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Interception of Communications Bill - Index of articles
Supreme
Court bars Mugabe e-mail snooping
From The Daily Mirror
March
16, 2004
THE Supreme
Court, sitting as a full bench, declared last week as unconstitutional
legal provisions that gives the president powers to eavesdrop, including
the powers to intercept mail, telephone conversations and other
such electronic telecommunications devices.
The superior
court upheld contentions by the Law Society of Zimbabwe (LSZ), a
grouping of lawyers who had filed the constitutional application
arguing that the presidential powers provided for by the Posts and
Telecommunication (PTC) Act violated section 20 of the Constitution.
The lawyers
were challenging section 98 and 103 of the PTC Act, which gives
president powers to intercept mail, telephones, e-mail and any other
form of communication. The Act also gave powers to the president
to give any directions to a licensee requiring him or her to do
or not to do a particular specified action.
Section 20 of
the Constitution provides for freedom of expression, freedom to
receive and impart ideas and freedom from interference from one's
correspondences.
LSZ's lawyer,
Advocate Adrian de Bourbon had argued that the PTC Act allowed the
president to act in his opinion in the interest of "national security"
and "in the maintenance of law and order" and need only to consult
his Minister, whose views he is not obliged to take into account.
"In effect,
the legislation gives to the President an unfettered ability to
intercept mail and communications with absolutely no safeguard whatsoever
to protect the innocent," said De Bourbon. "The absence of any restrictions
and in particular the absence of any judicial determination points
beyond doubt to the over-breathe of the power given to the president.
There is no arbiter as to whether a matter is subject to national
security other than the subjective view of the president."
It was also
submitted that the norm was so imprecise that no person could regulate
his conduct to avoid running the risk that the president would subjectively
form the opinion that mail or other communication from that person
should be intercepted in the interest of national security.
The lawyers
submitted that the provisions under challenge interfered with the
lawyer-client privilege, which would put at risk the privilege of
such communication.
They said they
feared that legal practitioners could prejudice their clients and
betray confidence if they used the postal system and yet the legal
practitioner-client privilege was fundamental in the proper administration
of justice.
In response,
Yvonne Dondo of the Attorney General's Office submitted that while
it was conceded that the provisions interfered with one's enjoyment
of the freedom of expression, it was a permissible derogation.
She submitted
that the Constitution authorised derogation of freedom of expression
in the interest of defence, public safety, public health, economic
interest, public morality and public health.
She said the
test for constitutionality of permissible derogation in terms of
section 20 of the Constitution was whether they were reasonably
justifiable in a democratic society.
Dondo had drawn
the court to observations once made by the court with regard to
what was reasonably justifiable in a democratic society, where the
court had this to say:
"What is reasonably
justifiable is an elusive concept. It is one that defies precise
definition by the courts. There is no legal yardstick save for the
quality of reasonableness of the provision under attack is to be
adjudged on whether it arbitrarily or excessively invades the enjoyment
of the guaranteed rights according to the standards of a society
that has proper respect for rights and freedoms of the individual."
Dondo submitted
that the present case passed the test set out above. "The legislative
objective to allow the president to intercept mail or give directions
to licensee in terms of the Act is to ensure that national security
is preserved," she said.
"Maintenance
or preservation of national security is sufficiently important to
justify limiting a fundamental right."
The case was
heard before Chief Justice, Godfrey Chidyausiku, Vernanda Ziyambi,
Misheck Cheda, Luke Malaba and Elizabeth Gwaunza.
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