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Statement on the Supreme Court ruling in the Daily News case
Crisis in Zimbabwe
Coalition
September 22, 2003
The Daily News refused to register under
the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act. It declined to
register strongly believing that to register would be to submit itself
to a system of repressive state controls that would violate its fundamental
right to freedom of expression and would drastically curtail its ability
to inform the public. It therefore sought to bring a constitutional challenge
in the Supreme Court. The basis of this challenge was that the system
of state control over newspapers is unconstitutional as it violates its
right to freedom of expression enshrined in the constitution.
The Supreme Court refused to entertain this
challenge. It held that a law remains valid until a court of law rules
that it is invalid and therefore a person wishing to challenge the validity
of a law must first comply and afterwards argue in court about its validity.
The newspaper could not approach the court for a constitutional ruling
whilst it was in breach of the law it was challenging. The court could
not condone its open defiance of that law. Before it would be heard it
must first stop violating that law either by registering under the Act
or ceasing to publish the newspaper until the constitutional challenge
had been decided.
We believe that this decision amounts to an
abrogation by the Supreme Court of its duty to protect and uphold the
fundamental rights of the people of Zimbabwe.
Section 3 of the Constitution provides that
the Constitution is the supreme law of Zimbabwe and any law that is inconsistent
with the Constitution is invalid and void. The Constitution has a series
of provisions declaring the fundamental rights of the people. These are
vitally important rights and an Act of Parliament will be invalid if it
contains provisions that breach these fundamental rights. The primary
responsibility for deciding whether provisions are void on this basis
rests with the Supreme Court. This court will decide this when constitutional
challenges are brought before them.
In cases where the constitutionality of laws
is challenged, it is important that the Supreme Court gives it’s ruling
as soon as possible so that the position can be clarified. If the law
is indeed void, or portions of it are void, people should not be obliged
to abide by such a law. If it is found to be constitutional, then everyone
will be expected to abide by that law.
The Daily News did not simply defy the
law and refuse to obey it. It sought a ruling from the Supreme Court about
the constitutionality of that law and would obviously have been bound
by the ruling.
It is unfair and unjust to require compliance
with a law as a precondition for a constitutional ruling on that law.
If a person believes that a law obliges him or her to take action or imposes
conditions that will seriously violate his or her fundamental rights,
that person should be entitled to a ruling by the court about this without
first complying with the law. A person may suffer grave prejudice by having
to comply with a law that the constitutional court later rules to be in
flagrant violation of constitutional rights. Some examples will illustrate
this. Take a law passed obliging a senior public official to resign immediately
without a hearing to determine whether there are any good grounds for
his forced removal and taking away all his pension entitlements. The official
would have to resign first before he would be entitled to challenge the
constitutional validity of the law. Take also a law that orders a newspaper
to close immediately and to hand over its equipment to the state without
the law giving any reasons why the paper should be closed down. Again
the newspaper would have to close and hand over its equipment before it
could mount a constitutional challenge. Similarly in the Daily News
the newspaper would have had to subject itself to a system of state control
that it thought violated its rights, before it could challenge that law.
Alternatively, it would have had to stop publishing the newspaper thereby
sustaining financial prejudice.
It is established law that a person who is
prosecuted for failing to comply with a criminal provision can challenge
the constitutionality of that law and the Supreme Court will be obliged
to make a ruling on its constitutionality. The fact that he has breached
the law will not mean that he forfeits his right to a constitutional ruling.
Surely a person who does not wait to be prosecuted and instead approaches
the Supreme Court for a ruling on its constitutionality should not be
in a worse position than the person who is being prosecuted for breach
of the law.
We therefore believe that the ruling in the
Daily News case was wrong.
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Zimbabwe Coalition fact
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