwaka mmoja
kuanzia tarehe 1 Julai, 1996 hadi tarehe 30 Juni, 1997. Kutokana na tathmini
tuliyofanya katika kipindi cha majaribio, tunasikitika kukujulisha kuwa
hautathibitishwa kazini.
Kufuatana na maelekezo na uamuzi wa Serikali,
TRA inakurudisha Wizara ya Fedha kuanzia tarehe 1/7/1997. Tafadhali wasiliana
na Katibu Mkuu kwa maelekezo zaidi.
Stella decided not to report to MOF but over a
year later, on 6tn January, 1999, she filed a suit against TRA
alleging wrongful termination of employment, that the termination was not done
by a competent authority, that she was not given the right to be heard, that
the letter of termination, Exh. P. 5, was defamatory, and that no reasons were
given to her for the termination.
The matter landed before
RUTAKANGWA, J. who framed five issues for trial and we paraphrase them as
follows:
Was there termination of employment? Was Stella
given a hearing before she was terminated?
iii. Was the termination ordered by a competent
authority?
iv. Was Stella entitled
to be given reasons for the
termination?
termination?
v. What reliefs are the parties entitled to?
RUTAKANGWA, J. found that Stella's employment
was terminated by a competent authority but that she was not given a hearing
before the decision was taken and that she was entitled to know the reasons for
the termination but that was not done. However, the learned judge was of the
decided opinion, based on the evidence of Patience Minga, DW 2, who was the
immediate boss of Stella, that she would not have been confirmed in the
employment even if she had been heard because of her irresponsible attitude.
For the same reason the learned judge found that Stella was not defamed and,
therefore, declined to grant her damages instead he gave her general damages of
shs. 2,000,000/= "for the wrongful termination of her probationary
employment".
Stella is aggrieved with that judgment and has
preferred this appeal having four grounds. Before us she was represented by Mr.
Malamsha, learned counsel, while TRA had the services of Mr. Rugaiya, learned
advocate. Briefly the four grounds were that the learned trial judge erred by:
i. Not annulling the termination and ordering
reinstatement.
ii. Framing new issues suo motu for which
there were neither
evidence nor submissions.
evidence nor submissions.
iii. Granting reliefs not prayed for.
iv. Subjecting the appellant to double jeopardy
of wrongful
termination by the respondent and termination by the court.
termination by the respondent and termination by the court.
Mr. Malamsha decided to combine grounds one and
three and argued grounds two and four separately.
Before we go into the grounds of appeal and the
submissions of the learned counsel, we think we need to appraise the evidence
which is on record and make up our own findings on certain important issues.
We do this under Rule 34
(1) which provides as follows:
(l) On any appeal from the decision of the High
Court acting in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, the Court may -
(a) re-appraise the evidence and draw inferences
of fact;
There are two matters of fact which we want to
make findings on: One, what was the status of Stella vis a vis TRA: was she
employed by TRA or was she seconded by MOF pending confirmation by TRA? Two,
and following from one, what did Exh. 5 do: did it terminate the employment of
Stella with TRA or did it decline to confirm Stella? Most of our questions to
the two counsel revolved around these two points of fact.
We have no doubts in our minds that Stella was
an employee of MOF and that it was Exh P 1 which moved her to TRA. The question
is what was the nature of this movement? Was she seconded to TRA or was she now
an employee of TRA and that she had severed all relations with MOF? Admittedly,
the word "seconded" was not used in Exh. P 1 or Exh. P 5.
However, Mr. Rugaiya referred us to Exh. D. 2,
"Waraka wa Utumishi Na. 7 wa Mwaka 1995", that is,
"Establishment Circular No. 7 of 1995", issued on 01 December, 1995.
That Circular prescribes three categories of services under which a Government
employee could work for a parastatal or a Government Agency: There is
secondment under paragraph 3. Then there is attachment under paragraph 8, and
thirdly, there is what we will refer to as "departmental transfer" or
as is termed in the Circular "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja". The second
mode, attachment, that is, assigning an employee to a parastatal for a
specified period of time after which the officer goes back to the parent
ministry, does not concern us here. The other two types are relevant here and
we shall reproduce the applicable portions in Kiswahili.
Secondment is provided
in paragraph 3 as follows:
3. Utaratibu wa Kuazimwa (Secondment):
Pale inapokusudiwa na inapoamliwa kumpeleka
mtumishi wa Serikali kwenye Shirika la Umma kwa minajili ya kumhamishia huko
moja kwa moja, mtumishi huyo baada ya kufuata utaratibu wa Waraka huu
atahamishiwa kwenye Shirika moja kwa moja. Hata hivyo mtumishi huyo atapaswa
kuwa katika muda wa majaribio (trial period) kwa kipindi cha miezi kumi na
miwili (12). Kipindi hicho kitakapokwisha, Shirika litapaswa kuamua kama
litamchukua mhusika kama mtumishi wake wa kudumu au la. Ikiwa atachukuliwa,
basi atafuata masharti yaliyomo katika Waraka huu. Iwapo Shirika litaamua
kutomchukuwa, mhusika atarejeshwa alikotoka bila ya kuchelewa. Endapo kipindi
hicho kitakuwa kimepita na Shirika halikuchukua hatua zozote za kumchukua au
kumrejesha, na kama mhusika hatakuwa ameomba kurudi alikotoka, itachukuliwa
kwamba ameingia katika utumishi wa kudumu wa Shirika.
Two things are obvious to us here: One, the
initiative of moving an employee from a ministry to a parastatal is of the
parastatal itself, which under paragraph 4 is required to make an application
to the Central Establishment. There was no such application here and we think
it was because all employees connected with taxation and custom duties were
seconded to TRA from MOF. Nevertheless, the initiative in this case came from
TRA who wrote Exh. P 1 offering employment to Stella in TRA. The second thing
is that an employee so seconded is taken on probation for one year. This is
what was contained in Exh. P 1.
The import of paragraph 3 is driven home by the
provisions of paragraph 11 which gives the third category of service, that is,
departmental transfer or "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja":
11. Utaratibu wa Uhamisho wa Moja kwa Moja:
Uhamisho wa moja kwa moja kutoka Serikalini
kwenda Shirika la Umma hufanyika baada ya mtumishi aliyeazimwa kumaliza muda
wake wa kuazimwa kama ilivyoelezwa katika ibara ya [3] hapo juu. Aidha mtumishi
anapojiunga na Shirika la Umma kutokana na uteuzi wa Serikali, mtumishi huyo
hujiunga na Shirika linalohusika moja kwa moja bila ya kuwa na muda wa
majaribio kwanza. Kwa madhumuni ya Waraka huu, uteuzi wa Serikali ni pamoja
na:-
11.1 Uteuzi unaotokana na Idara ya Serikali kuwa
Shirika la Umma.
It is abundantly plain to us that in this
"uhamisho wa moja kwa moja" the initiative is from the Government and
then there is no probation period. As we have already observed, Exh. P 1 was
written to Stella by TRA and not by the Government and then Stella's engagement
with TRA was prefaced by probation of one year. Therefore, Stella's engagement
with TRA was NOT "uhamisho wa moja kwa moja" but was secondment.
After the one year period of probation TRA could retain Stella, that is,
confirm her engagement or TRA could decide not to confirm her engagement, which
is what it did vide Exh. P 5. In that case Stella was to report back to her
former employer, MOF. Likewise, Stella could have decided, after the expiry of
the probation period, not to work for TRA and in that case, too, she would have
returned to MOF.
The position explained above is confirmed by
Exh. D. 3, a letter from the Central Establishment to TRA dated 11th
November, 1998, which said in relevant parts as follows:
Napenda kukutaarifu kuwa utaratibu ambao umekuwa
unatumika katika kuwahamisha watumishi wa Serikali, katika Idara ambazo
zimebadilishwa kuwa Wakala wa Serikali (Agencies) ni kuwapa kibali cha kuazimwa
katika kipindi cha mwaka mmoja na katika kipindi hicho mwajiri anawajibika
kulipa Hazina asilimia 25 ya mishahara yao kwa madhumuni ya kuhifadhi pensheni
zao. Baada ya kipindi cha mwaka mmoja kumalizika inabidi waajiriwa hao pamoja
na mwajiri kufanya uamuzi wa kuendelea au kutokuendelea na kazi katika Taasisi
hiyo. Watumishi ambao hawapendelei kuendelea na kazi au wameshindwa kutimiza
masharti inabidi warudishwe kwa mwajiri wao kutafutiwa nafasi nyingine ya kazi
kama ipo au kupungunzwa kazini.
The final piece of evidence supporting the fact
that Stella was seconded to TRA was the fact that she was on 19th
August, 1996, promoted from Finance Management Officer Grade III to Finance
Management Officer Grade I according to the letter to her from MOF, Exh. P. 2.
At that time Stella was with TRA where her engagement started from 01st
July, 1996. We asked Mr. Malamsha how could that happen if Stella was a
permanent employee of TRA. How could MOF promote a person who is not their
employee? Mr. Malamsha merely said that the process of promotion was in the
pipeline when Stella was transferred to TRA. That is not a satisfactory answer.
Even if that were so, MOF knew that she was no longer their employee. The
letter was sent to her through TRA. Our interpretation of that fact is that MOF
promoted Stella because she was still their employee, that she was merely
seconded to TRA, and that her continued stay there depended on confirmation
after the probation period.
So, our conclusion is that Stella was seconded
to TRA and that she continued being an employee of MOF. So, Exh. P. 5, did
not terminate her employment but did not confirm her engagement with TRA and
that she was to go back to MOF. So, grounds one and three which were
consolidated and which sought to fault the learned judge for not ordering the
reinstatement of Stella is dismissed. We agree with Mr. Rugaiya that if there
was no termination there could not be reinstatement. Equally, ground four of
appeal that Stella was subject to double jeopardy of termination TRA and also
by the court order is misconceived and is dismissed as was properly submitted by
Mr. Rugaiya.
What remains now is ground two that the learned
judge suo motu framed issues at the time of composing the judgment and
thereby denied Stella the opportunity to call evidence in rebuttal. Mr.
Malamsha complained of the discussion of defamation by the learned judge. We
agree with Mr. Rugaiya entirely that though defamation was not framed as an
issue, and that was the fault of both advocates at the trial, the pleadings
contained defamation. Even Stella in her examination-in-chief said:
When I received this letter of non-confirmation,
I believed that I had failed to perform my duties efficiently and I was defamed
thereby as a trained lawyer. My employment record as well as my reputation were
tarnished. Because of that I am praying for damages to clear my name and
record. I am therefore praying to be paid Tshs. 50,000,000/= as general
damages.
Surely, the learned judge could not pretend that
the question of defamation was not before him just because no issue was framed
on defamation. In fact this Court has decided in one appeal, following a
decision of the former East African Court of Appeal, that a court must decide a
matter which it has allowed to be argued before it even if the matter is not
contained in the pleadings. We dismiss this ground.
