v.
ARIYA RUBASINGHE, COMPETENT AUTHORITY AND OTHERS
SUPREME COURT
AMERASINGHE, J.
WADUGODAPITIYA, J.
AND
WEERASEKERA, J.
S. C. APPLICATION
No. 994/99
25TH
FEBRUARY AND
Fundamental Rights Emergency (Prohibition
on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive Military Information) Regulation
No. 1 of 1998 as amended Articles 1,12(1), 14(1)(a) and 15(7) of the
Constitution Public Security Ordinance, section 5 (Cap. 40) Pre
censorship.
The Emergency
(Prohibition on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive Military Information)
Regulation No. 1 of 1998 published in Gazette Extraordinary No. 1030/28 of 5th
June 1998 as amended on 6th June 1999 prohibited the publication,
inter alia, of "any publication pertaining to official conduct, morale,
the performance of the Head or any member of the Armed Forces or the Police
Force or of any person authorised by the Commander in Chief of
the Armed Forces for the purpose of rendering assistance in the preservation of
national security."
The regulation
empowered the Competent Authority to prohibit the use of any press or equipment
and to seize the same where there has been a contravention of the regulation
through such media.
The said regulations
were made by the President under section 5 of the Public Security Ordinance.
(Cap. 40).
The petitioner who
was actively engaged in furthering Interracial Justice and Equality and free
and fair elections and interested in the resolution of the "ethnic
conflict and the war in the North" complained that the restriction imposed
by the aforesaid regulation deprived her of receiving information regarding the
war and the ethnic conflict in breach of her rights under Article 10 of the
Constitution, the said regulation was unwarranted, discriminatory and arbitrary
and violative of Article 12(1); and that it was overbroad and vague and
therefore not necessary in a democratic State; hence it was violative of her
rights under Article 14(1)(a) of the Constitution. The petitioner alleged that
the aim of the
impugned regulation
was to prohibit the publication of information that was embarrassing to the
Government, rather, than to protect national security.
At the hearing of
the application counsel for the petitioner did not press the alleged
infringement in respect of Article 10 of the Constitution.
Held :
1.�������� The petitioner has
failed to show that the genuine purpose or demonstrable effect of the
regulation was to protect the government from embarrassment or wrongdoing. Nor
has she shown that the protection of national security was a
"pretext".
2.�������� The impugned regulations were framed in
reasonably precise terms������� and
confined in their application to defined circumstances. As such there was no violation of the petitioner's
rights under Article 12(1)
����������� of the Constitution.
3. a����� Per
Amerasinghe, J.
"Freedom
of speech necessarily protects the right to receive information. regardless of
the social worth of such information."
��� b����� Article 15(7) of the Constitution provides that the exercise of
the rights under Article 14(1)(a) shall be subject to such restrictions as may
be prescribed by "Law" (which expression includes emergency
regulations) in the interest of, inter alia, national security.
��� c ���� The
burden of establishing restrictions imposed under Article 15(7) ������ is heavy.
Per Amerasinghe, J.
"Exceptions [to Article
14(l)(a)] must be narrowly and strictly construed for the reason that the
freedom of speech constitutes one of the essential foundations of a democratic
society, which, as we have seen, the Constitution, in no uncertain terms,
declares
�� d������ While the preservation of morale of the Armed Forces is an
important matter, yet, in a democracy, freedom of speech performs a vital role
in keeping in check persons holding public office. Hence, even if the
restriction is not expressly related to the conduct of such persons in the
North and East, the regulations must be interpreted
restrictively
to limit it to information concerning such persons in the North and East.
4.�������� A restriction on the
freedom guaranteed by Article 14(1)(a) will be unconstitutionally overbroad and
violative of Article 155(2) of the Constitution if there is no proximate or
rational nexus between the restrictions imposed and the object sought to be
achieved namely, the interest of national security. Regulations which vest
arbitrary powers of censorship in administrative officials may be struck down
as being overbroad.
Per Amerasinghe, J .
�...................��� if the court is satisfied that the
restrictions are clearly unreasonable, they cannot be regarded as being within
the intended scope of the power under Article 15(7)"
5. a����� The impugned restrictions
had a basis in law, and that as far as the�����
quality of the law was concerned, it was formulated with sufficient
precision�� to enable the petitioner to
foresee, to a degree that was reasonable in the circumstances, consequences
which a given action may entail; and even though the discretion of the Competent
Authority was wide, the scope of the discretion and the manner of its exercise
were indicated with sufficient clarity to enable the discretion to be
reviewable and to give the petitioner adequate protection against arbitrary
interference.
�� b������ The restrictions imposed were not disproportionate to the
legitimate aim of the regulations, namely the furtherance of the interest of
national security in terms of Article 15(7).
6.�������� In the circumstances,
the petitioner's fundamental rights under Article 14(1)(a) have not been
infringed.
Cases referred to
:
1.�������� Joseph Perera alias Bruten Perera v. The Attorney General and
Others, (1992) 1 Sri L. R. 199.
2.�������� Re Compulsory membership of�
journalists association, (1986) 8 E.H.R. R. 165.
3.�������� Channa Pieris and Others v. The Attorney General and Others,
(1994) 1 Sri L. R. 1.
Page 317
4.��� Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319,
327; 658 S. Ct. 149, 152; 82L.Ed.288 (1937).
5.
����� Fernando v. The S. L. B. C. and Others (1996) 1 Sri L. R. 157.
6.�������� Sumith Jayantha Dias v. Reggie Ranatunge, Deputy Minister of� ���������Transport and Others, (1999) 2 Sri L.R.8.
7.�� ����� Stanley v. State of
Georgia, 394 U. S. 557; 89 S. Ct. 1243; 22���������
L. Ed.� 2d 542 (1969).
8.��� ���� Whitney v. California, 274 U. S. 357; 47
S. Ct. 641, 71 L. Ed. 1095
������ ���� (1927).
9.
����� Handyside v. The United Kingdom, (1976) 1 E.
H. R. R. 737.
10.
����� The Sunday Times v. The United Kindgom, (1979) 2 E. H. R. R. 245.
11.
����� Barthold v. Germany, (1985) 7 E. H. R. R. 383.
12.������ Hodgson, Woolf Productions and National Union of Journalists and�������������������� ������������������������������Channel Four
Television v. United Kindgom, (1988)
10 E. H. R. R. 503.
13. ����� �App. No. 11508/85 v. Denmark, (1989) 11 E. H.
R. R. 543.
14.
����� Muller v. Switzerland, (1991) 13 E. H. R. R. 212.
15.������ The Observer and the Guardian v. United Kindgom, (1992) 14 E. H.R. R. 153.
16.������ The Sunday Times v. United Kingdom (No. 2), (1992) 14 E.
H. R. R.
����������� 229.
17.
Castells v. Spain, (1992) 14 E. H. R. R. 445.
18.
Thorgeirson v. Iceland, (1992) 14 E. H. R. R. 843.
19.������ Brind and Others v. United Kingdom, (1994) 18 E. H. R. R. C. D. 76.
20.������ Jerslid
v. Denmark, (1995) 19 E. H. R. R. 1.
21.
Otto Preminger Institute v. Austria, (1995) 19 E.
H. R. R. 34.
22.
Oberschlick v. Austria, (1995) 19 E.
H. R. R. 389.
23.������ Piermont
v. France, (1995) 20 E. H. R. R. 301.
24.������ Goodwin
v. United Kingdom, (1996)
22 E. H. R. R. 123.
25.
Adams and Benn v. United Kingdom, (1997) 23 E. H. R. R. C. D. 160.
26.
Wingrove v. United Kingdom, (1997) 24 E.
H. R. R. 1.
27.������ Visuvalingam
and Others v. Liyanage and Others (1983)
2 Sri L. R. 311.
28.
Visuvalingam and Others v. Liyanage (1984) 2 Sri L. R. 123.
29.
Ratnasara Thero v. Udugampola, (1983) 1 Sri
L. R. 461.
30.
30.������ Mohottige
and Others v. Gunatillake and Others, (1992) 2 Sri L. R.246.
31.������ Amaratunga
v. Sirimal and Others (1993) 1 Sri L.
R. 264.
32.
Deshapriya and Another v. Municipal Council,
Nuwara Eliya and Others, (1995)
1 Sri L. R. 362.
33.
Dejonge v. Oregon, 299 U. S. 353, 57 S. Ct. 255, 81 L. Ed. 278
(1937).
34.������ Marian
and Another v. Upasena, (1998)
3 Sri L. R. 177.
35.������ Gunawardena and Another v. Pathirana, O. 1. C., Police
Station, Elpitiya and Others, (1997)
1 Sri L. R. 265.
36.������ Karunathilaka
and Another v. Dayananda Dissanayake, ���������������������������������������� Commissioner
of Elections and Others, (1994)
1 Sri L. R. 157.
37.
Open Door Counselling and Dublin Well Woman v.
