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It has
taken thirty years since these words for the laws of criminal
and seditious libel not only to be reviewed and reformed, but to
be repealed altogether.
For, though the Constitution of the Fourth Republic guaranteed
freedom of expression, including freedom of the press and other
media as a fundamental human right, and made elaborate
provisions for the freedom and independence of the media, the
existing laws, which were continued in force by the same
Constitution, contained colonial laws on our statute books that
were manifestly anti-libertarian and repressive of free
expression. To the extent that they were not repealed or
pronounced unconstitutional, the criminal and seditious libel
laws in the Criminal Code could become the hunting grounds for
any attempt to hold in check a critical and irreverent press and
to perpetuate a culture of silence with which the antecedent
military regime of the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC)
had long been associated with.
So it was that, when the people of Ghana won the battle for the
restoration of their civil and political liberties and gave
birth to the democratic, Fourth Republican Constitution, the
government of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) (which was
the metamorphosis of the Provisional National Defence Council)
was confronted with a radically changed constitutional and legal
framework, which did not permit the use of the more blunt and
primitive legal means of holding in check robust and critical
media.
It was in this changed climate that the government of the day
found ready use for the colonial criminal libel and seditious
libel laws still on our statute books. These laws were
forcefully deployed by the NDC government in an attempt to
silence an emerging recalcitrant and robust press. In response,
democratic forces rallied to challenge the constitutional
validity of these colonial laws in the light of the provisions
of the Constitution guaranteeing freedom of expression and the
freedom and independence of the mass media. Regrettably, these
constitutional challenges to the validity of the offences of
criminal libel and seditious libel were dismissed by our Supreme
Court, which held that they were neither in contravention of the
provisions of the Constitution nor inconsistent with them. In
Nigeria, however, the Court of Appeal (Enugu Division), in the
case of Nwankwo v. The State, was able to assert its position as
a court of an independent people with a Constitution and to
strike down the offence of sedition in section 5 (1) of the
Criminal Code Law (Cap. 30) of Eastern Nigeria. The Court
acquitted the two accused of two counts of sedition on the
grounds that the offence was inconsistent with the fundamental
right to freedom of expression guaranteed under the Nigerian
Constitution. Olatawura JCA observed in these refreshing words:
“It is my view that the law of sedition which has derogated from
the freedom of speech guaranteed under this Constitution is
inconsistent with the 1979 Constitution more so when this cannot
lead to public disorder as envisaged under section 4(i) (a) of
the 1979 Constitution. We are no longer the illiterates or mob
society our colonial master had in mind when the law was
promulgated. To retain S. 5 (1) of the Criminal Code in its
present form, that is even if not inconsistent with the freedom
of expression guaranteed by the Constitution will be a deadly
weapon and to be used at will by a corrupt government or a
tyrant. I hereby express my doubt about its retention in our
Criminal Code more so, as said earlier, there is adequate
provision in the same Criminal Code for criminal libel. Let us
not diminish from the freedom gained from our colonial masters
by resorting to laws enacted to suit their purpose”
Such judicial activism was not to be found in Ghana. The only
alternative for democratic forces, therefore, was political
action and mobilisation for the repeal of these anti-libertarian
laws. But the ruling government was adamant. As its Attorney
General had occasion to state publicly on more than one
occasion, these laws would be repealed over his dead body.
Mercifully for him, the repeal occurred without his involvement
and he is still very much alive!
By the end of the 1990s, these laws had come to symbolise
authoritarian, anti-democratic and anti-media impulses within
our body politic. There was a general consensus, outside the
ruling government and party, that these laws were not worthy of
an independent people who had long wrestled their freedom from
colonial oppression. The demand for their repeal was
consistently articulated by the media and broad sections of
civil society.
The opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP), as part of its
electoral platform for the 2000 general elections, promised to
repeal these laws when voted into power. It was, thus, only a
matter of time when the new government of the NPP assumed power
for the laws to be repealed in 2001. The laws were an affront to
our people’s sense of liberty and constituted a powerful
instrument in the hands of the previous government, which had
been in office from the inception of the Fourth Republic in
January 1993 till its electoral defeat in December 2000, to
repress political expression. I hope I can be forgiven for
saying that, as the unsuccessful advocate in the cases before
the Supreme Court which had rejected the challenges to the
constitutional validity of these laws, it was with some pleasure
that, as Attorney General, I led the process for their repeal in
Parliament. That was clearly a more effective submission than
any I made before the Court!