The learned judge found that Stella had a right
to be heard but that she was not. Also he made a finding that she was entitled
to know the reasons for the non-confirmation which again she was not given. Was
the learned judge right? These two matters could not be subject to the appeal,
and there was also no cross-appeal. However, we intend to use section 4 (2) of
the Appellate Jurisdiction Act, 1979, as amended by Act No. 17 of 1993, and
revise the proceedings. That section provides as follows:
For all purposes of and incidental to the
hearing and determination of any appeal in the exercise of the jurisdiction
conferred upon it by this Act, the Court of Appeal shall, in addition to any
other power, authority and jurisdiction conferred by this Act, have the power
of revision and the power, authority and jurisdiction vested in the Court from
which the appeal is brought.
The learned judge followed a number of
authorities in arriving at those two holdings. The main authority relied upon
is of the High Court of Australia in O'Rourke v. Miller [1980] LRC (Const.) 654. Unfortunately it has not been possible for us to lay our hands on
that law report in Arusha. However, that decision, in turn, relied on Chief
Constable of Northern Wales Police v. Evans [1982] UKHL 10; [1982] 3 All ER 141, which we have been able to obtain. In both of these cases a
police constable was employed but was placed under probation during which time
the constable was dismissed without being heard and without being given
reasons.
At page 151 Lord BRIGHTMAN said:
My Lords, before I conclude this unhappy story,
I must turn to the statutory provision. Regulation 16 of the Police Regulations
1971, which I need not quote 'erbatim, provides that during his period of
probation the force, the services of a constable may be dispensed with at any
time if the chief officer of police considers: (1) that he is not fitted,
physically or mentally, to perform the duties of his office; or (2) that he is
not likely to become an efficient constable; or (3) that he is not likely to
become a well conducted constable.
It is plain from the wording of the regulation
that the power of a chief officer of police to dispense with the services of a
person accepted as a probationer constable is to be exercised, and exercised
only, after due consideration and determination of the specified questions. It
is not a discretion that may be exercised arbitrarily and without
accountability.
The present case is distinguishable. In the case
cited there was a specific provision of law spelling out the
"checklist", as it were, for dismissing. In the present case there is
no such provision at all. Stella referred to performance appraisal forms but on
cross-examination she answered Mr. Rugaiya that "I do not know if these
forms were not in existence when I was in the service of TRA". It was up
to Stella to show that the forms were in use at her time and that in her case
they were not used when considering her confirmation. In any case the forms are
for employees and we have already made a finding that Stella was not an
employee of TRA.
Lord BRIGHTMAN observed further on page 154 that
I turn secondly to the proper purpose of the
remedy of judicial review, what it is and what it is not. In my opinion the law
was correctly stated in the speech of Lord Evershed ([1963] 2 All ER 66 at 91[1963] UKHL 2; , [1964] AC 40 at 96). His was a dissenting judgment but the dissent was not
concerned with this point. Lord Evershed referred to-
'a danger of usurpation of power on the part of
the courts ... under the pretext of having regard to the principles of natural
justice ... I do observe again that it is not the decision as such which is
liable to review; it is only the circumstances in which the decision was
reached, and particularly in such a case as the present the need for giving to
the party dismissed an opportunity for putting his case.'
That was the case of Ridge v. Baldwin and
Others where the appellant had been a police constable since 1925 and rose
to the rank of Chief Constable. He was prosecuted together with two others for
some offences but he was acquitted. However, the trial judge made some comments
which prompted the watch committee to discuss him and unanimously dismissed him
in March 1958 without giving him a hearing. Lord EVERSHED held that the chief
constable was entitled to a hearing. But Stella here was not an employee of
TRA.
Lord BRIGHTMAN had the same holding when he said
on page 154:
Judicial review is concerned, not with the
decision, but with the decision-making process. Unless that restriction on the
power of the court is observed, the court will in my view, under the guise of
preventing the abuse of power, be itself guilty of usurping power.
I leave these preliminary observations in order
to consider the judgments in the Court of Appeal. It was accepted by each
member of the court that the case fell within the third of Lord Reid's
categories; that the respondent was entitled to a fair hearing; and that he had
not had one.
In the present case, however, we are of the
opinion that there was no right of a hearing because there was no termination
but it was merely a non-confirmation while Stella remained in the employment of
the MOF. It is our decided opinion that probation is a practical interview. We
do not think that the right to be heard and to be given reasons extends even
where a person is told that he/she has failed an interview.
With that finding then
comes the question of remedies: is Stella entitled to any damages? The learned
judge said this:
I will accordingly award the plaintiff two
million (2 million) Tanzanian shillings as nominal general damages for the
wrongful termination of her probationary employment with the defendant.
The wrongful termination was because of
"the breach of the audi alteram rule and failure to give reasons
for the non-confirmation by the committee". As we are of the decided view
that those two requirements do not apply, we, therefore, quash the decision of
the learned judge of granting two million shillings.
We wish to make two observations before we
conclude this judgment. One, Exh. D. 2, "Waraka wa Utumishi Na. 7 wa Mwaka
1995", that is, "Establishment Circular No. 7 of 1995", was in
existence when TRA wrote the letter to Stella, Exh. P. 1, offering her
probationary service, TRA should have referred to that Circular in that letter
and should have used the terminology contained therein, we would have been
saved all this problem. Two, Stella ought to have reported to MOF as directed
and matters would have been different. In fact by not reporting she absconded
from world
So, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
At this 27th
day of October 2004.
A. S. L. RAMADHANI
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
H. R. NSEKELA
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
S. N. KAJI
JUSTICE O
2
Tanzania -- Rev. Christopher Mtikila v. the Attorney
General, Civil Case No. 5 of 1993 (High Court of Tanzania) (Ruling)
in
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF TANZANIA
AT DODOMA
CIVIL CASE NO. 5 OF 1993
(unreported)
REV. CHRISTOPHER MTIKILA . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . PLAINTIFF
Versus
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . DEFENDANT
RULING
LUGAKINGIRA, J.
This was an
unusual petition. In its content and depends it constitutes several petitions
in one which range from challenges to the validity of divers laws to the
protection of the Constitution and legality. The petitioner, the Rev.
Christopher Mtikila, is a human rights campaigner-cum-political activist and
was represented by learned counsel Mr. Ikumimit-Mbarat who was assisted by Mr.
Richard Rweyongoza. The respondent Attorney General was represented by Mr.
Kipenka Msememba Mussa a Senior State Attorney. I wish to commend them all for
the industry and brilliance that went into the preparation and presentation of
arguments.
The petition
originally raised very diverse issues, many of them usher political in flavour
and substance, and this prompted Mr. Musasa [sic] to raise a litany of
preliminary objections which the Court resolved in the early stages of the
proceeding. The objectives were grounded in questions of the petitions locus
standi, cause of action and justiciabilty of some of the issues. At the end of
the day a number of matters were struck out and issues were then framed for the
survivours [sic]. In view of the character of the petition which had to be
amended several times it is better to paraphrase these issues rather than
merely . . . . . . . . . . . . them.
The first
issue is a general one and is tied up with the second and fifth issues. It
seeks to establish generally whether the fundamental rights guaranteed in Part
III, Chapter One of the Constitution of the United Republic, 1977 are
immutable. The inquiry is prompted by a set of amendments to the Constitution
vide the Eight Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 (No. 4). The Act amends
Articles 39, 67 and 77 in a manner which appears to infringe the right of
participation in national public affairs which is guaranteed in subpart (1)
thereof. To put it differently, the problem posed in the first issue is whether
the amendments to the Constitution were validly made and, if not, whether they
can be declared void pursuant to the provisions of Art. 64(5).
The second
issue turns on the provisions of ss. 8, 9, 10 and 15 of the Political Parties
Act, 1992 (No. 5) which was enacted pursuant to the amendment to Art. 20. These
provisions are alleged to inhibit the formation of political parties and
therefore to infringe the freedom of association. I am called upon to declare
them unconstitutional and void. The fifth issue arises from the amendment to
Articles 39, 67 and 77 as well as s. 39 of the Legal Authorities (Elections)
Act, 1979. These amendments renders [sic] it impossible for independent
candidates to contest presidential, parliamentary or local council elections. I
am again called upon to remedy the situation.
In the third
issue the petition takes on ss. 5 (2), 13, 25, and 37-47 of the Newspapers Act,
1976 (No. 3). Section 5(2) empowers the Minister responsible for matters
relating to newspapers to exclude any newspaper from the operation of any of
the provisions relating to the registration of newspapers. Section 13 empowers
the Minister to require any publisher of a newspaper to execute and register a
bond in the office of the Registrar of Newspapers. Section 25 empowers the
Minister to order cessation of publication of any newspaper. Sections 37-47 are
concerned with defamation and the punishment for libel. Finally, the petition
takes on para 12 (1) of Government Notice No. 166 of 1977 which empowers the
Registrar to refuse registration of a newspaper. It is contended that all these
provisions are arbitrary and liable to abuse and constitute an infringement to
the freedom of expression which is guaranteed under Art. 10 (1).
A fourth
issue turns on the freedom of peaceful assembly and public expression and
questions the constitutionality of ss. 4, 41, 42 and 43 of the Police Force
Ordinance, Cap. 322, as well as s. 11 (1) and (2) of the Political Parties Act.
These provisions make it necessary for permits to be obtained in order to hold
meetings or organise processions and also provide for police duties in relation
thereto. In the sixth and final issue a declaration is sought on the
constitutionality of the appointment of Zanzibaris to non-Union posts on the
Mainland.
In my ruling
in the preliminary questions I reserved for consideration at this stage the
questions of locus standi, cause of action and justiciability and I will
proceed to do so before considering the matters set out above.
Arguing
the question of locus standi, no doubt with a mind to the common law orthodox
position, Mr. Mussa submitted that the petitioner had to show a sufficient
interest in the outcome. He considered this to be implied in Art. 30 (3) of the
Constitution. In his view the petitioner had to demonstrate a greater personal
interest than that of the general public, and cited the Nigerian case of Thomas
& Ors. v. Olufosoye (1986) LRC (const) 639 in support of his argument. In
that case it was held by the Court of Appeal that under s. 6 (6) (b) of the
1979 Nigerian Constitution it was necessary for the appellants to establish a
sufficient interest in maintaining the action and this should be a personal
interest over and above that of the general public. Ademola, J.C.A. said, at p.
650:
It is also the law as laid down in the (Adesanya) case that, to entitle a person to invoke judicial power, he must show that either his personal interest will immediately be or has been adversely affected by the action or that he has sustained or is in immediate danger of sustaining an injury to himself and which interest injury is over and above that of the general public.
It is also the law as laid down in the (Adesanya) case that, to entitle a person to invoke judicial power, he must show that either his personal interest will immediately be or has been adversely affected by the action or that he has sustained or is in immediate danger of sustaining an injury to himself and which interest injury is over and above that of the general public.
Basing on
this, Mr. Mussa went on to assert that the crucial factor in the petition was
the petitioner himself and not the contents of the petition. Furthermore, he
contended that Art. 26 (2) of the Constitution did not in itself confer locus
standi and appeared to read the provision as if it were not independent in
itself.