Ireland, (1993) 15 E. H. R. R. 244.
38.
Information sverein Lentia v. Austria, (1994) 17 E. H. R. R. 93.
39.������ Martin v. City of Struthers, 319 U. S. 141; 63 S. Ct. 862;
87 L. Ed.1313 (1943).
40.������ Winters v. New York, 333 U. S. 507; 68 S. Ct. 665; 92 L. Ed.
840(1948).
41.������ Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U. S. 479; 85 S. Ct. 1678; 14 L. Ed.2d
510 (1965).
42.������ Lamont v. Postmaster General, 381 U. S. 301; 85 S. Ct.
1493; 14�� L.
Ed. 2d. 398 (1965).
43.������ Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U. S. 510; 45 S. Ct. 571;
69 L. Ed.1070 (1925).
44.
Casado Coca v. Spain, (1994) 18 E. H. R. R. 1.
45.
Abeyratne v. Gunatilake and Others, (1994) 2 Sri
L. R. 294.
46.
Prager and Obserschlik v. Austria, (1996) 21 E.
H. R. R. 1.
47.������ Lingens
v. Austria, (1986) 8 E. H.
R. R. 407.
48.������ Worm
v. Austria, (1996) 22 E. H. R. R. C. D. 7.
49.������ McLaughlin
v. United Kingdom, (1994)
18 E. H. R. R. 84.
50.������ Vereinigung Democratischer Soldaten Osterreichs and Gubi v.
Austria, (1995) 20 E. H. R.
R. 56.
51.������ Vereniging Radio 100 et al. v. Netherlands, (1996) 22 E. H. R. R. C.D. 198.
52.������ Abrams v. United States, 250 U. S. 616; 40 S. Ct. 17; 63
L. Ed. 1173,(1919).
53.������ Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. F. C. C., 395 U. S. 376, 89
S. Ct. 1794;23 L. Ed. 2d. 371, (1961).
54.������ West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U. S.
624; 633 S.Ct. 1178; 87 L. Ed. 1173, (1943).
55.
Shantha Wijeratne v. Vijitha Perera and Others,
S. C. Application 379/93, S.
C. Minutes of 03.02.94.
56.������ Gitlow v. New York, 268 U. S. 652; 45 S. Ct. 625; 69 L. Ed. 1138,(1925).
57.������ Dissanayaka v. Sri Jayewardenapura University, (1986) 2 Sri L. R.254.
58.������ Gaskin
v. United Kingdom, (1987) 9
E. H. R. R. 279.
59.
Gaskin v. United Kingdom, (1989) 11 E. H. R. R. 402.
60.������ Leander
v. Sweden, (1987) 9 E. H. R. R. 433.
61.������ Wallen v. Sweden (1986) 8 E. H. R. R. 320.
62.������ Chaplinsky v. NewHampshire, 315, U.S. 568, (1942).
63.������ Cantwell
v. connecticut, 310 U.S.296
(1940).
64.������ Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47; S. Ct. 247; 63 L.
Ed. 470,(1919)
65.������ Mallawaarachchi v. Seneviratne, S. C. Application 212/88, S. C.Minutes of 28.09.1989.
66.������ Bernard Soysa and Two Others v. The A. G. and Two Others, (1991)
2 Sri L. R. 56.
67.
Saranapala v. Solanga Arachchi, Senior
Superintendent of Police, and Others, (1999) 2 Sri L. R. 166.
68.������ Mahinda Rajapakse v. Kudahetti and Others, (1992) 2 Sri L. R. 223.
69.������ Walker v. City of Birmingham, 388 U. S. 307; 87 S. Ct.
1824; 18 L. Ed. 2d 1210, (1967).
70.������ Markt Intern Verlag and Beeman v. Germany, (1990) 12 E. H. R.
R.161.
71.������ Dennis v. United States, 341 U. S. 495; 71 S. Ct. 857; 95
L. Ed. 1157 (1951).
72.������ New York Times Co. v. U. S., and United States v. The Washington Post
Company et al., 403 U. S. 713; 91 S. Ct. 2140, (1971).
73.
Travancore Cochin v. Bombay Co. Ltd., (152) S. C. R. 1112.
74.
Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarabagawalla, (157) S. C. R. 874.
75.������ Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. v. Union, (1959) S. C. R. 12.
76.������ Kingsley International Pictures Corporation v. Regents of the
University of New York, 360 U. S. 684; 79 S. Ct. 1362; 3 L. Ed. 2d 1512
(1959).
77.������ United States v. Carolene Products Co., 304 U. S. 144, 58 S. Ct.
778; 82 L. Ed. 1234, (1938).
78.������ Brandenberg v. Ohio, 395 U. S. 444; 89 S. Ct. 1827; 23 L.
Ed. 2d.430, (1969).
79.������ Hess v. Indiana, 414 U. S. 105; 94 S. Ct. 326; L. Ed. 303, (1973).
80.������ Frohwerk
v. United States, 249 U. S. 204 (1919).
81.������ United States v. David Paul O'Brien, 391 U. S. 367; 88 S. Ct.
1673,(1968).
82. ����� Hins and Hugenholtz v. Netherlands, (1996) 21 E. H. R. R. C. D.
124.
83.
Gay News v. United Kingdom, (1983) 5 E. H. R. R. 123.
84.
G. V. Germany, (1984) 6 E. H. R. R. 467.
85.������ Markt Intern and Beerman v. Germany, (1989) 11 E. H. R. R. 212.
86.������ Times Newspapers Ltd. and Neil v. United Kingdom, (1993) 15 E.
H.R. R. C. D.
49.
87.
Groppera Radio AG v. Switzerland, (1990) 12 E. H. R. R. 321.
88.
Arrowsmith v. United Kingdom, (1982) 3 E. H. R. R. 218.
89.������ Tolstoy Miloslavsky v. United
Kingdom, (1995) 20 E. H. R. R. 442.
90.������ Near v. Minnesota, 283 U. S. 697; 51 S. Ct. 625; 75 L. Ed.
1357,(1931).
91.
Wickremasinghe v. Edmund Jayasinghe, (1995) 1 Sri L. R. 300.
92.������ Debs
v. United States, 249 U. S. 211, (1919).
93.
Ekanayake v. HerathBanda, S. C. App. 25/91 (F. R.), S. C. Minutes of 11.10.91.
94.
Amaratunga v. Sirimal., S. C. App. 468/92, S. C. Minutes of 08.03.93.
95.������ McCray v. United States, 195 U. S. 27, 56; 24 S. Ct. 769,
776; 49�� L. Ed. 78, (1904).
96.������ State of Arizona v. State of California, 283 U. S. 423;
455; 51 S. Ct.522; 75 L. Ed., 1154, (1931).
97.
Malalgoda v. A. G. and Another, (1982) 2 Sri L. R. 777.
98.
Lingens and Leitgens v. Austria, (1982) 4 E.
H. R. R. 373.
99.������ App.
No. 12230/86 v. Germany, (1989)
11 E. H. R. R. 101.
100.����
Barfod v. Denmark, (1991) 13 E.
H. R. R. 493.
101.
Wickremabandu v. Herath and Others, (1990) 2
Sri L. R. 348.
102.
Rohr v. Switzerland, (1989) 11
E. H. R. R. 81.
103.����
Bowman v. U. K., (1996) 22 E. H.
R. R. C. D. 13.
104.����
Autronic AG v. Switzerland, (1990) 12
E. H. R. R. 485.
105.
Weber v. Switzerland (1990) 12 E.
H. R. R. 508.
106.����
Shelton v. Tucker 364 U. S. 479,
81 S. Ct. 247, (1960).
107. ��� Siriwardene
and Others v. Liyanage, (1983)
2 Sri L. R. 164.
108.
Klass and Others v. Federal Republic of
Germany, (1979 80)
2 E. H. R. R. 214.
109. ��� App.
No. 10628/83 v. Switzerland, (1987) 9 E. H. R. R. 107.
110.���� App.
No. 11508 v. Denmark, (1989) 111 E. H. R. R. 543.
111.���� Lovell v. Griffin. 303 U.
S. 444; 58 S. Ct. 666; 82 L. Ed. 949,
(1938).
112.���� Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296; S. Ct. 900; 84 L. Ed. 1213, (1940).
113.
Sata v. New York 334.U. S. 558; 68 S. Ct 1148; 92 L. Ed. 1574, (1948).
114.���� Kunz v. New York, 340 U. S. 290; 71 S. Ct. 312; 95 L. Ed. 280,� (1951).
115. ��� Yasapala
v. Wickramasinghe, (1980) 1 F. R.
D. 143.
116. ��� Vereninging Weekblad Bluf v. Netherlands, (1995) 20 E. H. R. R. 189.
APPLICATION for relief for infringement of fundamental rights.
R. K. W. Goonesekera with S. H.
Hewamanne, J. C. Weliamuna and Kishali Pinto Jayawardena for the
petitioner.