The rationale for the repeal was fully stated in the following
terms in the Memorandum to the Bill, which I placed before
Parliament: “The time has come to repeal these laws and expand
the boundaries of freedom in the State. Designed to frustrate
our freedom and perpetuate our servitude, these laws should have
been repealed at independence. Unfortunately, they were
maintained and, in some cases, actually extended, especially
during the period of the one-party-state of the First Republic,
and have up to date remained on the statute books, even
throughout the short-lived existence of the multi-party states
of the Second and Third Republics. The dangers implicit in the
retention of these laws for an open, free society are now plain
for all to see. The laws are unworthy of a society seeking to
develop on democratic principles, on the basis of transparency
and accountability in public life. Government is confident that
the good sense of the Ghanaian people will ensure that the
expanded space created for expression and the media with the
repeal of these laws will be used for the development of a
healthy, free, open and progressive society operating in
accordance with the rule of law and respect for human rights. It
is time to chart a new course.” The Bill was passed without a
single dissenting vote.
The repeal of these laws has had a very positive impact on the
development of the Ghanaian mass media, freeing them from
unnecessary self-censorship and promoting a robust and critical
media. In the process, it has contributed to the growth of a
vibrant and critical media that has won Ghana the reputation of
having one of the most media friendly and liberal climates on
the continent and has contributed significantly to the deepening
of democracy in our country and enhancing public accountability
as a strategic goal of public policy. This is not to say that
there are no excesses and acts of unprofessional conduct by the
media in Ghana. Media excesses and, at times, gross professional
misconduct there are, and some of them cannot be justified under
any circumstance. These have partly given a bad name to sections
of our media and provided the ready ammunition to authoritarian
and anti-democratic forces to initiate a rear-guard action for
the reintroduction of the criminal and seditious libel laws. The
parlous justification proffered has been that the repeal of
these laws has made the Ghanaian media and journalists reckless
and unprofessional in their work, thereby damaging the good name
and reputation of public figures and endangering society as a
whole. Even as one of the public figures most vilified in
sections of the Ghanaian media, and one who ironically was a
principal actor in the repeal of these laws, I continue to
insist that their repeal was necessary in the public interest in
our emerging democracy.
Fortunately, the good sense of Ghanaians and their love of
liberty have ensured that these demands have not found fertile
grounds for growth in the political space. Rather, there is
general recognition of the need for training, critical
engagement by society with our media, self-regulation and
insistence on media ethics and journalistic standards by media
houses, journalists and their organizations as part of the
process of building a culture of high journalistic standards and
professionalism in the Ghanaian media. This has largely been
accepted as the means of addressing the current shortcomings and
ills of our mass media.
Despite the repeal of these laws, however, media freedom is
threatened by some of the arcane laws still on our statute
books. This has become particularly apparent since the
government of the National Democratic Congress once more assumed
office in January 2009 after winning the 2008 general elections.
Bereft of the convenient tools of criminal and seditious libel
laws, the ruling government has had to comb through the Criminal
Code and to seize upon the offence of offensive conduct
conducive to breaches of the peace and the sister offence of
publishing false news likely to cause fear and alarm to the
public.
The first is, in truth, a breach of the peace offence and
ordinarily has nothing to do with media freedom and the work of
journalists. Desperate to keep in check a robust media, the
police first seized on this offence to invade a radio station to
arrest a panel member who had made certain unsubstantiated
allegations against the former President of the Republic, His
Excellency Jerry John Rawlings, regarding a fire that gutted to
ashes his official residence. A mob of youthful supporters of
the ruling NDC party was quickly mobilised to lay siege to the
radio station, threatening to attack it. Instead of the police
arresting them for unlawful assembly and conduct conducive to
breach of the peace, they rather arrested the radio panelist.
There was public outcry to this abuse of an otherwise apparently
legitimate offence on our statute books. The police,
shame-faced, responded by changing tack: they had taken the
panelist to the police station for his own protection. The
charges were never pursued.
Sensing that the offence of conduct likely to cause a breach of
the peace could not easily be harnessed to the prosecution of
journalists and media practitioners for what they say and write,
the police next turned to the offence of publishing false news
likely to cause fear and alarm to the public or to disturb the
public peace. This law has been deployed in some two instances.
One involved a commentator on a morning newspaper review
programme, who was arrested on suspicion of having committed the
offence of publishing false news likely to cause fear and panic.
Again, the outcry that greeted the arrest and the ridicule of
the conduct of the police, together with the intervention of the
Ghana Journalists Association, led to the release of the
journalist and eventually the dropping of charges against him.
The other case involved an allegation made by a young woman in a
radio phone-in that she was on board a bus travelling from Accra
to Tamale in the Northern Region of Ghana, when the bus was
waylaid by armed robbers who forced the passengers to have sex
with one another. She was arrested and charged under the offence
of publishing false news likely to cause fear and panic to the
public. The matter is currently sub judice.