In response
Mr. Mbezi argued that standing was certainly conferred on the petitioner by
Art. 26 (2) and that personal interest (or injury) did not have to be disclosed
in that context. He maintained that the alleged illegality of the laws was
sufficient to justify the petition under that provision. Mr. Mbezi further
stated that the petitioner acquired locus standi under Art. 30 (3) as well and
referred to the dispersal of his meeting under the provisions of the Police
Force Ordinance, the refusal to register his party under the provisions of the
Political Parties Act an the banning of Michapo and Cheka newspapers (his
alleged mouthpieces) as sufficiently demonstrating the petitioner`s interest
within the contemplation of Art. 30 (3). Mr. Mbezi further argued that in view
of the provisions of Art. 64 (5) the Court could be moved into action by any
petitioner.
I have given
due consideration to the contending arguments and feel called upon to deal with
the subject at some length. The status of a litigant in administrative law is a
crucial factor and it has assumed an added dimension in constitutional law in
the wake of written constitutions. In the English common law the litigant`s
locus standi was the handmaid of judicial review of administrative actions.
Whenever a private individual challenged the decision of an administrative body
the question always arose whether that individual had sufficient interest in
the decision to justify the court`s intervention. Hence, it is stated in Wade
and Phillips, Constitutional Law (1965 : 672):
In
administrative law it is necessary for a complainant to have a peculiar
grievance which is not suffered in common with the rest of the public.
The turning
point in England came with the procedural reforms in judicial review vide s. 31
of the Supreme Court Act, 1983, which was to lead in the course of the 1980s to
the recognition of the existence of public law as a distinct sphere from
private law. In other parts of the Commonwealth, notably India and Canada, a
similar but imperceptible development came to manifest itself in the doctrine
of public interest litigation. Traditionally, common law confines standing to litigate
in protection of public rights to the Attorney General and this was reaffirmed
by the House of Lords in Guriet v. Union of Post Office Workers (1978) AC 435,
and the Attorney General`s discretion in such cases may be exercised at the
instance of an individual. But before even the enactment of the Supreme Court
Act, a liberal view on standing was already taking shape and a generous
approach to the issue was already considered desirable. This is illustrated by
these words of Lord Dipleck in IRC v. National Federation of Self-Employed and
Small Businesses Ltd. (1981) 2 A11 E.R. 93, 107:
It would, in
my view, be a grave lacuna in our system of public law if a pressure group,
like the federation or even a single spirited taxpayer, were prevented by
outdated technical rules of locus standi from bringing the matter to the
attention of the a [sic] court to vindicate the rule of law and get the
unlawful conduct stopped.
Yet more
contemporary developments indicate that in England judges are beginning to
acknowledge the possible appearance of apparent "busy-bodies" where
public interest litigation is concerned. The late Raymond Blackburn, a lawyer
and former Member of Parliament, litigated several public interest questions in
which he evidently had no greater interest than the other members of the
public. In [missing character(s)] v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner, ex parte
Blackburn, (1968) 2 QB 118, he challenged police policy in not enforcing the
gaming or obscenity laws, and in Blackburn v. Attorney General, (1971) 2 A11
E.R. 1380, he challenged Government policy in joining the European Community.
The
developments in Canada have been no less breathtaking and we there find more
generous standing rules applied than elsewhere in the older Commonwealth. This
has been largely facilitated by the existence of a written constitution and the
incorporation of a charter of basic rights. The taxpayer is the central figure
in the Canadian approach. In Thorson v. A.G. of Canada, ([illegible date])
[illegible number] 1 SCR 138, a taxpayer was allowed by a majority to challenge
the constitutionality of the Official Languages Act. Laskin, J., of speaking
for the majority, contemplated ". . . . . . . whether a question of
constitutionality should be immunised from judicial review by denying standing
to anyone to challenge the impugned statute." It was observed that
standing in constitutional cases was a matter for the exercise of judicial
discretion. In the case of Nova Scotia Board of Censors v. McNeil,
(197[illegible digit]) [illegible digit] SRC 265, the Supreme Court again
granted standing to a taxpayer to challenge the validity of a provincial Act
regulating film and theatre shows. This position is also illustrated in
Minister of Justice v. Dorowaki (1981) 2 SCR [illegible] where the majority
granted standing to a taxpayer impugning federal legislation allowing abortion,
and ruled:
. . . . . .
. to establish status as a plaintiff in a suit seeking a declaration that the
legislation is invalid, if there is a serious issue of invalidity, a person
need only to show that he is affected by it directly or that he has a genuine
interest as a citizen in the validity of the legislation and that there is no
other and that there is no other and effective manner in which the issue may be
brought before the Court.
The Canadian
Supreme Court has in fact extended the liberalising affect of these judgments
beyond constitutional cases.
Finally, it
is important to revisit the Nigerian position. What was said in Thomas was not
merely an expression of the seeming inflexibility of s. 6 (6) (b) of the 1979
Nigerian Constitution but it was also a product of the colonial heritage. Soon
after the attainment of independence Nigerian courts found themselves having to
determine when and under what circumstances will a litigant be accorded
standing to challenge the constitutionality of a statute or to ask for a
judicial review. In Olawayin v. A.G. of Northern Nigeria (1961) A11 N.L.R. 269,
the plaintiff had challenged the constitutionality of a law which prohibited
children from engaging in political activities. The trial court dismissed the
claim on the ground that no right of the plaintiff was alleged to have been
infringed and that it would be contrary to public principle to make the
declaration asked for in vacuo. He appealed to the Federal Supreme Court which
dismissed the appeal on the same ground of absence of sufficient interest. In a
classic restatement of the orthodox common law approach, Unsworth, F.J. said,
at p. 274:
There was no
suggestion that the appellant was in imminent danger of coming into conflict
with the law or that there has been any real or direct interference with his
normal business or other activities . . . the appellant [needed] to show that
he had a sufficient interest to sustain a claim . . . to hold that there was an
interest here would amount to saying that a private individual obtains an
interest by the mere enactment of a law which may in future come in conflict.
Curiously,
the Nigerian courts remained stuck in that position even when the 1979
Constitution suggested a way out with the clause —
Any person
who alleges that any of the provisions of this chapter has been, is being or is
likely to be contravened in any State in relation to him may apply to a High
Court in that State for redress.
This is
illustrated in the much criticised decision in Adesanya v. President of Nigeria
& Anor. (1981) 1 A11 N.L.R.I. In that case the appellant brought action
challenging the appointment by the President of the second respondent to the
chairmanship of the Federal Electoral Commission. The latter was at the time
the Chief Judge of Dendel State and was, therefore disqualified from being
appointed a member of the Commission. When the matter came up for final
disposal before the Supreme Court it was unanimously held that the appellant
had no locus standi to bring the action on the ground that he had not
demonstrated the appointment and subsequent confirmation by the Senate of the
second respondent had in any way infringed his civil rights and obligations.
Significantly, though, Fatayi-Williams, C.J.N. who delivered the leading
judgment had these interesting remarks to make (at p. 20):
I take
significant cognisance of the fact that Nigeria is a developing country with a
multi-ethnic society and a written Federal Constitution, where rumourmongering
is the pastime of the market places and the construction sites. To deny any
member of such a society who is aware or believes, or is led to believe, that
there has been an infraction of any of the provisions of our Constitution, or
that any law passed by any of [our? the?] Legislative Houses, whether Federal
or State, is unconstitutional, access to a Court of law to air his grievance on
the flimsy excuse of lack of sufficient interest is to provide a ready recipe
for organised disenchantment with the judicial process.
There was
unfavourable reaction from the public and the profession to the
Adesanyadecision and the ambivalence of the Chief Justice in the above passage
provided more ammunition. Henceforth many of the Nigerian courts preferred to
use the broad and liberal part of the judgment of the Chief Justice. Therefore,
in Chief Isagba v. Alege (1981) 2 NCLR 424, Omerun [?], J. accorded standing to
a plaintiff by holding that any Nigerian taxpayer had sufficient interest in
the observance of the provisions of the Constitution by any organ of the State
or the agency. And in A.G. of Dendel State v. A.G. of Nigeria) ([illegible]) 3
NCLRI, 88, Obaseki, J.S.C., who was a party to the decision in Odesany, came
around to say:
The
constitution has opened the gates to the courts by its provisions and there can
be no justifiable reasons for closing the gates against those who do not want
to be governed by a law enacted NOT in accordance with the provisions of the
constitution.
The shift in
Nigeria was sealed in Adediran v. Interland Transport Ltd. (1991) 9 NWLR 155
where Karibi-Whyte, J.S.C. said:
. . . . the
restriction imposed at common law on the right of action . . . is inconsistent
with the provisions of s. 6 (6) (b) of the Constitution, 1979 and to that I
think the high constitutional policy involved in s. 6 (6) (b) is the removal of
the obstacles erected by the common law requirements against individuals
bringing actions before the court against the government and its institutions .
. .
It was
necessary to treat the subject to this length in order to demonstrate that Mr.
Mussa`s appreciation of locus standi in the context of constitutional
litigation no longer hold good. The notion of personal interest, personal injury
or sufficient interest over and above the interest of the general public has
more to do with private law as distinct from public law. In matters of public
interest litigation this Court will not deny standing to a genuine and bona
fide litigant even where he has no personal interest in the matter. This
position also accords with the decision in Benazir Bhutto v. Federation of
Pakistan, PLD 1988 SC 46, where it was held by the Supreme Court that the
traditional rule of locus standi can be dispensed with and procedure available
in public interest litigation can be made use of if the petition is brought to
the court by a person acting bona fide.
The
relevance of public interest litigation in Tanzania cannot be over-emphasized.
Having regard to our socio-economic conditions, this development promises more
hope to our people than any other strategy currently in place. First of all,
illiteracy is still rampant. We were recently told that Tanzania is second in
Africa in wiping out illiteracy but that is statistical juggling which is not
reflected on the ground. If we were that literate it would have been
unnecessary for Hanang District Council to pass bye-laws for compulsory adult
education which were recently published as Government Notice No. 191 of 1994.
By reason of this illiteracy a greater part of the population is unaware of
their rights, let alone how the same can be realised. Secondly, Tanzanians are
massively poor. Our ranking in the world on the basis of per capita income has
persistently been the source of embarrassment. Public interest litigation is a
sophisticated mechanism which requires professional handling. By reason of
limited resources the vast majority of our people cannot afford to engage
lawyers even where they were aware of the infringement of their rights an the
perversion of the Constitution. Other factors could be listed but perhaps the
most painful of all is that over the years since independence Tanzanians have
developed a culture of apathy and silence. This, in large measure, is a product
of institutionalized mono-party politics which in its repressive dimension,
like detention without trial, supped up initiative and guts. The people found
contentment in being receivers without being seekers. Our leaders very well
recognise this, and with the emergence of transparency in governance they have
not hesitated to affirm it. When the National Assembly was debating Hon. J.S.