Saleem Marsoof P. C., A. S. G. with U.
Egalahewa, S. C. for the respondent
���� Cur.
adv. vult.
May 15, 2000
AMERASINGHE, J.
THE IMPUGNED EMERGENCY REGULATIONS AND THEIR PRECURSORS
On 21 September
1995, the President of Sri Lanka (hereinafter referred to as the President)
made the following regulations under section 5 of the Public Security
Ordinance.
"1.������� These Regulations may be cited as the
Emergency (Restriction on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive Military
Information) Regulations, No. 1 of 1995.
2. ������� The President may for the purpose of
these regulations, appoint, by name or by office, any person or body of persons
to be the Competent Authority.
3.�������� No Editor or Publisher of a Newspaper
or any person authorized by or under law, to establish and operate a
Broadcasting Station or Television Station shall, whether in or outside Sri
Lanka, print, publish or distribute or transmit, whether by means of electronic
devices or otherwise, or cause to be printed, published, distributed or
transmitted whether by electronic means or otherwise, any material containing
any matter which pertains to any operations carried out, or proposed to be
carried out, by the Armed Forces or the Police Force (including the Special
Task Force), the procurement or proposed procurement of arms or supplies by any
such Forces, the deployment of troops or personnel, or the deployment or use of
equipment, including aircraft or naval vessels, by any such Forces.
4.�������� Where any person prints, publishes,
distributes or transmits, or causes to be printed, published, distributed or
transmitted, whether by electronic means or otherwise, any matter in contravention
of the provisions of regulation 3, the Competent Authority may, after issuing
such directions, as he considers necessary to effect compliance with the
provisions of such regulation, make order that the press or equipment used for
such printing, publication, distribution or transmission shall, for such period
as is specified in that order not be used for the purpose of printing,
publication, distribution or transmission of any matter referred to in
regulation 3 and the Competent Authority may by the same order authorise any
person specified therein to take such steps as appears to the person so
authorised to be necessary, for preventing the printing, publication,
distribution or transmission of any such material.
5.�������� Any person who prints, publishes, distributes
or transmits, any material in contravention of the provisions of regulation 3,
shall be guilty of an offence."
On October 02,
1995, (Gazette Extraordinary No. 891
/3) the President amended the regulations made on 21 September 1995 by
adding, "any statement pertaining to the official conduct or the
performance of the Head or any member of any of the Armed Forces or the Police
Force", to the list of restricted subjects.
On December 20,
1995, the President, acting under
section 5 of the Public Security
Ordinance, rescinded the Emergency (Restriction on Publication and Transmission
of Sensitive Military Information) Regulation No. 1 of 1995, as amended by the regulation of October 2, 1995.
On 19 April
1996, the President made the
following regulations under section 5 of
the Public Security Ordinance.
Page 324
"1.������� These Regulations may be cited as the
Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive Military
Information) Regulations No. 1 of 1996.
2. ������� No Editor or Publisher of a Newspaper or
any person authorised by or under law to establish and operate a Broadcasting
Station or a Television Station shall, whether in or outside Sri Lanka, print,
publish, distribute or transmit, whether by means of electronic devices or
otherwise, or cause to be printed, published, distributed or transmitted
whether by electronic means or otherwise, any material containing any matter
which pertains to any operations carried out or proposed to be carried out, by
the Armed Forces or the Police Force (including the Special Task Force), the
procurement or proposed procurement of arms or supplies by any such Forces, the
deployment of troops or personnel, or the deployment or use of equipment,
including aircraft or naval vessels, by any such Forces, or any statement
pertaining to the official conduct or the performance of the Head or any member
of any of the Armed Forces or the Police Force.
3.�������� Where any person prints, publishes,
distributes or transmits, or causes to be printed, published, distributed or transmitted,
whether by electronic means or otherwise, any matter in contravention of the
provisions of regulation 2, the Competent Authority may, after issuing such
directions as he considers necessary to effect compliance with the provisions
of such regulation, make order that the press or equipment used for such
printing, publication, distribution or transmission shall for such period as is
specified in that order not be used for the purpose of printing, publication,
distribution or transmission of any matter referred to in regulation 2 and the
Competent Authority may by the same order authorize any person specified
therein to take such steps as appears to the person so authorized to be
necessary, for preventing the printing, publication, distribution or transmission
of any such material.
4.�������� The President may for the purpose of
these regulations, appoint, by name or by office, any person or body of persons
to be the Competent Authority.
5.�������� Any person who prints, publishes,
distributes or transmits, any material in contravention of regulation 2 shall
be guilty of an offence."
On 8 October
1996, the Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive
Military Information) Regulations No. 1 of 1996 were rescinded by a regulation
made by the President under section 5 of the Public Security Ordinance.
On 5 June 1998,
the President made the following regulations under section 5 of the Public
Security Ordinance:
"1.These
Regulations may be cited as the Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and
Transmission of Sensitive Military Information) Regulations No. 1 of 1998.
2. No Editor or
Publisher of a Newspaper or any person authorized by or under law, to establish
and operate a Broadcasting Station or a Television Station shall whether in or
outside Sri Lanka, print, publish, distribute or transmit whether by means of
electronic devices or otherwise, or cause to be printed, published, distributed
or transmitted whether by electronic means or otherwise, any material
containing any matter which pertains to any operations carried out or proposed
to be carried out, by the Armed Forces or the Police Force (including the
Special Task Force), the deployment of troops or personnel, or the deployment
or use of equipment, including aircraft or naval vessels, by any such forces,
or any statement pertaining to the official conduct or the performance of the
Head or any member of the Armed Forces or the Police Force.
3.Where any
person prints, publishes, distributes or transmits, or causes to be printed,
published, distributed or
�transmitted, whether by electronic means or
otherwise, any matter in contravention of the provisions of Regulation 2, the
Competent Authority may, after issuing such directions as he considers
necessary to effect compliance with the provisions of such regulation, make
order that the press or equipment used for such printing, publication
distribution or transmission shall for such period as is specified in that
order not be used for such printing, publication,distribution or transmission
of any matter referred to in Regulation 2 and the Competent Authority may by
the same order authorize any person specified therein to take such steps as
appears to the person so authorized to be necessary for preventing the
printing, publication, distribution or transmission of any such material.
4. The
President may for the purpose of these regulations, appoint by name or office,
any person or body of persons to be the Competent Authority.
5. Any person
who prints, publishes, distributes or transmits any material in contravention
of the provisions of Regulation 2 shall be guilty of an offence."
On 6 November
1999,the President made the following regulations, hereinafter reffered to as
the �impugned regulations�, under section 5 of the public security Ordinance;
�1. The Emergency
(Prohibition on Publication and Transmission of Sensitive Military Information)
Regulation 01 of 1998 published in Gazette
Extraordinary No. 1030/28 of 05th� June, 1998 and deemed to be in force by
virtue of Section 2A of the Public Security Ordinance, is hereby amended by the
substitution for Regulation 2 thereof, of the following new Regulation:
2. No Editor or
Publisher of a newspaper or any person authorized by or under law to establish
and operate a Broadcasting Station or a Television Station shall, except
Page 327
with the permission
of the Competent Authority, print, publish, distribute or transmit whether by
means of electronic devices or otherwise cause to be printed, published,
distributed or transmitted any material (inclusive of documents, pictorial
representations, photographs or cinematograph films) containing any matter
pertaining to military operations in the Northern and Eastern Province (sic.)
including any operation carried out or being carried out or proposed to be
carried out by the Armed Forces or by the Police Force (including the Special
Task Force), the deployment of troops or personnel or the deployment or use of
equipment including aircraft or Naval vessel by any such forces or any
statement pertaining to the official conduct, moral[e], the performance of the
Head or any member of the Armed Forces or the Police Force or of any person
authorized by the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces for the
purpose of rendering assistance in the preservation of national security."
THE PETITIONER
AND HER COMPLAINT
The petitioner
is the President of the Movement for Interracial Justice and Equality (MIRJE)
and a member of the Executive Committee of the Movement for Free and Fair
Elections (MFFE). The petitioner stated that during the Presidential election
campaign of 1999, any citizen or political party had the right to "seek,
receive and impart information on the ethnic conflict and the war and" had
"the concomitant right to seek and receive and impart information on the
military strategies and drawbacks in the conduct of the military operations in
the North arid East." The petitioner went on to state that she is "a
registered voter in the country and a public spirited citizen concerned about the
integrity of the democratic process and the people's franchise guaranteed by
Article 3 of the Constitution. As a social/ human rights activist concerned
about the ethnic conflict and the war in the North and East", she said she
had "actively taken part in debate to resolve the said conflict and hence
she is required to know the correct position with regard to the long drawn out
war between the
Armed Forces and the
LTTE", The petitioner said that her "opinion on all activities
relating to the ethnic conflict in the country in general and in relation to
the (1999 Presidential) election is based on information received by her on the
said war and hence any prior restraints on information as aforesaid is contrary
to the rights guaranteed to the petitioner under Article 10 of the
Constitution".