Quite apart from the highly selective manner in which the false
news law has been applied to date, there is first, the question
of its abuse and use in cases where it should not apply. The
more fundamental question, however, relates to the
constitutional validity of the law, given the overly broad and
sweeping terms in which it is couched. It may very well be
legitimate to have a law that criminalises the deliberate
publication of false news likely to lead to personal injury
associated with the fear and alarm the false news causes. But,
then, there ought to be a direct causal link between the false
news and the injury sustained. The manifest example is the
typical case of a mischief maker who cries fire in a packed
cinema hall, when it is obvious that this will lead to a
stampede in which persons are likely to suffer injury, including
in extreme cases death. The problem with our current false news
law is that it is more directed at mere expression and the state
of mind, namely fear and alarm, which in the best of worlds is
difficult to determine. As the offence of publishing false news,
therefore, currently stands, it is, in my view, inconsistent
with the constitutional provisions on free expression, being
overly broad and accordingly not proportionate to the legitimate
public interest sought to be protected. The offence, therefore,
requires substantial review to ensure that it is narrowly
tailored to meet the protection of the legitimate public
interest sought to be protected.
But the threat to free expression and media freedom does not lie
only in laws of colonial origin still to be found in our
Criminal Code. There are provisions in a fairly recent
Defamation Bill of the late 2000s and which is being currently
resurrected that give considerable cause for concern. Its
ostensible purpose is to codify common law principles of the law
of defamation. The fundamental problem with the Bill, however,
is that it is not informed by the far-reaching constitutional
provisions guaranteeing freedom of expression. Rather in many
respects, the provisions of the Bill fall far short of even
those common law principles of defamation in their protection of
free expression and, in one instance, regress to medieval times
of the English Star Chamber by criminalisation of “blasphemous
publication”! Again, even judges under the Bill may be sued in
respect of what they say in the course of judicial proceedings
if their statements contain “distortions of fact” or are
actuated by “malice”. This provision stands in stark
contradiction of Article 127 of the Constitution which
prescribes the independence of the judiciary and provides that
judges “shall not be liable for any action or suit for any act
or omission by them in the exercise of judicial power”.
It appears that the Defamation Bill was crafted largely as a
response to the repeal of the much discredited criminal and
seditious libel laws. It has been described as a means of
re-introducing, through the backdoor of civil defamation, some
of the egregious provisions of these laws that criminalised free
speech and which were repealed in 2001. Indeed, the first draft
of the Bill specifically indicated that one of its cardinal
purposes was to fill the void left by the repeal of the criminal
and seditious libel laws. The wording of some of the provisions
is an exact reproduction of the erstwhile section 185 of the
Criminal Code, which created the offence of seditious libel.
Under the Bill, government through the Attorney General may
institute civil defamation suit against third parties to
vindicate “the reputation of the people of Ghana (!)”. Even
English common law defamation principles, which are not
particularly distinguished by their libertarian ethos, do not
permit a public or governmental authority or body to sue a
citizen for defamation. That would be to stand the whole system
of representative democracy (in which the people are sovereign
and government servant and agent) on its head. In the
circumstance, democratic forces still have their work cut out
for them in so far as the review of the Defamation Bill is
concerned.
This short review of the history of criminal libel and seditious
libel laws in Ghana from colonial times to date, their active
use in an attempt to silence the rising tide of nationalist
consciousness and anti-colonial agitation and their expression
through the press of the time, and their more recent, cynical
use to throttle democratic and free expression under the
Constitution of the Fourth Republic demonstrate the
authoritarian, anti-democratic and repressive nature of these
laws. Their repeal in 2001 marked an important watershed in our
people’s struggle for freedom and justice and the preservation
of their ancient rights and privileges. But developments since
the repeal demonstrate that the struggle for liberty is
permanent and requires constant vigilance if the gains of past
struggles are not to be rolled back. I am confident that the
people of Ghana will defend the right to free expression to the
very end because of their determination to build a free, open
society with accountable governance. That confidence is further
reinforced by the fact that Ghana continues to produce intrepid
media practitioners such as the late Tommy Thompson, Eben
Quarcoo, Kabral Blay Amihere, Kofi Coomson, Haruna Atta, Kweku
Baako, Kwesi Pratt, Gina Blay, Gabby Otchere Darko, Egbert
Faible Jnr, Ken Kuranchie and Anas Aremyaw Anas, who have
demonstrated fearless commitment to media freedom, no matter the
cost.
There are some who want to claim that the popular desire for
democracy is providing a pretext for the recolonisation of the
continent by foreign powers. Nothing could be further from the
truth. The surest recipe for the intervention of foreign powers
in African matters in a globalised world is poor governance,
which leads to grave crises and breakdowns and about which
African organisations, national, regional and continental,
appear helpless to address or resolve. Our generation of
Africans has to be the generation that refuses to be either
victim or pawn, and accepts to travel down the path of genuine
popular empowerment, which represents the strongest guarantee of
our independence and sovereignty. Freedom of expression and
media freedom are critical elements of that journey, which we
must guard jealously at all times.
Once again, I thank the co-organisers- the Institute of
Comparative and International Law of the University of Pretoria
and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung- for this opportunity, and wish
the new Institute the best of luck in its work.
Nana Akufo-Addo
Pretoria, 4th August, 2011
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