Warioba`s private motion on the desirability of a referendum before some
features of the Constitution were tampered with, Hon. Sukwa Said Sukwa, after
two interruptions by his colleagues, continued and said (Parliamentary Debates,
26.8.94):
Mheshimiwa
Spika, nilisema kwamba tatizo la nchi yetu sio wananchi. Lazima tukubali hili
kwa kweli, tatizo ni sisi viongozi. Kama sisi viongozi tutakubaliana, wananchi
hawana matatizo. Mimi nina bakika Mheshimiwa Spika. Kama viongo [illegible]
Tanzania wote, wa pande zote mbili wa Zanzibar na wa Tanzania Bara, tutakubali
kusema kosho Serikali moja, basi itakuwa kesho, na wananchi watafanya maandamano
kuunga mkono. Maana wananchi wetu hawana tatizo. Kwa nini tunawapolekea hili
tatizo? Nasema tatizo ni sis viongozi.
Given all
these and other circumstances, if there should spring up a public-spirited
individual and seek the Court`s intervention against legislation or actions
that pervert the Constitution, the Court, as guardian and trustee of the
Constitution and what it stands for, is under an obligation to rise up to the
occasion and grant him standing. The present petitioner is such an individual.
These
principles find expression in our Constitution. It is apparent from the scheme
of Part III, Chapter One of the Constitution that every person in Tanzania is
vested with a double capacity: the capacity as an individual and the capacity
as a member of the community. In his former capacity he enjoys all the basic
rights set out in Art. 12 to Art 25; in the latter capacity he is bounden to
discharge duties towards the community as indicated in Art. 25 to Art. 28. This
scheme reflects the modern trend in constitutionalism which recognises the
pre-eminence of the community in the formulation of the constitution. It is
recognised that rights are correlative with functions: we have them that we may
make our contribution to the social end. Our Constitution goes further to
emphasize the two capacities by equipping the individual with a double standing
to sue. In the first place he is vested with standing by Art. 30 (3) which
states:
(3) Where
any person alleges that any provision of this Part of this Chapter or any law
involving a basic right or duty has been, is being or is likely to be
contravened in relation to him in any part of the United Republic, he may,
without prejudice to any other action or remedy lawfully available to him in
respect of the same matter, institute proceedings for relief in the High Court.
This
provision, in my view, caters for both personal and public interest litigation
for at times the two may prove inseparable. A person who sues because he
desires to be an independent parliamentary candidate where the system does not
so allow necessarily shoulders the burden for the public. It is also important
to note that under this provision action lies where a person`s right "has
been, is being or is likely to be contravened." These are plain and clear
words which admit of no controversy. Standing is therefore available under the
Constitution even where contravention of a basic right is reasonably
apprehended. The case of Thomas, and in asmuch [sic] as it was decided in
deference to the much criticised decision in Adesanya, has no relevance in the
context of the Constitution. In the upshot it is not correct to say, as Mr.
Mussa suggested, that the petitioner has no locus standi because he cannot show
that his rights have already been infringed. In my view he is within the
purview of Art. 30 (3) is there is in existence a law the operation of which is
likely to contravene his basic rights.
Standing is
additionally conferred by Art. 26 (2), and this states:
(2) Every
person is entitled, subject to the procedure provided for by the law, to
institute proceedings for the protection of the Constitution and legality.
Mr. Mussa
suggested that this provision has to be read with Art. 30 (3) and cannot be
used in lieu of the latter. With respect, I cannot agree. It is a cardinal rule
of statutory and constitutional interpretation that every provision stands
independent of the other and has a special [?] function to perform unless the
contrary intention appears. There is nothing in Art. 26 (2) or elsewhere to link
it to Art. 30 (3). The only linkage is to Art. 30 (4) and this is one of
procedure rather than substance. Clause (4) empowers Parliament to make
provision for the procedure relating to institution of proceedings under the
article. It has not done so to date but that does not mean that the court is
hamstrung. In D.P.P. v. Daudi Pete [?], Criminal Appeal No. 28 of 1990
(unreported), the Court of Appeal stated in that ". . . . until the
Parliament legislates under sub- article (4) the enforcement of the Basic
Rights, Freedoms and duties may be affected under the procedure and practice
that is available in the High Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction, depending on the nature of the remedy sought." I hold Art.
26 (2) to be an independent and additional source of standing which can be
invoked by a litigant depending on the nature of his claim. Under this
provision, too, and having regard to the objective thereof — the protection of
the Constitution and legality — a proceeding may be instituted to challenge
either the validity of a law which appears to be inconsistent to the
Constitution or the law of the land. Personal interest is not an ingredient in
this provision; it is tailored for the cummunity and falls under the sub-title
"Duties to the Society." It occurs to me, therefore, that Art. 26 (2)
enacts into our Constitution the doctrine of public interest litigation. It is
then not in logic or foreign precedent that we have to go for this doctrine; it
is already with us in our own Constitution.
I hasten to
emphasize, however, that standing will be granted on the basis of public
interest litigation where the petition is bona fide and [evidently?] for the
public good and where the Court can provide an effective remedy. This point is
underscored in People Union of Democratic Rights v. Minister of Home Affairs,
AIR 1985 Do hi 268, where it was stated that "public interest
litigation" meant nothing more than what it stated, namely, it is a
litigation in the interest of the public. It is not the type of litigation
which is meant to satisfy the curiosity of the people, but it is a litigation
which is instituted with a desire that the court would be able to give
effective relief to the whole or a section of the society. It is emphasized in
the case that the condition which must be fulfilled before public interest
litigation is entertained by the court is that the court should be in a
position to give effective and complete relief. If no effective or complete
relief can be granted, the court should not entertain public interest
litigation. I gave serious consideration to the matters raised in this petition
and the prayers connected therewith and I was persuaded that in quite a number
of areas the public interest overwhelmed what appeared to be a private factor.
I therefore allowed arguments to proceed on the issues reviewed above. But in
the light of those arguments and what is stated in this paragraph, it may be
necessary to reconsider the position of one issue at the appropriate stage
later. Meanwhile I will turn to dispose of the question of cause of action.
Cause of
action is not a problem in this petition. Mr. Mussa seemed to suggest, but I
respectfully disagree, that in order for cause of action to arise an event
injurious to the rights of the petitioner must have taken place. In my view,
where the issue is whether a law is unconstitutional the court looks at the law
itself but not at how it works. The following passage from Chitaley [ao] , The
Constitution of India (1970 : 686), citing Prahalad Je v. State, 1990 Orissa
157, is to the point:
In order to
determine whether a particular law is repugnant or inconsistent with the
Fundamental Rights it is the provisions of the Act that must be looked at and
not the manner in which the power under the provision is actually exercised.
Inconsistency or repugnancy does not depend upon the exercise of the power by
virtue of the provisions in the Act but on the nature of the provisions
themselves.
I agree and
do not wish to add anything more. In this petition the dispute is over the
validity of various laws and this, in my view, constitutes the necessary cause
of action. A situation could certainly arise where the cause of action would
depend upon actual exercise of power. Such a situation is exemplified in this
petition where the constitutionality of the appointment of Zanzibaris to
non-union positions on the Mainland is questioned. In that context it is the
appointments themselves that constitute the cause of action, but that has to do
with the validity of the action rather than a law. There now remains the
question of justiciability of the claims but since that has more to do with the
first of the issues, I will not turn to consider them.
The first
issue seeks to determine the immutability of basic rights enacted in the Constitution.
This turns on the power of the Parliament to amend the provisions providing for
these rights. Specifically, what is at issue are the amendments to Art. 20 and
Art. 39 of the Constitution vide the Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992.
In its original form Art. 20 read as follows:
20. (1)
Subject to the laws of the land, every person is entitled to freedom of
peaceful assembly, association and public expression, that is to say, the right
to assemble freely and peaceably, to associate with other persons and, in
particular, to form or belong to organisations or associations formed for the
purposes of protecting or furthering his or any other interests.
(2) Subject
to the relevant laws of the land, a person shall not be compelled to belong to
any association.
In its
amended form clause (1) remains unaffected, hence the rights and freedoms spelt
out therein remain as before. Our interest in this petition centres on the
freedom of association which, under the present multi-party system, includes the
formation of political parties. Clause (2) was also unaffected by the amendment
save that it now became clause (4). In between there are new clauses (2) and
(3) which it is necessary to set out in full. (The translation from Kiswahili
is partly my own and partly adapted).
(2) Without
prejudice to subsection (1) no political party shall qualify for registration
if by its constitution and policy —
(a) it aims
to advocate or further the interests of —
(i) any religious belief of [sic] group;
(ii) any tribal, ethnic or racial group;
(iii) only a specific area within any part of the United Republic;
(i) any religious belief of [sic] group;
(ii) any tribal, ethnic or racial group;
(iii) only a specific area within any part of the United Republic;
(b) it
advocates the breaking up of the Union constituting the United Republic:
(c) it
accepts or advocates the use of force or violence as a means of attaining its
political objectives;
(d) it
advocates or aims to carry on its political activities exclusively in one part
of the United Republic; or
(e) it does
not allow periodic and democratic elections of its leadership.
(3)
Parliament may enact legislation prescribing conditions which will ensure
compliance by political parties with the provisions of subsection ( 2 ) by
relations to the people`s freedom and right of association and assembly.
Pursuant to
clause (3), Parliament enacted the Political Parties Act of [ 92] providing for
the registration of political parties and other matters. Clause (2) above was
lifted in its entirety and re-enacted as s. 9 (2) of the Act. In addition s. 8
of the Act provided for a two-stage registration — provisional and full
registration. Provisional registration is done upon fulfilment of the
conditions prescribed in s. 9; full registration is effected after fulfilment
of the conditions in s. 10 which reads:
10 — No
political party shall be qualified to be fully registered unless —
(a) it has
been provisionally registered;
(b) it has
obtained not less than two hundred members who are qualified to be registered
as voters for the purpose of parliamentary elections from each of at least ten
Regions of the United Republic out of which at least two Regions are in
Tanzania, Zanzibar being one Region each from Zanzibar and [Pe_ts_] and
(c) it has
submitted the names of the national leadership of the party and such leadership
draws its members from both Tanzania-Zanzibar and Tanzania Mainland;
(d) it has
submitted to the Registrar the location of its head offices within the United
Republic and a postal address to which communications may be sent.
It is
contended by the petitioner that ss. 8, 9 and 10 of the Political Parties Act
are in the conditions on the formation of political parties and thereby
inhibiting enjoyment of the freedom of in Art. 20(1). It is further contended
that Art. 20(2) and [sections derive? are for the] therefore to Art. 20(2) and
(3) ss. 8, 9, 10 and 13 of the Political Parties Act.
On the other
hand, Art. 39 previously provided as follows:
39. No
person shall be eligible for election to the office of President of the United
Republic unless he —
(a) has
attained the age of forty years; and
(b) is
qualified for election as a Member of the National Assembly or of the
(Zanzibar) House of Representatives.
As amended
by the Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act, the [ above] paragraphs are
maintained but [numbered] (b) and (a) . There is added new paragraphs (a) and
(d) which state (my translation);
(a) is a
citizen of the United Republic by birth;
(d) is a
member of and sponsored by a political party.