The petitioner
states that the amended regulation made by the President on 6 November 1999 had
"been imposed by Presidential Order in a manner that is unwarranted,
discriminatory, and arbitrary and violative of Article 12(1) of the
Constitution".
The petitioner
further states that "as a result of the said amended Regulation... she is
constrained from forming (sic.) and communicating information on matters of
public debate and which are of vital concern to the nation and which task she
had been hitherto responsibly engaged in as an Executive Director of
INFORM." Consequently, it is alleged, that the petitioner's fundamental
rights guaranteed by Article 14(1) (a) of the Constitution have been violated.
Article 10 of
the Constitution states: "Every person is entitled to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion, including the freedom to adopt a religion or belief of
his choice."
Article 12(1)
states: "All persons are equal before the law and are entitled to the
equal protection of the law."
Article 14(1)
(a) states: "Every citizen is entitled to the freedom of speech and
expression including publication."
On the face of
it, the impugned regulations apply to all persons and they have not been shown
to have been applied in a discriminating manner. In Joseph Perera alias Bruten Perera v. The Attorney General
and Others, (1) especially at p. 230, the Court held that the impugned
regulation in that case violated Article 12 of the Constitution since it had
vested
Page 329
the Police with
"naked" "unguided" and "arbitrary" power
"enabling them to discriminate". In the instant case, however, as we
shall see, the impugned regulations were framed in reasonably precise terms and
confined in their application to defined circumstances. Therefore, I fail to
see how the impugned regulations violate the petitioner's rights under Article
12(1) of the Constitution and I declare that there has been no violation of
that Article. With regard to Article 10, the gravamen of the petitioner's
complaint was that she was deprived of the opportunity of forming her own
judgment as well as influencing others by being able, freely and openly without
restraint, to have access to and receive and disseminate information on what
the petitioner describes in her petition as the "ethnic conflict and the
war in the North and East." The petitioner's substantial complaint is that
the impugned regulations interfered with her freedom of speech and expression
guaranteed by Article 14(1) (a) of the Constitution.
����������� Freedom of speech and expression
represents the means that enable the community, when exercising its options to
be sufficiently informed. Cf. Re
Compulsory membership of journalists'
association, (2) at p. 184 para. 70. Links between free speech and
some of the other rights and freedoms recognized by our Constitution, including
freedom of thought and conscience, do exist. This hardly comes as a surprise
when we consider the words of the First Amendment of the American Constitution,
described in Channa Pieris and
Others� v. The Attorney General and
Others, (3) at p. 137, as "the progenitor of Article 14(1)
(a) (freedom of speech), 14(l) (b) (freedom of peaceful assembly), and 14(1)(c)
(freedom of association) of the Constitution." The First Amendment states
as follows: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or of the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Justice
Cardozo observed that free speech is "the matrix, the indispensable
condition of nearly every other form of freedom." Palko
v. Connecticut, (4) cited in Channa
Pieris and Others v. Attorney General and Others, (3) at
p. 143.
The submissions
of learned counsel for the petitioner concentrated on the question of
interference with the petitioner's freedom of speech and expression, including
her right to receive and impart information. The complaint, it seems, related
to the deprivation of food for thought by reason of interference with her right
to receive information which she could process and transmit by speech and
expression, rather than to an interference with her freedom of thought and
beliefs: Access to information made her right of freedom of speech fully
meaningful. Cf. the observations of Fernando, J. in Fernando v. The S. L. B. C. and Others (5) at p. 179. Cf. also Sumith Jayantha Dias v. Reggie Ranatunge.
Deputy Minister of Transport and Others, (6) at pp. 21 22. In the instant case the complaint was not
that the Government was exercising control over the mind of the petitioner by
dictating to her, while she sat down in her own house, what she may read or
what audio visual information she may gather. Cf. Stanley v. State of Georgia, (7). Understandably, learned Counsel for the
petitioner did not press the matter of the alleged violation of the
petitioner's right to freedom of thought, although leave to proceed in respect
of the alleged violation of Article 10 had been granted. In the circumstances,
it is unnecessary to deal separately with the question whether there has been a
violation of Article 10.
FREEDOM OF SPEECH
IN A REPRESENTATIVE� DEMOCRACY
Freedom of
speech is vitally important in the discovery of truth in the market place of
ideas so that the wishes of the people safely can be carried out; in serving
the need of every man and woman to achieve personal fulfilment; and in meeting
the demands of a democratic regime. I had, at some length, endeavoured to
discuss these three intrinsic bases of the right to freedom of expression in Channa Pieris, (3), at pp. 131 137 and
feel reluctant to repeat what I said. However, Thomas Emerson (Toward a General Theory of the First
Page
331
Amendment, 1963, 72 Yale L. J. 877, 894)
observed: "The theory of freedom of expression is a sophisticated and even
complex one. It does not come naturally to the ordinary citizen but needs to be
learned. It must be restated and reiterated not only for each generation, but
for each new situation." In relation to the issues before this Court,
where the Constitutional validity of the impugned regulations is being
challenged, principally on the ground that it is overbroad and therefore not
necessary in a democratic state, I should like to reiterate the following:
The preamble to
the Constitution states that the people of Sri Lanka empowered their
representatives by a mandate to "draft, adopt and operate" a new
Constitution "in order to achieve the goals of the DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST
REPUBLIC, and having solemnly resolved by the grant of such mandate . . . to
constitute Sri Lanka into a DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST REPUBLIC, whilst ratifying the
immutable republican principles of REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY, and assuring to
all peoples FREEDOM, EQUALITY, JUSTICE, FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS and the
INDEPENDENCE OF THE JUDICIARY as the intangible heritage that guarantees the
dignity and well being of the succeeding generations of the People
of� SRI LANKA and of all the people of
the World, who come to share with those generations the effort of working for
the creation and preservation of a JUST AND FREE SOCIETY:
WE, THE FREELY
ELECTED REPRESENTATIVES OF THE PEOPLE OF SRI LANKA, in pursuance of such
mandate . . . do hereby adopt and enact this Constitution as the Supreme Law of
the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka."
The words in
capital letters so appear in the Constitution.
Article 1 of
the Constitution states, "Sri Lanka (Ceylon) is a Free, Sovereign,
Independent and Democratic Socialist Republic and shall be known as the
Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka." Article 27(2) states that
"The State
Page 332
is pledged to
establish in Sri Lanka a democratic socialist society, . , '
Article 27(2)
states that "The State is pledged to establish in Sri Lanka a democratic
socialist republic. . ."
"Democratic"
is derived from the Greek words demos (the
people) and Kratos (rule). Democracy
is the rule of the people. Although at a time when the Greek States had small
populations and limited franchise it was possible for the people at any
rate those who were empowered at the time to directly decide every
important issue, today, with large populations, universal suffrage, infinitely
more complex organizations of societies and the costs involved in holding
elections or referrenda, the people of most countries, including Sri Lanka,
cannot directly participate in deciding every important issue, although Article
3 of the Constitution does state that "In the Republic of Sri Lanka sovereignty
is in the people and is inalienable", and that "sovereignty includes
the powers of government. . ."�
For practical
reasons, people must act in a modern democracy through their elected
representatives. And so, Article 4 states:
"The
sovereignty of the People shall be exercised. and enjoyed in the following
manner:
(a) the
legislative power of the People shall be exercised by Parliament, consisting of
elected representatives of the People and by the People at a referendum;
(b) the
executive power of the People, including the defense of Sri Lanka, shall be
exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People;
(c) the
judicial power of the People shall be exercised by Parliament through courts,
tribunals and institutions created and established, or recognized by the
Constitution, or created and established by law, except in regard to matters
relating to
the privileges,
immunities and powers of Parliament and of its members, wherein the judicial
power of the People may be exercised directly by Parliament according to law. .
."
The value of
free speech in a democracy has been recognized by the Courts of many democratic
countries around the world. In Whitney v.
California, (8) quoted in Channa Pieris, (3), at p. 137, explaining
why the framers of the American Constitution, who in 1787 had felt no need to
include in the original document a general theory of freedom of speech, in
1791, by the First Amendment, did introduce the concept, Justice Brandeis,
said:
�Those who won our independence believed that the final end of the State was to make men free to develop their faculties; and that in its government the deliberative forces should prevail over the arbitrary. They valued liberty both as an end and as a means. They believed liberty to be the secret of happiness and courage to be the secret of liberty. They believed that freedom to think as you wish and to speak as you think are means indispensable to the discovery and spread of political truth; that without free speech and assembly discussion would be futile; that with them, discussion affords ordinarily adequate protection against the dissemination of noxious doctrine; that the greatest menace to freedom is an inert people; that public discussion is a political duty; and that this should be a fundamental principle of the American Government. They recognized the risks to which all human institutions are subject. But they knew that order cannot be secured merely through fear of punishment for its infraction; that it is hazardous to discourage thought, hope and imagination; that fear breeds repression; that repression breeds hate; that hate menaces stable government; that the path of safety lies in the opportunity to discuss freely supposed grievances and proposed remedies; and that the fitting remedy for evil counsels is good ones. Believing in the power of reason as applied through public discussion, they eschewed silence coerced by law the argument of force in its worst form. Recognizing the occasional tyrannies of governing
majorities, they
amended the Constitution so that free speech and assembly should be
guaranteed."
The European
Commission of Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights have
repeatedly stressed that freedom of expression, in particular freedom of
political and public debate, constitutes one of the essential foundations of a
democratic society, in addition to being one of the basic conditions for its
progress, and for individual self fulfilment and development of every man
and woman. Handyside v. The United
Kingdom, (9) at p. 754; The
Sunday Times v. The United Kingdom, (10) at p. 280; Barthold v.
Germany, (11) at p.
403; Hodgson, Woolf Productions and
National Union of Journalists and Channel Four Television v. United Kingdom, (12)
at p. 507; App. No. 11508/85 v. Denmark, (13); Muller v. Switzerland, (14)
at p. 228; The Observer and the Guardian
v. United Kingdom, (15) p. 178, and p. 191; The Sunday Times v. United Kingdom (No. 2) (16) at p.
235 and p. 241; Castells v. Spain, (17)
at p. 476; Thorgeirson v. Iceland, (18)
at p. 865; Brind and Others v. United
Kingdom, (19) at p. C. D. 82; Jersild v. Denmark, (20) at p. 25; Otto Preminger Institute v. Austria, (21) at p. 57; Oberschlick v. Austria, (22)
at p. 421; Piermont v. France, (23)
at p. 341; Goodwin v. United Kingdom, (24)
at p. 143; Adams and Benn v. United
Kingdom, (25) at p. C. D. 164; Wingrove v. United Kingdom, (26) at p. 52.
The Inter American
Court of Human Rights in Re compulsory
membership of journalists' association, (2) at pp. 183 184,
has expressed similar views. It stated: "Freedom of expression is a
cornerstone upon which the very existence of a democratic society rests. It is
indispensable for the formation of public opinion. It is a conditio sine qua non for the development of political parties,
trade unions, scientific and cultural societies and, in general, those who wish
to influence the public. It represents, in short, the means that enable the
community, when exercising its options, to be sufficiently informed. Consequently,
it can be said that a society that is not well informed is not a society that
is truly free."
����������� Various important international bodies have,
from time to time, also endorsed the value of free speech and expression in a
democracy. For instance, on the 29th of April 1982, the Committee of
Ministers of the Member States of the Council of Europe, in their Declaration on the Freedom of Expression and
Information", among other things, reiterated "their firm
attachment to the principles of freedom of expression and information as a
basic element of democratic and pluralist society." (1983) 5 E. H. R. R.
311.
The Supreme
Court of Sri Lanka too has stated that "freedom of speech and expression
is not only a valuable freedom in itself but is basic to a democratic form of
Government." Joseph Perera's case, (1), at p. 223. The Supreme Court stated in Channa Pieris's case, (3), at p. 132:
"Freedom of thought and expression is an indispensable condition if Sri
Lanka is to be more than a nominally representative democracy."
In Visuvalingam and Others v. Liyanage and
Others (27) at pp. 320 323, Wanasundera, J. referred to
the submissions made to the Constitutional Court on the Sri Lanka Press Council
Bill which, inter alia, provided
"the background for the drafting of the present constitutional provisions
relating to fundamental rights," and at p. 548 said: "I am in
agreement with Mr, Nadesan when he says that the freedom of the press embraces
the freedom to propagate a diversity of views and ideas and the right of free
and general discussions of all public matters . . ." See also the
observations of Wimalaratne, J. accepted by Colin Thome, J., Ranasinghe, J.,
Abdul Cader, J. and in a separate judgment by Rodrigo, ,J., in Visuvalingam and Others v. Liyanage (28)
at p. 131.
In Ratnasara Thero v. Udugampola (29),
the Court held that the seizure by the Police of copies of pamphlets that had
been printed on a question of interest to voters violated the petitioner's
freedom of speech and expression including publication and awarded him
compensation and costs. In Mohottige and
Others v. Gunatillake and Others (30), at p. 255,
Page 336
�����������
a prohibition
imposed by the Police on persons seeking to criticize the government and its
activities was said to "nullify democratic government as is understood in
this country". In Amaratunga v.
Sirimal and Others, (31), at p. 271, and in Deshapriya and Another v. Municipal Council,
Nuwara Eliya and Others, (32), at p. 370, Fernando, J. said:
"The right to support or to criticize Governments and political parties,
policies and programmes, is fundamental to the democratic way of life, and the
freedom of speech and expression is one which cannot be denied without
violating those fundamental principles of liberty and justice which lie at the
base of all civil and political institutions. Dejonge v. Oregon (23)." Cf. Marian and Another v. Upasena, (34). In awarding
compensation for the violation of freedom of speech, the Court has taken
account of its numerous decisions stressing the importance of that fundamental
right. Gunawardena and Another v.
Pathirana, O.1. C., Police Station, Elpitiya and Others, (35),
at p. 274. And if has been held that the Constitutional guarantee of free
speech must be interpreted in the light of the "fundamental principles of
democracy and the Rule of Law which are the bedrock of the Constitution.":
Karunathilake and Another v. Dayananda
Dissanayake, Commissioner of Elections and Others, (36) at p.
173.
Speech
concerning public affairs is more than self� expression; it is the essence of
self government. To make an informed and educated decision in choosing
his or her elected representative, in deciding to vote for one group of persons
rather than another, a voter must necessarily have the opportunity of being informed
with regard to proposed policies. The election of representatives is based on
an appeal to reason and not to emotions; a system of government based on
representative democracy assumes it to be so. In the`
formation of
opinions and the mobilization of such ideas offered for acceptance in the
competition for the right to represent the people, there can be no appeal to
reason without the freedom to express and propagate and discuss ideas, based on
adequate and reliable information.
END OF THE
2000-1 PART-12.
PART-13
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Page 337
����������� In its social
dimension, freedom of expression is a means for the interchange of ideas and
information among human beings and for mass communication. It includes the
right of each person to seek to communicate his or her own views to others, as well
as the right to receive opinions and information from others. Open Door Counselling and Dublin Well Woman v. Ireland, (37) at p. 261; Informationsuerein Lentia v. Austria (38), at p. 113.
Freedom of speech necessarily protects the right to receive information,
regardless of the social worth of such information. The right is fundamental to
a free society. Martin v. City of
Struthers, (39); Winters
v. New York, (40); Griswold
v. Connecticut, (41); Lamont
v. Postmaster General, (42); Stanley v. Georgia, (7);
Cf. Pierce u. Society of Sisters, (43).
For the average citizen, it is just as important to know the opinions of others
or to have access to information generally as the very right to impart his or
her opinions. Re Compulsory membership of
journalists' association, (2) at pp. 171 172.
In this connection the "dual aspect"
of freedom of expression needs to be stressed. It requires, on the one hand,
that no one be arbitrarily limited or impeded in expressing his or her own
thoughts. In that sense, it is a right that belongs to each individual. Its
second aspect, on the other hand, in general, implies a collective right to
receive information and have access to the thoughts expressed by others. The
right to receive information is an important aspect of free speech and
expression. Visuvalingam and Others v.
Liyanage and Others, (28) at pp. 131 133.
Since the petitioners's complaint is concerned
with political matters and freedom to use the print media, I have focussed
attention on those aspects. However, the impugned regulations extend to all
forms of expression and communication. Therefore it must be stressed that the
principles relating to freedom of speech and expression do not apply solely to
certain types of information or ideas or forms of expression. Freedom of speech
and expression protects not only the substance of the ideas and information
expressed, but also the form in
Page 338
which they are conveyed. Oberschlick
v. Austria, (22) at p. 422.
In its individual dimension, although formulated primarily with regard to
speech and the print media, freedom of speech and expression includes "all
forms of freedom of speech and expression", Karunathilaka and Another v. Dayananda Dissanayake, Commissioner of
Elections and Others, (36)
at p. 173, including the right to use audio visual media, Jersild v. Denmark, (20) at p. 26, and indeed whatever medium is deemed appropriate to impart ideas
and to have them reach as wide an audience as possible, and it includes
artistic expression. See Article 19(2) of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights; Muller v. Switzerland,
(supra), (14) at p. 225. It also encompasses information of a
commercial nature and even music, and commercials transmitted by cable. Casado Coca v. Spain, (44)
at p. 20.