The
requirement for membership of and sponsorship by a political party is extended
to candicacy for the National Assembly in Art. 67 and Art. 77 as well as for
local councils in s. 39 of the Local Authorities (Elections) Act. 1979 as
amended by the Local Authorities (Elections) (Amendment) Act, 1992 (No. 7), s.
9. The petitioner contends that the requirement for membership of and sponsorship
by a political party abridges the right to participate in national public
affairs granted by Art. 21(1) which states: —
(1) Every
citizen of the United Republic is entitled to take part in the government of
the country, either directly or through freely chosen representatives, in
accordance with procedure provided by or under the law.
I am
therefore called upon to strike out para (d) in Art. 39 and wherever else the
requirement for membership of and sponsorship by a political party occurs.
As stated earlier
the issue of immutability turns on Parliament`s power to amend the
Constitution. In assessing this power it on [sic] is appropriate to recall, in
the first place, that fundamental rights are not gifts from the state. They
inhere in a person by reason of his birth and are therefore prior to the State
and the law. In our times one method of judging the character of a government
is to look at the extent to which it recognises and protects human rights. The
raison d`etre for any government is its ability to secure the welfare of the
governed. Its claim to allegiance of the governed has be [sic?] in terms of
what that allegiance is to serve. Allegiance has [to be] correlative with
rights. Modern constitutions like our own have enacted fundamental rights in
their provisions. This does not mean that the rights are thereby created;
rather it is evidence of their recognition and the intention that they should
be enforceable in a court of law. It can therefore be argued that the very
decision to translate fundamental rights into a written code is by itself a
restraint upon the powers of Parliament to act arbitrarily. As aptly observed
by Chief Justice Nasim Hassan Shah in Muhammad Nawaz Sharif v. President of
Pakistan, PLD 1993 SC 473, 557,
Fundamental
Rights in essence are restraints on the arbitrary exercise of power by the
State in relation to any activity than an individual can engage. Although
constitutional guarantees are often couched in permissive terminology, in
essence they impose limitations on the power of the State to restrict such
activities. Moreover, Basic or Fundamental Rights of individuals which
presently stand formally incorporated in the modern constitutional documents
derive their lineage from and are traceable to the ancient Natural Law.
Our
Constitution confers on Parliament very wide powers of amendment but these
powers are by no means unlimited. These powers are to be found in Art. 93(1)
and (2) and it is necessary to set out the relevant parts.
98 — (1)
Parliament may enact legislation altering any provision of this Constitution .
. . (emphasis added)
(2) For the
purposes of construing the provisions of sub- section (1), references to
alteration of any provision of this Constitution or of any law include
references to the amendment or modification, of those provisions, suspension or
repeal and replacement of the provisions or the re-enactment or modification in
the application of those provisions.
These powers
are evidently wide. It has to be accepted, in the first place, that Parliament
has power to amend even those provisions providing for basic human rights.
Secondly, that power is not confined to a small sphere. It extends to
modification of those provisions, suspension or repeal and replacement of same,
re-enactment or modification in the application thereof. Drastic as some of
these terms may sound, I still do not believe that they authorise abrogation
from the Constitution of these rights. The provisions of Art. 98 should be read
in the light of the clawback [?] clauses in Art. 30(2) and 31. The former reads
as follows: —
(2) It is
hereby declared that no provision contained in this Part of this Constitution,
which stipulates the basic human rights, freedoms and duties, shall be be [sic]
construed as invalidating any existing law or prohibiting the enactment of any
law or the doing of any lawful act under such law, making provision for —
(a) ensuring that the rights and freedoms of others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the individual rights and freedoms;
(a) ensuring that the rights and freedoms of others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the individual rights and freedoms;
(b) ensuring
the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public morality, public
health, rural and urban development planning, the development planning, the
development and utilisation of mineral resources or the development or
utilisation of any other property in such manner as to pr the public benefit;
(c) ensuring
the execution of the judgment or order of a court given or made in any civil or
criminal proceeding;
(d) the
protection of the reputation, rights and freedoms of others or the private
lives of persons involved in any court proceedings, prohibiting the disclosure
of confidential information, or the safeguarding of the dignity, authority and
independence of the courts;
(e) imposing
restrictions, supervision and control over the establishment, management and
operation of tion and private companies in the country; or
(f) enabling
any other thing to be done which promotes, enhances or protects the national
interest generally.
Art. 31, on
the other hand, empowers Parliament, notwithstanding the provisions of Art.
30(2), to legislate for measures departing from the provisions of Art. 14
(Right to live) and Art. 15 (Right to personal freedom) during periods of
emergency, or in ordinary times in relation to individuals who are believed to
be conducting themselves in a manner that compromises national security. We may
refer to Art. 97(1) which provides in part —
(1) subject
to the other provisions of this Constitution, the legislative power of
Parliament shall be exercised through the National Assembly . . .
Reading all
these provisions together, it occurs to me that Parliament`s power in relation
to the amendment of the provisions under Part III of Chapter One of the
Constitution can only be exercised within the limits of Art. 30(2) and Art. 31.
Hence, even if it is a suspension, or a repeal and replacement it must be
justifiable within the scope of the two provisions. I have therefore come to
the conclusion, and Mr. Mussa concedes, that Parliament`s power of amendment
are not unlimited. It should be recognised, on the other hand, that society can
never be static. New times bring with them new needs and aspirations. Society`s
perception of basic human rights is therefore bound to change according to
changed circumstances, and that makes it imperative for Parliament to have
power to alter every provision of the Constitution. What remains immutable,
therefore, is the ethic of human rights but not the letter by which they are
expressed.
We turn to
consider whether the amendments complained of were not within the
constitutional limits, beginning with Art. 20 (2) and (3). The former does not
abrogate or abridge beyond the purview of Art. (2) the right of association guaranteed
under Art. 22 (3). It merely lays down the conditions a political party has to
fulfil before registration and all these conditions are within the parameters
of Act. [sic] 30(2). The conditions are clearly aimed at the promotion and
enhancement of public safety, public order and national cohesion. There cannot
be any such thing as absolute or uncontrolled liberty wholly freedom [sic]
restraint, for that would lead to anarchy and disorder. Indeed, in a young
country lke ours, nothing could be more suicidal than to licence prties based
on tribe, race or religion. The problem with Art. (3) is even less apparent. It
is an enabling provision giving Parliament power to enact a law for the
registration of political parties and for ensuring compliance with Art. 20(2)
by these parties. It does not expressly tell Parliament what to write in that
law. I am satisfied and hold that Art. 20(2) and (3) were validly . . . . . .
There remains, however, the provisions of the Political Parties let which fall
for comment under the second issue. Next is Art. 39 and allied articles and
provisions relating to presidential, parliamentary and local council
candidates. Once again, I am unfortunate in . . . . . . say that these
amendments were within the powers of Parliament. They do not abrogate but
merely modify the application of Art. 21(1) by providing that participation in
national public affairs shall be through political under Art. 98(2). I also
think that the amendments are within the ambit of Art. 7(2) if public order be
taken as having supplied the inspiration. These amendments were, therefore,
validly made. It should be understood, however, that I am at this juncture
talking of validity in strict legal terms; the amendments are otherwise not
free from difficulties and there are dealt with under the fifth issue.
The Court`s
power to declare a law void is founded in Art. 64(5). Having held that the
impugned constitutional amendments were validly made, I do not have to consider
whether such amendments are "law" within the meaning of the article.
I have read in this connection the interesting arguments in the cases of
Golaknath v. State of Punjab (1967) 2 SCR 762 and Kesav anda v. State of Keral
(1973) Supp. SCR1, but in view of the decision I have reached, I am unable to take
advantage of them.
The second
issue questions the constitutionality of ss. 8, 9, 10, and 15 of the Political
Parties Act. Much effort had gone into this matter when I was obliged to admit
that the trial of this issue should have been stayed. Last year the petitioner
filed at the Dar es Salaam registry of this Court an application for orders of
certiorari and mandamus. That was Miscellaneous Civil Cause No. 67 of 1993, the
applicants being himself and the Democratic Party and the respondents being the
Attorney General and the Registrar of Political Parties. The grounds for the
application were that the Registrar was biased in refusing to register the
Democratic Party and that the Political Parties Act (apparently the whole of
it) was unconstitutional and void. He was praying for orders to quash the
Registrar`s decision and to direct him to reconsider the Democratic Party`s
application according to law. The application was heard and subsequently
dismissed by Maina, J. on 14 December 1993. Two days later the petitioner
lodged a notice of appeal. There is now pending before the Court of Appeal a
Civil Appeal No. 24 of 1994, in which the first ground of appeal states: —
The learned
judge erred in law in failing to hold that section 8 and 10 of the Political
Parties Act, 1992, Act No. 5 of 1992 are violative of article 13 (6)(a) of the
Constitution of the United Republic of Tanzania and therefore null and void on
the ground that they do not provide for fair hearing before the Second
Respondent`s to refuse full registration of a political party.
The
memorandum concludes: —
It is
proposed to ask the Court for the following orders:
(i) an order
striking out sections 8, 10 and 16 of the Political Parties Act, 1992.
In the
present petition I am confronted with the same prayer with slight variation,
namely, to strike out ss. 8, 9, 10 and 15 of the same Act. In other words a
suit in which the matter in issue is substantially in issue in another suit
between the same parties is pending in another court in the country. It seems
also that the Dar es Salaam suit was instituted earlier because the record of
this petition shows that its trial was being put off to await the outcome of
the former. In these proceedings we do not have a prescribed procedure but we
have invariably invoked and been guided by the provisions of the Civil
Procedure Code, 1966. Section 8 of the Code provides thus: —
8. No court
shall proceed with the trial of any suit in which the matter in issue is also
directly or substantially in issue in a previously instituted suit between the
same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim
litigating under the same title where such suit is pending in the same or any
other court in Tanganyika having jurisdiction to grant the relief claimed.
This provision
is in parimateria with s. 10 of the Indian Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. MULLA
observes in relation to the latter that the object is to prevent courts of
concurrent jurisdiction from simultaneously trying two parallel suits in
respect of the same matter in issue. It goes on to claim, citing a 1919 obscure
authority, that the section enacts merely a rule of procedure and a decree
passed in contravention of it is not a nullity and cannot be disregarded in
execution proceedings. I think, however, that this might be true where the
subsequent suit is decided without knowledge of the existence of the previous
suit.
It is the
pendency of the previously instituted suit that constitutes a bar to the trial
of the subsequent suit. The word "suit" has been held to include
"appeal": see Raj Spinning Mills v. A.G. King Ltd. (1954) A. Punj.
113. The "matter in issue" in the provision has also been construed
as having reference to the entire subject matter in controversy between the
parties and not merely one or more of the several issues: see Hariram v. Hazi
Mohamed (1954)Allahabad 141. The same position was stated by the Court of
Appeal of Eastern Africa in Jadva Krson v. Harman Singh Bhogal (1953) 20 EACA
74 when they were considering s. 6 of Kenya Civil Procedure Ordinance which is
again in parimateria with our s. 8. The case before me is, of course, a
novelty. Like the eye of a butterfly, it is a composite of several petitions
wrapped up into one. When considering the expression "matter in
issue" one has to consider each issue independently for they have no
relationship. There is not one subject matter in controversy between the
parties but several. In these circumstances the second issue is severable as it
could, indeed have been tried in a separate suit. In the circumstances of this
case "matter in issue" must be taken to be matter in issue in each of
the six issues framed and I am satisfied that the same matter is in issue in
the appeal pending before the Court of Appeal.