In Amaratunga
v. Sirimal and Others, (31),
disapproval of the policies and actions of government on a range of issues
was expressed by a fifteen minute, noisy cacophany of public protests Jana Ghosha
which included the ringing of bells, tooting of motor vehicle
horns, the banging of saucepans and the beating of drums. It was held at p. 270, citing several opinions of the U.
S. Supreme Court, that "speech and expression" extended to forms of
symbolic speech and expression and that Jana
Ghosha could be regarded as "speech and expression". In Abeyratne v. Gunatilake and Others, (45) at p. 295 it was held that the guarantee of freedom of speech and expression
and freedom of peaceful assembly "could be rendered meaningless if
permission for the use of amplifying mechanical devices in furtherance of free
speech is unreasonably withheld."
It is only by informed discussion that
proposals adduced can be modified so that the political, social and economic
measures desired by voters can be brought about� And, in between elections, it
is only through free and informed debate and exchange of ideas that the elected
majority can be made to remain responsive to and reflect the will of the
people.
Page 339
The fact that people have elected representatives does not imply that
such representatives may always do as they will; members of the public must, in
matters affecting them, be free to influence intelligently the decisions of
those persons for the time being empowered to act for them. Every legitimate
interest of the people or a section of them should have the opportunity of
being made known and felt in the political process. Moreover, in a
representative democracy there must be a continuing public interest in the
workings of government which should be open to scrutiny and well founded
constructive criticism. Indeed, a central value of free speech, and the
concomitant rights of freedom of association and assembly, lies in checking the
abuse of power by those in authority. The free press has a legitimate interest
in reporting on and drawing the public's attention to deficiencies in the
operation of Government services, including possible illegal activities. It is
incumbent on the press to impart information and ideas about such matters and
the public has a right to receive them. The
Observer and the Guardian v. United Kingdom, (15) at p. 178; The Sunday Times v. United Kingdom, (No.
2), (16) at p. 235.
Journalism, it has been held, "is the
primary and principal manifestation of freedom of expression of thought." Re Compulsory membership of journalists'
association, (2) at p. 184. With regard to the press, it has
been stated that it has a pre eminent�
role in a State governed by the rule of law and, that whilst it must not
overstep the bounds set, it is nevertheless incumbent on the press, in a way
consistent with its duties and responsibilities, to disseminate information and
ideas and stimulate debate on political issues and on other matters of public
interest. Castells v. Spain, (17)
at 476; Prager and Obserschlick v.
Austria, (46) at p. 19 20.
Not only does the press have the task of imparting such information and ideas,
the public also have a right to receive them. Sunday Times v. U. K., (10) at p. 280; Lingens v. Austria, (47) at p. 418; Worm v. Austria, (48) at p. C. D. 39. Were it otherwise, the press would be unable to
play its vital role of `public watchdog'. The
Page 340
Observer and the Guardian, v. U.
K., (15) at p. 191;
Thorgeirson v. Iceland, (18),
at p. 865; Brind and Others v. U. K.,
(19) at p. 82; Jersild v. Denmark, (20) at p. 14; Goodwin v. U. K., (24) at p. 136. Freedom of the press affords the public one of the best means of
discovering and forming an opinion of the ideas and attitudes of their
political leaders. In particular, it gives politicians the opportunity to
reflect and comment on the preoccupations of public opinion; it thus enables
everyone to participate in political debate which is at the very core of the
concept of a democratic society. Lingens
v. Austria, (47) at
pp. 418 419; Castells v. Spain,
(17) at p. 476; Brind and Others v. U. K., (19) at p. 82; McLaughlin v. UnitedKingdom, (49) at p. C. D. 92; Oberschlick v. Austria, (22) at p. 422.
Freedom of speech and expression protects not
only information or ideas that are favourably received or regarded as
inoffensive or as a matter of indifference, but also those that offend, shock
or disturb the State or any sector of the population. See Channa Pieris, (3)
at p. 134, cited in Gunawardena and Another v. Pathirana, O. I.
C., Police Station Elpitiya and Others, (35) at p. 278. Such are the
demands of that pluralism, tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is
no 'democratic society'. Handyside
�v. U.K., (9) at p. 754;
The Sunday Times v. U. K., (10) at p. 280; Appl No.
11508/85 v. Denmark, (13) at pp. 560 561; Lingens v. Austria (47), at p. 418; Muller v. Switzerland, (14) at p. 228; Castells v. Spain
(17) at p. 476;
Thorgeirson v. Iceland, (18) at p. 865; Brind and Others v.
U. K, (19) at p. 82; Jersild v. Denmark, (20) at p. 14; Otto Preminger Institute v. Austria, (21) at p. 57; Obserschlick v. Austria, (22) at p. 421; Vereinigung
Democratischer Soldaten Osterreichs and Gubi v. Austria, (50) at p. 83; Piermont v. France, (23) at p. 341; Goodwin v. U.
K. (24) at p. 136; Vereniging Radio 100 et al.
v. Netherlands, (51) at
p. C. D. 204.
Justice Holmes in Abrams v. United States, (52) quoted in Channa Pieris, (3) at p. 136, said:
"Persecution for the expression of
opinions seems to me perfectly logical. If you have no doubt of your premises
or your power and want a result with all your heart you naturally express your
wishes in law and sweep away all opposition. To allow opposition by speech
seems to indicate that you think the speech impotent, as when a man says that
he has squared the circle, or that you do not care wholeheartedly for the
result, or that you doubt either your power or your premises. But when men have
realised that time has upset many fighting faiths, they may come to believe
even more than they believe the very foundations of their conduct that the
ultimate good desired is better reached by free trade in ideas that the
best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the
competition of the market, and that truth is the only ground upon which their
wishes can be carried out. That at any rate is the theory of our Constitution.
. ."
There is a vital societal interest in
preserving an uninhibited market place of ideas in which truth will ultimately
prevail. Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
(53). We are committed to the principle that debate on public issues
should be uninhibited, robust and wide open. Channa Pieris, (3) at p. 36. An assumption
underlying Article 14(1) (a) of the Constitution is that speech can rebut
speech, propaganda will answer propaganda and that free debate of ideas will
result in the wisest policies, at least for the time being. Channa Pieris, (3)
at p. 135.
����������� Attempts to secure
uniformity of ideas is fraught with danger. "Those who begin coercive
elimination of dissent soon find themselves eliminating dissenters. Compulsory
unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity of the graveyard. It seems
trite that [the Constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression] was designed
to avoid these ends by avoiding beginnings." West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, (54),
followed in ShanthaWijeratne v. Vijitha
Perera and Others, (55), Channa
Pieris, (3) at pp. 42 43, and in Gunawardena and Another v. Pathirana, O.1. C., Police Station,
Page 342
Elpitiya and Others, (35) at p. 277. As we have seen,
Justice Brandeis pointed out in Whitney
v. California, (8) repression breeds hate and hate menaces
stable government. Nowak, Rotunda and Young,
Constitutional Law, pp. 836 7),
cited with approval in Channa Pieris, (3) at p. 43, pointed out:
"Just as the ancient Roman eventually learned that executing
Christians did not suppress Christianity, modern governments should realize
that forbidding people to talk about certain topics does not encourage public
stability. It only creates martyrs. Punishing people for speech does not
discourage speech; it only drives it underground and encourages conspiracy. In
the battle for public order, free speech is the ally, not the enemy."
RESTRICTIONS ON FREEDOM OF SPEECH IN GENERAL
Although one may think what one may wish, no
intelligent person articulates or ought to articulate every thought that
happens to pass through his or her mind, anywhere at any time.
In the exercise and operation of a person's
freedom of thought, conscience and beliefs, and the right to impart opinions,
one might be restrained by the Buddha's advice to be watchful of one's speech,
recalling the fate of the everhungry spirit (peta),
with the head of a pig and the body of a human being, with its mouth swarming
with maggots, who ignored the Buddha's admonition. Dhammathha Vagga, xx. 6.
Those who cannot restrain themselves for moral
reasons are in many ways prevented by law
from speaking as they think, for the societal value of speech must on occasion
be subordinate to other values and considerations. Article 28(e) of the
Constitution draws our attention to the fact that "the exercise
and enjoyment of rights and freedoms is inseparable from the performance of
duties and obligations" and reminds us that "accordingly it is the
duty of every person in Sri Lanka
Page 343
to respect the rights and freedoms of other." Article 15(2) states
that "the exercise and operation of the fundamental right declared and
recognized by Article 14(1) (a)", namely, freedom of speech and
expression, including publication, "shall be subject to such restrictions
as may be prescribed by law in the interests of racial and religious harmony or
in relation to Parliamentary privilege, contempt of court, defamation or
incitement to an offence." Article 15(7) states that the exercise and
operation of the fundamental rights declared and recognized by Article 14
"shall be subject to such restrictions as may be prescribed by law in the
interests of national security, public order, and the protection of public
health or morality, or for the purpose of securing due recognition and respect
for the rights and freedoms of others, or of meeting the just requirements of
the general requirements of the general welfare of a democratic society. .
."
Laws restraining speech to ensure that the
rights of others are safeguarded and that people shall exercise their right of
free speech with responsibility are commonplace. Laws relating to official
secrets, defamation, obscenity, contempt of court, perjury, fraud, extortion,
and licensing of radio and television broadcasters, readily come to mind. As
Justice Sanford, delivering the opinion of the United States Supreme Court,
observed in Gitlow v. New York, (56),
cited in Channa Pieris and Others v.
Attorney General and Others, (3) at pp. 137 138,
"It is a fundamental principle, long established, that freedom of speech
and the press which is secured by the Constitution, does not confer an absolute
right to speak or publish without responsibility, whatever one may
choose." See also the observations of Sharvananda, C. J. in Dissanayake v. Sri Jayawardenapura
University, (57) at pp. 263 264 and at p. 270. Nor is
there an absolute right to receive information as an element of the right of
free speech and expression. Gaskin v.
United Kingdom, (58) at p. 285; Gaskin v. United Kingdom, (59) at p. 411: Leander v. Sweden, (60) at p.
452 and p. 456; Wailen v. Sweden, (61)
at p. 322.
Page 344
The Constitutional provision relating to free
speech, as Meikljohn observed in his work Free
Speech and its Relation to SeIf Government, �is not the guardian of unregulated talkativeness." Geoffrey
Robertson, Q. C., and Andrew Nicol, Media
Law, 3rd ed., p. 1., observed: "By and large, Parliament
and the judiciary have taken the view that free speech is a very good thing so
long as it does not cause trouble. Then it may become expensive speech
speech . . . with costly court actions, fines, damages and occasionally
imprisonment. 'Free speech', in fact, means no more than speech from which
illegal utterances are subtracted."
In addition to restrictions prescribed by law,
there may be utterances that are no essential part of any exposure of ideas and
are of such social value as a step in truth that any benefit that may be
derived from them is outweighed by the social interest in order and morality. Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, (62).
Thus, it has been said that resort to rude epithets or personal abuse is not in
any proper sense communication of information or opinion safeguarded by the
Constitution. Cantwell v. Connecticut, (63).
����������� Likewise, although, as
Lord Denning in an address before the High Court Journalists' Association
observed in 1964 (The Times, 03
December 1964), "Justice has no place in darkness and secrecy. When a
judge sits on a case, he himself is on trial . . . If there is any misconduct
on his part, any bias
or prejudice, there is a reporter to keep an eye on him," and
although justice is not a "cloistered virtue", yet, wanton and
irresponsible criticism of democratic institutions like the judiciary, can
hardly claim to be an use of freedom of speech that deserves constitutional
protection. Thus in Prager and
Obserschlick v. Austria (46), at p. 20, the European Court of
Human Rights stated that it is incumbent on the press in a way consistent with
its duties and responsibilities to impart information and ideas on matters of
public interest including "questions concerning the functioning of the
system of justice, an institution that is essential for any democratic society.
Page 345
����������� The press is one of the means by which
politicians and public opinion can verify that judges are discharging their
heavy responsibilities in a manner that is in conformity with the aim which is
the basis of the task entrusted to them." The Court added: "Regard
must, however, be had to the special role of the judiciary in society. As the
guarantor of justice, a fundamental value in a law governed State, it
must enjoy public confidence if it is to be successful in carrying out its
duties. It may therefore prove necessary to protect such confidence against
destructive attacks that are essentially unfounded, especially in view of the
fact that judges who have been criticised are subject to a duty of discretion
that precludes them from� replying."
Free speech has its limits. In his famous
aphorism in Schenck v. United States, (64)
cited with approval in several cases including Mallawarachchi v. Seneuiratne, (65) Bernard Soysa and Two Others v. The A. G. and Two� Others, (66) at p. 58 and in Channa Pieris, (3) at p. 138, Justice
Holmes said, "The most stringent protection of free speech would not
protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing panic."
Moreover, as Fernando, J. observed in Bernard
Soysa (66) at p. 58, "What may be said or done in the exercise of the
freedom of speech, expression or peaceful assembly would also depend on the
place." See also Saranapala v.
Solanga Arachchi, (67) at pp. 172 173, on the use of
public places. Moreover, the right to speak must be tailored to the occasion. Mahinda Rajapakse v. Kudahetti and Others, (68),
at p. 229. See also the observations of Sharvananda, C. J. in Joseph Perera v. A. G. (1) at p. 226 p. 227.
Referring to 'other countries', extravagant
claims are sometimes made by journalists. Even the Republic of Iceland, which
in Artice 72 of its Constitution states that "Every person has the right
to express his thoughts in print . . . Censorship or other limitations on the freedom of the press may never be
imposed," (The emphasis is mine,) provides in that very same Article
that a person expressing his thoughts "may be held
Page 346
responsible for them in courts."An author, or if the publication is
not in his or her name, then the publisher, editor, seller or distributor may,
under section 15 of the Right of Publication Act 1956 of Iceland, be held both
criminally and civilly liable. Moreover, a defamatory publication constitutes a
criminal offence under the Penal Code of Iceland. Thorgeirson v. Iceland, (18), at p. 857. Admittedly, in
the law relating to defamation in Iceland, there is no prior restraint on the
exercise of free speech, Yet, where the governing instrument, be it a
Constitution or international convention, does not prohibit prior restraints on
publication, the imposition of such restraints, e. g. by injunctions obtained
under a prescribed law, is not per se impermissible.
In Sri Lanka, pre censorship is not necessarily unconstitutional and can
be justified, if brought within the ambit of Article 15. Joseph Perera's case, (1) at p. 229. Dissanayake v. Sri Jayewardenepura
University, (57) at p. 270. However, the dangers inherent in
prior restraints are such that they call for the most careful scrutiny on the
part of a Court that is called upon to consider the validity of such
restraints. Wingrove v. U. K., (26)
at p. 31. But that is another matter.
As far as prior restraints are concerned, a
person may seek judicial review of a censor's acts. Yet, if a person must
pursue his or her judicial remedy before he or she may exercise his or her
right of freedom of speech, the occasion might have become history and later
speech may be futile or pointless. See per
Justice Douglas in Walker v. City of
Birmingham, (69). This is especially so as far as the press is
concerned, for news is a perishable commodity and to delay its publication,
even for a short period, for instance, while the Competent Authority makes up
his mind under the impugned regulations, may well deprive it of all its value
and interest. Cf. The Observer and the
Guardian v. U. K., (15) at p. 191; The Sunday Times v. U. K., (16) at p. 242. See also Markt Intern Verlag and Beemann v. Germany (70)
at p. 175. On the other hand if prior restraint was not possible, irreparable
harm could be caused in certain instances. As Justice Douglas observed in Dennis v. United
Page 347
States, (71) see
also Channa Pieris, (3) at pp. 47 48: "There comes a time when even
free speech loses its constitutional immunity . . . When conditions are so
critical that there will be no time to avoid the evil that the speech threatens,
it is time to cry a halt. Otherwise free speech which is the strength of the
nation will be the cause of its destruction."
In Abrams� v. United States, (52) even Holmes J., despite his off quoted words
in support of free speech in the opinion he expressed in that case, recognized
the danger of waiting before taking action against a person exercising the
right of free speech, although he did stress the need to limit restraint. He
said: "I think that we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check
the expression of opinions we loathe and believe to be fraught with death,
unless they so imminently threaten immediate interference with the lawful and
pressing purposes of the law that an immediate check is required to save the
country. [Only] the emergency that makes it immediately dangerous to leave the
correction of evil counsels to time warrants making any exception to the
sweeping command, Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of
speech."
THE RELEVANCE OF OTHER LAW, INCLUDING DECISIONS OF OTHER COURTS AND TRIBUNALS
Learned Counsel for the petitioner, relied on dicta in the opinions of the United
States Supreme Court in Schenck v. U. S.,
(51) Abrams v. U. S., (52) Gitlow v. New York, (47), New York Times Company� v. U. S., and United States v. The Washington Post Company et al ., (72), usually referred to as New York Times u. U. S., and
particularly on the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights in The Observer and Guardian v. U. K., (15) and The
Sunday Times v. U. K. (No. 2) (16), in submitting that the
conditions for the imposition of restrictions stated in Article 15(7) had not been satisfied in the making of
the impugned regulations and that such regulations were therefore
unconstitutional.
Page 348
The Additional Solicitor General
submitted that the dicta in the
American opinions were unhelpful, since the First Amendment of the American
Constitution did not provide for restrictions and that the restrictions had
been judge made. On the other hand, he submitted, the restrictions in the
Sri Lanka Constitution are to be found in the Constitution itself, as it was
the case with the Indian Constitution, which provided for restrictions in
Article 19(2).