In Jinnat
Bibi v. Howeah Jute Mills Co. Ltd., AIR 1932 Cal. 751, it was held that the
provisions of s. 10 of the Indian Code were mandatory and left no discretion to
the courts in respect of the stay of suits when circumstances are such as to
invoke the operation of that section. It was further held that one test of the
application of the [sic] to a particular case ins whether on the final decision
being reached in the previous suit such decision would operate as res
judicatain the subsequent suit. Indian decisions are certainly not binding on this
Court, but they deserve the greatest respect where they expound a provision
which was previously our own and which remains in pari materia with our own.
The Indian
Code of Civil Procedure was in application in Tanganyika until 1966 and s. 10
thereof is in pari materia with our s. 8. It is therefore not only in courtesy
but also in common sense that I consider myself entitled to rely on these
decisions. In so doing, I hold that the provisions of s. 8 of our Code are
mandatory and provide no room for discretion in circumstances where it is
invokable. It is invokable in the instant case. Moreover, there is no doubt
that the final decision in the pending appeal would operate as res judicata in
the instant petition. The question is not whether I am in a position to decide
the matter ahead of the Court of Appeal; courts of law are not racecourses. The
point is that I am bound to stop in my tracks and let the previous suit proceed
to finality because the decision on the matter in issue would operate as res
judicata on the same matter in the suit before me. I will therefore stay the
[decision on] the second issue until the outcome of Civil Appeal No. 24 of
1994.
In the third
issue the Court is invited to pronounce on the constitutionality of ss. 5 (2),
13, 25, 37-47 of the Newspapers Act, 1976 and para. 12 of G.N. No. 166 of 1977.
I have two observations to make in this connection. First, it must be realised
that the constitutionality of a provision or statute is not found in what could
happen in its operation but in what it actually provides for. Where a provision
is reasonable and valid the mere possibility of its being abused in actual
operation will not make it invalid: Collector of Customs (Madras) v. N.S.
Chetty, AIR 1962 SC 316. It seems to me, with respect, that much of what was
said against the above provisions reflected generally on what could happen in
their operation rather than on what they actually provided for. I was generally
referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Kukutia ale Pumbum v. Attorney
General, Civil Appeal No. 32 of 1992 (unreported), but I think that case covers
a different situation — the situation where a person was deprived of his right
to sue unless he was permitted to do so by the defendant (the Government). The
provisions complained of however, are administrative and implementational and
their constitutionality can only be challenged if they were not within the
power of the Legislature to enact them.
Secondly,
and most importantly, have unfortunately come to doubt the petitioner`s
standing in this issue. As stated before, our Constitution confers a double
capacity on every person — his personal and his community capacities. Now, in
what capacity did the petitioner take up these provisions? It cannot be in his
personal capacity because there is nothing in the provisions or any of them
which is shown to have contravened, is contravening or is likely to contravene
his right to receive or impart information. The contravention has to be read in
the provisions themselves. It transpires that the petitioner`s complaint is in
fact founded on the banning of the "Michapo" and "Cheka"
newspapers vide Government Notice No. 8 of 1993. That is improper. The use or
misuse of the powers granted by s. 25, the relevant provision in that
connection, has nothing to do with the validity of that provision as such. What
would be relevant is whether Parliament had no power to grant those powers. As
for the misfortunes of "Michapo" and "Cheka" the doors were
open for the option of judicial review but it seems better options were found.
Can we alternatively say that this issue falls under public interest
litigation? I don`t think so either. As seen before, public interest litigation
is litigation in the interest of the public. In other words, the general public,
or section thereof, must be seen to be aggrieved by the state of the law and to
be desirous of redress. There could probably be provisions in the Newspaper Act
one could consider oppressive, unreasonable and even unconstitutional, but that
is beside the point; the point is that there is no evidence of public agitation
against that law. And by "public" I do not mean merely newspaper
editors but the Tanzanian public generally. Ironically, whatever ills this law
may be identified with appear to be overshadowed by the unprecedented upsurge
of private newspapers in recent years. As stated in Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing
Co. v. Bhamet Coal Ltd., AIR 1983 SC 239, courts are not authorised to make
disembodied pronouncements on serious and cloudy issues of constitutional
policy without battle lines being properly drawn. Judicial pronouncements
cannot be immaculate legal conceptions. It is but right that no important point
of law should be decided without a proper issue between parties properly ranged
on either side and a crossing of the swords. It is inexpedient for the Court to
delve into problems which do not arise and express opinion thereon. In the
premises I decline to pronounce on the third issue.
The fourth
issue brings us to the provisions of the Police Force Ordinance and the
Political Parties Act touching on assemblies and processions. Under s. 40 of
the former a permit is necessary to organise an assembly or procession in a
public place. The permit is grantable by the District Commissioner. Similarly,
political parties require a permit from the District Commissioner to hold
public meetings pursuant to the provisions of s. 11 (1) of the Political
Parties Act. Section 41 of the Ordinance empowers a police officer above the
rank of inspector or any magistrate to stop or prevent any assembly or
procession of the holding or continuance of it "is imminently likely to
cause a breach of the peace, or to prejudice the public safety . . ." The
police officer or magistrate may therefore give orders, including orders for
the dispersal of the assembly or procession. Section 42 defines what
constitutes an unlawful assembly or procession, namely an assembly or
procession not authorised by a permit, where one is required, or one held in
contravention of the conditions thereof or in disregard of orders by the police
or magistrate. Section 43 is the penal provision for disobediences, etc. These
provisions, i.e. ss. 41, 42 and 43, are imported into the Political Parties Act
vide s. 11 (2) thereof. It was argued for the petitioner that these provisions
are inconsistent with the freedom of peaceful assembly and public expression
which is guaranteed under Art. 20(1). Mr. Mussa, on the other hand, thought
they were all supervisory in character, intended to ensure peace and good order,
to the end that the rights and freedoms may be better enjoyed.
A better
approach to these provisions is to distinguish their functions. First of all,
there is the requirement for a permit grantable by the District Commissioner
and this falls under s. 40 of the Ordinance and (1) of the Act. Next there is
control of the meetings and processions and this falls under s. 41, the
exercise of that power being vested in the police and the magistracy. Finally,
we have the criminal law provisions in ss. 42 and e . In considering the
question of constitutionality these distinctions have to be kept in mind. : I
draw these distinctions also because not all meetings or processions require a
permit, yet all attract police and magisterial supervision. By virtue of G.N. No.
169 of 1958, religious processions as well as religious, [sic] social,
educational, entertainment and sporting assemblies do not require a permit; by
virtue of G.N. No. 98 of 1960 assemblies convened by rural local authorities
within the areas of their jurisdiction do not require a permit; and by virtue
[of] G.N. No. 237 of 1962 assemblies convened by Municipal or Town Councils
within the areas of their jurisdiction do not require permits either; but all
these events attract police and magisterial supervision. Let us now look at the
character of the three divisions in relation to the Constitution.
Section
40(2) provides in part: of (2) Any person who is desirous of convening,
collecting, forming, or organising any assembly or procession in any public
place, shall first make application for a permit in that behalf to the District
Commissioner . . . and if the District Commissioner is satisfied, having regard
to all the circumstances, . . . that the assembly or procession is not likely
to cause a breach of the peace . . . he shall, subject to the provisions of
sub-section (3), issue a permit . . .
Section 11
(1) of the Political Parties Act is to the same effect although it does not
expressly set out all that is in the above provision. These provisions may then
be contrasted with the provisions of Art. 20(1) which states in part:—
(1) Subject
to the laws of the land, every person is entitled to freedom of peaceful
assembly, association and public expression, that is to say, the right to
assemble freely and peaceably . . .
The
Constitution is the basic or paramount law of the land and cannot be overriden
by any other law. Where, as in the above provision, the enjoyment of a
constitutional right is "subject to the laws of the land." the
necessary implication is that those laws must be lawful laws. A law which seeks
to make the exercise of those rights subject to the permission of another
person cannot be consistent with the express provisions of the Constitution for
it makes the exercise illusory. In this class are s.40 of the Police Force
Ordinance and s.11 (1) of the Political Parties Act. Both provisions hijack the
right to peaceful assembly and procession guaranteed under the Constitution and
place it under the personal disposition of the District Commissioner. It is a
right which cannot be injoyed unless the District Commissioner permits. That is
precisely the position that was encountered in ole Pumbun where the right to
sue the Government could not be exercised with the permission of the
Government. The Court of Appeal was prompted to say: -
. . . a law
which seeks to limit or derogate from the basic right of the individual on
grounds of public interest will be saved by Article 30 (2) of the Constitution
only if it satisfies two essential requirements: First such a law must be
lawful in the sense that it is not arbitrary. It should make adequate
safeguards against arbitrary decision, and provide effective controls against
abuse by those in authority when using the law. Secondly, the limitation
imposed by such law must not be more than is reasonably necessary to achieve
the legitimate object. This is what is also known as the principle of
proportionality . . . If the law . . . does not meet both requirements, such
law is not saved by Article 30 (2) of the Constitution, is null and void.
Section 40 does not meet these requirements. It is in the absolute discretion
of the District Commissioner to determine the circumstances conducive to the
organisation of an assembly or procession; there is no adequate or any safeguards
against arbitrary exercise of that discretion and there is no mechanism for
challenging his decisions, except probably by way of judicial review which is
tortuous and unbeneficial for the purpose of assemblies and processions. I have
easily come to the conclusion that the requirement for a permit infringes the
freedom of peaceful assembly and procession and is therefore unconstitutional.
It is not irrelevant to add, either, that in the Tanzanian context this freedom
is rendered the more illusory by the stark truth that the power to grant
permits is vested in cadres of the ruling party.
Coming to s.
41, I am of the view that the provision does not operate to take away the right
to hold assemblies or processions. It only empowers the police and the magistracy
to step in for the preservation of peace and order. The provision is thus saved
by Art. 31(2) (b), it being in furtherance of the State`s normal functions of
ensuring public safety and public order and is reasonably justifiable in a
democratic society. As rightly remarked by Mr. Mussa the enjoyment of basic
human rights presupposes the existence of law and order. A provision like . 41
is therefore a necessary concomitant to the realisation of these rights.
Moreover, there is inherent in the provision a safeguard against arbitrary use.
It comes into play when the holding or continuance of an assembly or procession
"is imminently likely to cause a breach of the peace, or to prejudice the
public safety or the maintenance of public order or to be used for any unlawful
purpose," and therefore meets what is termed the "clear and present
danger" test. In Muhammad Nawaz Sharif cited earlier, Saleem Akhtar, J.
said, at pp. 832-833:—
Every
restriction (on basic rights) must pass the test of reasonableness and overriding
public interest. Restriction can be imposed and freedom . . . may be curtailed
provided it is justified by the "clear and present danger" test
enunciated in Saia v. New York (1948) 334 US 558 that the substantive evil must
be extremely serious and the degree of imminence extremely high.
Section 41,
in my view, is conditioned on a clear and present danger where the substantive
evil is extremely serious and the degree of imminence extremely high. A
situation befitting the application of the provision can be found in the
Guyanese case of C.R. Ramson v. Lloyed [sic] Barker and the Attorney General
(1983) 9 CLB 1211. That case arose from the dispersal of a political meeting by
the police. The plaintiff, an Attorney-at-Law, was standing near his motor car
parked by the roadside discussing with a colleague the methods used by the
police to disperse the crowd. A policeman came up, held the plaintiff by his
arm and asked him what he was doing there, and was told "that is my
business." Other policemen came up and surrounded the plaintiff, who was
then jabbed several times in the ribs with a baton by another policeman who
ordered him into the car. The plaintiff and his colleague then got into the car
unwillingly and drove away. The plaintiff later brought action alleging, inter
alia, an infringement of his right to freedom of assembly, expression and
movement. It was held by the Court of Appeal that there was no infringement of
the constitutional right to the freedom of assembly, expression or movement as
the action of the police was not directed towards a hindrance or deprevation
[sic] of these constitutional freedoms.
These
factors apart, it is equally apparent that the petitioner admits the legitimate
role of the police at assemblies and processions although, somehow, he does not
realise that this role is specially authorised by s. 41. Para 19 (h) of the
petition states in part:—
The court
should also declare that a citizen has right to convene a peaceful assembly or
public rally and the right to make a peaceful demonstration or procession
without a permit from anybody except that he should just inform the police
before doing so. (my emphasis).
I would not
wish to believe that by this prayer it is intended that the police should
attend assemblies and processions to applaud the actors and fold their arms in
the face of an imminent break down in law and order. I am satisfied that s. 41
is a valid provision.
Finally, ss.
42 and 43. The former defines an unlawful assembly or procession and the latter
punishes the same. Art. 30(2) (a) and (b) of the constitution empowers the
Legislature to enact legislation for ensuring that the rights and freedoms of
others or the public interest are not prejudiced by the misuse of the
individual rights and freedoms and for ensuring public safety and public order.
This pwer [sic], in my vies [sic], includes the power to prescribe penalties
for criminal breaches. In other words, the penalties are necessarily
concomitant to the effective excercise [sic] of police and magisterial powers under
the other provisions. I consider the provisions valid as well.
At this
stage I will proceed to show the significance of the distinction I have been
making. I have held that the requirement for a permit is unconstitutional but
not the police- magisterial and penal role. The crucial question now is whether
these aspects can be severed. Severance is provided for under Art. 64(5) which
states that "any other law inconsistent with the provisions of the
Constitution . . . shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void." It
is therefore established that where the valid portion is severable from the
rest, that portion will be maintained provided it is sufficient to carry out
the purpose of the Act. Delivering the judgment of the Privy Council in A.G. of
Alberta v. A.G. of Canada (1946) AC 503 6, Viscount Simon said:
The real
question is whether what remains is so inextricably bound up with the part
declared invalid that what remains cannot independently survive, or, as it has
sometimes been put, whether on a fair review of the whole matter it can be
assumed that the Legislature would have enacted what survives without enacting
the part that is ultra vires at all.
I am in no
doubt whatsoever that the permit aspect can be expunged and expelled from the
law without prejudicing the rest. This is illustrated by the fact that the
supervisory aspects already operate independently where a permit is not
required. It is evident, therefore, that the Legislature could have enacted the
supervisory aspects without enacting the permit aspect. Having held, and I
repeat, that the requirement for a permit is unconstitutional and void, I
direct the provisions of s. 40 of the Police Force Ordinance and s. 11(1)(a) of
the Political Parties Act, and all provisions relating thereto and connected
therewith, shall henceforth be read as if all reference to a permit were
removed. It follows that from this momment [sic] it shall be lawful for any
person or body to convene, collect, form or organise and address an assembly or
procession in any public place without first having to obtain a permit from the
District Commissioner. Until the Legislature makes appropriate arrangements for
this purpose, it shall be sufficient for a notice of such assembly or
procession to be lodged with the police, being delivered a copy to the District
Commissioner for his information.
In reaching
this decision, I am certainly aware of the decision cited to me in C.Mtikila
& Ors. V.R. Criminal Appeal NO. 90 of 1992 (Dodoma Registry - Unreported).
In that case the present petitioner and others were charged before the District
Court of Dodoma with three counts, the first of which alleged "refusing to
desist from convening a meeting or assembly after being warned not to do so by
police officers contrary to sections 41 and 42 of the Police Force Ordinance,
Cap. 322." They were convicted and fined 500` each. They appealed to this
Court and it was contended, inter alia, that s. 41 was unconstitutional.
Mwalusanya. J. agreed and said: "I construe section 41 of the Police Force
Ordinance to be void. From now onwards this section is deleted from the Statute
Book." I am given to understand that an appeal has been lodged against
that decision.
The fact
that an appeal is pending naturally restrains me in my comments on that decision,
yet I cannot avoid to show, albeit briefly, why I find that decision difficult
to go by. The learned judge did not merely hold s. 41 to be unconstitutional;
he went further and held the entire trial to be a nullity. He said between pp.
23 and 25 of his judgment:
In my
judgment I find that the denial by the trial magistrate to have the appelants
have access to the documents they required for their defence was a fundamental
defect which is not curable … The error is so fundamental that it has rendered
the whole trial a nullity.
This is
significant indeed. It is established practice that that [sic] where a matter
can be disposed of without recourse to the Constitution, the Constitution
should not be involved at all. The Court will pronounce on the constitutionality
of a statute only when it is necessary for the decision of the case to do so:
Wahid Munwar Khan v. State AIR 1956 Hyd. 22. In that case a passage from
Coday`s Treatise on Constitutional Limitations was also cited in these terms:
In any case
where a constitutional question is raised, though it may be legitimately
presented by the record, yet if the record presents some other clear ground the
court may rest its judgment on that ground alone, if the other questions are
immaterial having regard to the view taken by the court.
The Supreme
Court of Zimbabwe expressed the same view in Minister of Home Affairs v. Bickle
& Ors (1985) LRC (Const) 755 where Geoges, C.J. said (at p. 750):
Courts will
not normally consider a constitutional question unless the existence of a
remedy depends upon it; if a remedy is available to an applicant under some
other legislative provision or on some other basis, whether legal to factual, a
court will usually decline to determine whether there has been, in addition, a
breach of the Declaration of Rights.
And here at
home the Court of Appeal had this to say in Attorney General v. W.K. Butambala,
Criminal Appeal NO. 37 of 1991 (unreported):
We need
hardly say that our Constitution is a serious and solemn document. We think
that invoking it and knocking down laws or portions of them should be reserved
for appropriate and really serious occasions.
The court
continued:
… it is not
desirable to reach a situation where we have "ambulance courts" which
go round looking for situations where we can invalidate statutes.
It is
evident that the appeal under reference could have been disposed of on the
ground that the trial was a nullity without going into the constitutionality of
s. 41. It is indeed curious that a trial which was adjudged a nullity could
still provide the basis for striking down s. 41. On these grounds and others, I
was unable to benefit from the decision of my learned brother.
The fifth
issue takes us back to the amendments to the Constitution and elsewhere which
make membership of and sponsorship by a political party mandatory for a person
to contest presidential, parliamentary or local authority elections. I hold
that the amendments was constitutionally valid but I reserved my position on
their practical implication until this stage. It is essential for the purpose
of the present exercise, and for case of reference, to set out side by side the
provisions of Art. 21 (1), Art. 20 (4) and Art. 39 (c), the last mentioned
being representative of allied amendments elsewhere. Art. 21 (1) reads as
follows:
(1) Every
citizen of the United Republic is entitled to take part in the government of
the country, either directly or throooough freely chosen representativrd, in
accordance with procedure provided by or under the law.
Art. 20 (4)
states (my translation):
(4) Without
prejudice to the relevant laws, no person shall be compelled to belong to any
party or organisation, or for any political party to be refused registration by
reason only of its ideology or philosophy.
And Art.
39(c) states (my translation):
39. No
person shall be eligible for election to the office of President of the United
Republic unless he -
(a) …; (b) …;
(c) is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
(a) …; (b) …;
(c) is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
As generally
understood the citizen`s right to participate in the government of his country
implies three consideration: the right to the franchise, meaning the right to
elect his representatives: the right to represent, meaning the right to be
elected to law making bodies; and the right to be chosen to a political office.
These three rights are, in my vies, epitomised in the provisions of Art. 21(1),
subject, of course, to the qualifications which expediency may dictate for the
exercise of these rights, e.g. literacy and age. But while accepting the
relevancy of such qualifications it has to be admitted in the first place that
the concept of basic human rights has utilitarian aspect to it: to whom are
these rights to be useful? Harold Laski (A Grammar of Politics, 1967: 92)
responds thus:
There is
only one possible answer. In any State the demands of each citizen for the
fulfilment of his best self must be taken as of equal worth; and the utility of
a right is therefore its value to all the members of the State. The rights, for
instance, of freedom of speach does not mean for those in authority, or for
members of some church or class. Freedom of speech is a right either equally
applicable to all citizens without distinction or not applicable at all.
These
remarks are no more applicable in political philosophy than they are in human
rights jurisprudence. The matter is brought into focus if we substitute the
right to participate in the government of one`s country for the freedom of
speech. The proposition would then be that the right to participate in the
government of one`s country is not reserved for those in authority, or for
members of some special class or groups, but it is a right either equally
applicable to all citizens without distinction or not applicable at all. This
utilitarian factor is writ large in Art. 21 (1) for it speaks of "every
citizen" being entitled to participate in the government of his country.
It could easily have said "Every member of a political party…," but
it did not, and this could not have been without cause. It will be recalled,
indeed, that the provision existed in its present terms ever since the
one-party era. At that time all political activity had to be conducted under
the auspices and control of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi, and it could have been
argued that this left no room for independent candidates. It is certainly this
notion which was at the base of Mr. Mussa`s submission to the effect that the
amendments did not take away the right for independent candidates for such
right never existed before. The argument is no doubt attractive, but, at least
with effect from July 1, 1992, Art. 21 (1) has to be read in a multi-party and
non- party context. That is what I can gather from Art. 20 (4) - previously
Art. 20 (2) - which was deliberately rephrased to accomodate [sic] both
situations. It is illogical for a law to provide that no person shall be
compelled to belong to a political party and in the same breath to provide that
no person shall run for office except through a political party. If it were the
intention of the Legislature to exclude non-party citizens from participating
in the government of their country, it could easily have done so vide the same
Eighth Constitutional Amendment Act by removing the generality in Art. 21 (1).
The
position, as I see it, is now this: By virtue of Art. 21 (1) every citizen is
entitled to participate in the government of the country, and by virtue of the
provisions of Art. 20 (4) such citizen does not have to be a member of any
polical party; yet by virtue of Art. 39(c) and others to that effect, no citizen
can run for office unless he is a member of and sponsored by a political party.
This is intriguing, I am aware that the exercise of the right under Art. 21(1)
has to be "in accordance with procedure provided by or under the
law," but I think that while participation through a political party is a
procedure, the exercise of the right of participation through a political party
only is not a procedure but an issue of substance. The message is: either you
belong to a political party or you have no right to participate. There is
additionally the dimension of free elections alluded to in Art. 21(). A citizen
may participate in the government "either directly or through freely
chosen representatives." It is contrary to every notion of free elections
if non-party citizens are compelled to vote for party candidates. In the midst
of this unusual dilemma I had to turn to the canons of statutory and
constitutional interpretation.
When the
framers of the Constitution declared the fundamental rights in Part III of Chapter
One thereof, they did not do so in vain, it must have been with the intention
that these rights should be exercisable. It is therefore established that the
provisions of the Constitution should always be given a generous and purposive
construction. In A.G. of Gambia v. Jobe(1985) LRC (Const) 556, 565, Lord
Diplock said:
A
constitution and in particular that part of it which protects and entrenches
fundamental rights and freedoms to which all persons in the State are to be
entitled, is to be given a generous and purposive construction.
This echoes
what was said earlier in British Coal Corporation v. The King (1935) AC 500,
518, to the effect that in interpreting a constitutent [sic] or organic status
the construction most beneficial to widest possible amplitude of its power must
be adopted. And not much later, in James v. Commonwealth of Australia (1935) AC
578, 614 Lord Wright, M.R. said:
It is true
that a Constitution must not be construed in any narrow and pedantic sense. The
words used are necessarily general, and their full import and true meaning can
often be appreciated when considered, as the years go on, in relative to the
vicissitudes of fast that from time to time emerge. It is not that the meaning
of the word changes, but the changing circumstances illustrate and illuminate
the full import of the meaning.
This
approach is directed principally at resolving difficulties which may be
inherent in a single provision. The strategy, according to these authorities,
is to approach the provision generously and liberally particularly where it
enacts a fundamental right. The case before me takes us a stage further. What
happens when a provision of the constitution enacting a fundamental right
appears to be in conflict with another provision in the Constitution? In that
case the principle of harmonisation has to be called in aid. The principle
holds that the entire Constitution has to be read as an integrated whole, and
no one particular provision destryoying [sic] the other but each sustaining the
other; see Muhammad Nawaz Sharif (above), p. 601. If the balancing act should
succeed, the Court is enjoined to give effect to all the contending provisions.
Otherwise, the court is enjoined to incline to the realisation of the
fundamental rights and may for that purpose disregard even the clear words of a
provision if their application would result in gross injustice. CHITALEY, p.
716, renders the position thus:
… it must be
remembered that the operation of any fundamental right may be excluded by any
other Article of the constitution or may be subject to an exception laid down
in some other Article. In such cases it is the duty of the Court to construe
the different Articles in the Constitution in such a way as to harmonise them
and try to give effect to all the Articles as far as possible, one of the
conflicting Articles will have to yield to the other.
These
propositions are by no means novel but are well known in common law
jurisdictions. They rest, above all, on the realisation that it is the
fundamental rights which are fundamental and not the restrictions. In the case
of Sture s.v. Crowninshield (1819) 4 Law Ed. 529, 550, Chief Justice Marshall
of the Supreme Court of the United States said:
Although the
spirit of an instrument, especially a Constitution, is to be respected not the
less than its letter, yet the spirit is to be collected chiefly form its words.
It would be dangerous in the extreme to infer from extrinsiz (sic)
circumstances that a case for for which the words of n instrument expressly
provide shall [its operation?]. Where words conflict with each other, where the
different clauses of an instrument bear upon each other and would be
inconsistent unless the natural and common words be varied, construction
becomes necessary, and a departure from the obvious meaning of words is
justifiable. But if in any case the plain meaning of a provision, not
contradicted by any other provision in the same instrument is to be
disregarded, because we believe the framers of that instrument could not intend
what they say, it must be one in which the absurdity and injustice of applying
the provision to the case would be so monstrous that all mankind would, without
hesitation, unite in rejecting the application.
In the
instant petition, the following factors emerge. First, Art. 39(c) and allied
amendments are restrictions on the exercise of a fundamental right and not
fundamental in themselves. It is the fundamental rights, but not their
restrictions, that this Court is enjoined to guard jealously. Secondly, the
scheme of our Constitution contemplates the full excercise [sic] of the
fundamental rights enacted therein save as they may be limited in terms of the
provisions of Art. 30(2) and Art. 31(1). Although the amendments pass the test
of validity by virtue of the very wide definition of "alteration" in
Art. 98(2), it is only tenuously that they come within the ambit of Art. 30(2).
Thirdly, the literal application of the amendments could lead to monstrous and
nationally injurious results. It is believed that there are between three and
four million people in this country who subscribe to some political party,
leaving well over twenty millions a free decision in the government of their
country is unjust, monstrous and potentially calamitous. Fourth, it must be
said that any talk of "parties" at this juncture in the country`s
history cannot be serious. Apart from Chama cha Mapuaduzi whose presence is all
pervasive, the rest exist more in name than in practice. The amendments are
therefore capable of being abused to con i e the right of governing into the
hands of members of a class and to render illusory the emergence of a truly
democratic society. I do not wish to believe that that was the intention of the
Legislature. Finally, Art. 21(1) can in fact operate alongside Art. 39 and
allied amendments, without the latter`s exclusionary properties, there being
nothing strange in having party and independent candidates in any election.
For
everything I have endeavoured to state and notwithstanding the exclusionary
elements to that effect in Articles 39, 67 and 77 of the Constitution as well
as s. 39 of the Local Authorities (Elections) Act, 1979, I declare and direct
that it shall be lawful for independent candidates, along with candidates
sponsored by political parties, to contest presidential, parliamentary and
local council elections. This will not apply to the council elections due in a
few days.
We now come
to the sixth and final issue. A declaration is sought to the effect that it
unconstitutional for the President to appoint Zanzibaris to head non-union
ministries and departments on the Mainland. This matter invites a bit of the
union`s history. When Tanganyika and Zanzibar united in 1964 the Constitution
of the former was adopted as the interim Constitution of the United Republic,
modified as to provide for a separate government for Zanzibar in matters other
than those reserved to the union Government. At the same time the Government of
Tanganyika was abolished. The union operated under interim constitutions until
the promulgation of the 1977 Constitution.
Article 4(3)
of the Constitution provides for the division of governmental functions on the
basis of union and non-union matters. Authority in respect of all union matters
as well as non- union matters in and for the Mainland is vested in the Union
Government by Art. 34(1). Likewise all executive power of the United Republic
with respect to union matters and with respect to non-union matters in and for
the Mainland is vested in the President. He may exercise that power either directly
or through delegation to other persons holding office in the services of the
United Republic. The President is also empowered to constitute and abolish
offices and, pursuant to the provisions of Art. 36(2), he has power to appoint
persons to offices in the public services of the United Republic subject to the
other provisions of the Constitution. In the exercise of the functions of his
office the President has unfettered discretion apart from complying with the
provisions of the Constitution and the law. Article 55(1) additionally empowers
the President to appoint Ministers who "shall be responsible for such
offices as the President may from time to time . . . establish." He also
has power to appoint Regional Commissioners for regions in the Mainland. Zanzibar
retains its internal autonomy in respect of non-union matters falling on that
side.
It was
argued by Mr. Mbezi that the structure of the Constitution points to a dual
role for the Union Government, i.e. as a Government responsible for Union
Matters and as a Government responsible for non-Union Matters for and in the
Mainland. He also submitted that the division of union from non-union matters
could not have been done without a purpose. In his view non- union matters on
the Mainland have to be run by Mainlanders, and the fact that they are
constitutionally placed under the Union Government does not amount to their
unionisation. He therefore thinks that the appointment of Zanzibaris to run
these matters offends Art. 4(3). Mr. Mussa responded by pointing out that no
provision in the Constitution compelled the President not to appoint Zanzibaris
to such positions and that it would actually be discriminatory if he did not do
so. In his view the exercise of the power of appointment was a matter of policy
but not one founded on the Constitution.
The issue of
Zanzibaris in "Mainland" ministries is presently a matter of
considerable interest, and seems to derive more drive from the polarised
political situation which culminated in the ill-fated parliamentary notion for
a government of Tanganyika. But sentiments apart, one would certainly wish to
know the juridicial [sic] position of non-union matters in and for the
Mainland. The dualism factor asserted by Mr. Mbezi was recognised and
articulated by the Court of Appeal in Haji v. Nungu & Aner. (1907) LRC
(Const) 224 where Chief Justice Nyalali further stated (at p. 231) that in the
basic structure of the Constitution there are "matters which concern
exclusively that area which before the Union constituted what was then known as
Tanganyika…" He went on to say that "These matters under the scheme
of the Constitution fall under the exclusive domain of the Government of the
United Republic. The Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar has no jurisdiction
over these matters." Of course that case was concerned with a different
matter - the jurisdiction of the High Court of the United Republic in election
petitions - yet, even with that reference to the exclusive domain of the
Government of the United Republic over Tanganyika matters, I cannot read a
suggestion of the unionisation of those matters. There are various types of
constitutions which are classified as federal and ours could carry that
appellation in the absence of a standard or ideal type of a federal
constitution. It is not uncommon for such constitutions to enumerate the areas
reserved to the federated states, leaving the rest to the federal or central
government. The Founders of our Union could easily have done that. They could
have enumerated the spheres in which the Zanzibar Government would exercise
power and leave the rest to the Union Government. In that case the philosophy
of changu, changu; chako, chetu (mine is mine; yours is ours) would have made
considerable sense, for everything in and for the Mainland would have then been
a union matter. But that was carefully avoided. Instead the Constitution
enumerates union matters only and expressly declares the rest to be non-union;
and this is so, according to Art. 4(3), "For the purpose of the more
efficient discharge of public affairs… and for the effective division of
functions in relation to those affairs…" I think, with respect, there is
reason to insist on the significance of the division. It is occurs to me, that
the fact of the non-union matters in the Mainland could have the effect of
blurring that division.
That said,
however, it is difficult to draw the inference of unconstitutionality, which
the Court was called upon to draw, in relation to those appointments. The
provisions to which I have referred, notably Art. 36(2) and Art. 55(1), do not
limit the President in his choice of officers or Ministers or in their
disposition. The furthest we can go is to fall back to the words "subject
to the other provisions of this Constitution" in Art. 36 (2) and this
would lead to the division of union and non-union matter in Art. 4(3). It can
then be suggested that to keep the division effective there is an implied
invitation to keep Tanganyika matters Tanganyikan. A breach of the
Constitution, however, is such a grave and serious affair that it cannot be
arrived t by mere inferences, however attractive, and I apprehend that this
would require proof beyond reasonable doubt. I have therefore not found myself
in a position to make the declaration sought and I desist from doing so.

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