The relevant words of Article 19 of the Indian
Constitution are as follows:
"(1) All citizens shall have the right (a)
to freedom of speech and expression . . . (2) Nothing in sub clause (a)
of Clause (1) shall affect the operation of any existing law, or prevent the
State from making any law, in so far as such law imposes reasonable
restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by the said sub clause
in the interests of the sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the
State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, decency or
morality, or in relation to contempt of court, defamation or incitement to an
offence."
The learned Additional Solicitor General cited
H. M. Seervai who, in Constitutional Law
of India, 4th Ed., p. 710, drew attention to the warning given
by the Indian Supreme Court in Travancore cochin
v. Bombay Co. Ltd., (73) at p. 1120, and in Bombay v. R. M. D. Chamarabagawalla, (74) at p. 918,
about the use of American decisions, and stated as follows:
"In Express
Newspapers (Private) Ltd. v. Union,
(75) [pp. 121 122], Bhagwati, J. said that there was a
paucity of authority in India on the nature, scope and extent of the
fundamental right to the freedom of speech and expression and he added: ".
. . the fundamental right to the freedom of speech and expression enshrined in
. . . our Constitution is based on the provisions in Amendment 1of the
Constitution of the United States . . . and it would be therefore legitimate
and
Page 349
proper to refer to those decisions of the U. S. Supreme Court to
appreciate the true nature, scope and extent of this right in spite of the
warning administered by this Court against the use of American and other
cases.�
It is submitted that the provisions of the two
Constitutions as to freedom of speech and expression are essentially different,
the difference being accentuated by provisions in our Constitution for
preventive detention which have no counterpart in the U. S. Constitution. The
First Amendment enacts an absolute prohibition, so that a heavy burden lies on
anyone transgressing it to justify such a transgression. Again, since the
Amendment contains no exceptions, it is not surprising that exceptions have had
to be evolved by judicial decisions which have limited the scope of such
exceptions with increasing stringency. The position in India is different. The
right to the freedom of speech and expression, and the limitations on that
right are contained in Article 19(1) (a) read with sub Art. (2). Laws
which fall under sub Art, (2) are expressly permitted by our Constitution
and the problem in India is to determine whether an impugned law falls within
Article 19(2), and that is essentially a problem of construction. No doubt
Article 19(2) authorizes the imposition of "reasonable restrictions",
and in the end, the question of reasonableness is a question for the Court to
decide. However, a law made in respect of the matters referred to in Article
19(2) must primafacie be presumed to
be constitutionally valid and due weight must be given to the legislative
judgment on the question of reasonableness, though that judgment is subject to
judicial review. It is difficult, if not impossible, to read into the words
"reasonable restrictions" the test of "clear and present
danger" evolved by the U. S. Supreme Court in dealing with the freedom of
speech and the press. The difference between the First Amendment and Article
19(1) (a) was noted by Douglas J. in Kingsley
[International Pictures] Corporation v. Regents of the University of New York, (76). In holding that all pre censorship
of cinema films was constitutionally void, he said: "If we had a provision
in our Constitution for "reasonable"
Page 350
regulation of the press, such as India has included in hers, there would be room for argument that censorship in the interest of morality would be permissible."
The above submission is reinforced by the fact
that preventive detention for reasons connected with the security of a State,
the maintenance of public order and the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community is a subject of concurrent legislative power . . .
and Article 22(3) . . . provides safeguards of a very limited nature in respect
of such detention .� . ."
Admittedly, no restrictions on the exercise of
the freedom of speech were specified in the First Amendment. However, the U. S.
Supreme Court, from the now famous "footnote 4" of the opinion of
Chief Justice Stone in United States v.
Carotene Products Co., (77)
through Brandenberg v. Ohio, (78), and Hess
v. Indiana, (79) has
interpreted the First Amendment in numerous cases and evolved guidelines, on
the one hand, to protect free speech, and, on the other, to ensure the safety
of the State and protect other interests. Admittedly, due regard must be had to
the fact that an inquiry as to the exercise of the permissible restrictions
under the law of Sri Lanka involves essentially a matter of construction by our
own courts. Nevertheless, although we are not bound by the opinions of the U.
S. Supreme Court, yet in the interpretation of our own Constitutional
provisions, especially those that impinge and impact on the value of free
speech in a democratic State, and concepts relating to matters expressly
referred to in our own Constitution, e. g. "national security",
"public order", "the protection of public health or morality",
"securing due recognition for the rights and freedoms of others", and
"meeting the just requirements and the general welfare of a democratic
society", some of the opinions expressed by the U. S. Supreme Court are of
great usefulness and of persuasive authority, for they are concepts essentially
developed over many years by the U. S. Supreme Court, although more recently,
and not less importantly, by other domestic courts,
Page 351
including the Supreme Courts of Sri Lanka and India, and by
international bodies like the European Commission for Human Rights and Courts
like the European Court for Human Rights. Divergent approaches must be
expected, and we should proceed with caution, although, in my view, that is not
a good ground for looking at one's own Constitution wearing blinkers.
Jeremy McBride, Widening Case Law Horizons, Vol. 1 No. 4, Interights Bulletin, 1986, at pp. 8 10, dealt with the
question of the use of precedents from other systems in the interpretation of
international instruments. However, his observations with regard to
interpretation deserve repetition even with regard to the interpretation of
Constitutional provisions and domestic legislation. McBride said,
"Differences of this kind are not
necessarily undesirable or impermissible even though the treaties involved seek
to protect many of the same basic rights and freedoms and subject them to
similar restrictions. After all the framework, language and political
background of the various instruments is not the same. The universality of
human rights is, therefore, out of the question, at least as far as the
detailed understanding of individual rights and freedoms is concerned. However,
although uniformity in interpretation may be precluded by the terms of the
treaties themselves, this cannot be true of the major concepts underlying them
since all share a common acknowledged lineage back to the Universal
Declaration. While therefore the autonomous meaning of each instrument can be
insisted upon, it does not follow that the case law emanating from one system
should be regarded as irrelevant to another."
I agree that the universality of human rights
is "out of the question, at least as far as the detailed understanding of
individual rights and freedoms is concerned." Universality is
aspirational. However, we might cooperate in the ongoing effort to make
universality a reality, although we ought to be
Page 352
vigilant in preserving our own values, despite attempts by specious promises� or plain bullying to jetisson those things we in our communities hold to be of intrinsic worth. We might, if we proceed cautiously, derive assistance from the decisions of other Courts elsewhere, in appropriate cases, the Court being circumspect and attentive to all the circumstances affecting its decision.
����������� �I should like to make reference to some of the Bangalore Principles� declared
by Commonwealth Jurists on 26 February1988, at the end of a colloquium on The Domestic Applicationof Haman Rights
Norms. Interights Bulletin, Vol. 3, 1988, No. 1 p. 2.
I must emphatically state that I do not
subscribe to any of the other views stated in the Bangalore Principles.
"2. . . . international human rights
instruments provide important guidance in cases concerning fundamental rights
and freedoms.
3. There is an impressive body of jurisprudence,
both international and national, concerning the interpretation of particular
human rights and freedoms and their application. This body of jurisprudence is
of practical relevance to judges and lawyers generally.
4. In most countries whose legal systems are
based upon the common law, international conventions are not directly
enforceable in national courts unless their provisions have been incorporated
by legislation into domestic law. However; there is a growing tendency for
national courts to have regard to these international norms for the purpose of
deciding cases where the domestic law whether constitutional, statute
or common law is incomplete.
6. While it is desireable for the norms
contained in the international human rights instruments to be still more widely
recognized and applied by national courts, this
Page 353
process must take into full account local laws, traditions,
circumstances and needs.
7. It is within the proper nature of the
judicial process and well established judicial functions for national
courts to have regard to international obligations which a country undertakes
whether or not they have been incorporated into domestic law for the
purpose of removing ambiguity or uncertainly from national constitutions,
regulation or common law.
8. However, where national law is clear and
inconsistent with the international obligations of the State concerned, in
common law countries, the national court is obliged to give effect to national
law. In such cases the court should draw such inconsistency to the attention of
the appropriate authorities since the supremacy of national law in no way
mitigates a breach of an international legal obligation which is undertaken by
a country.
9. These views are expressed in recognition of
the fact that judges and lawyers have a special contribution to make in the
administration of justice in fostering universal respect for fundamental human
rights and freedoms."
Decisions from elsewhere are, in my view, of
most value where the right or freedom or limiting concept is expressed in
broadly similar terms. Even when a formulation is different, the omissions,
additions and drafting may shed light on the result to be reached. To take
account of the case law of another system should, however, never be a back door
attempt to achieve universality at the expense of the will of States parties to
a convention, or the will of Sovereign Peoples in the case of domestic
Constitutions.
Despite his submissions against the usefulness
of looking at the opinions of the U. S. Supreme Court, the learned Additional
Solicitor General himself placed reliance on the following decisions of
the U. S. Supreme Court: New York
Page
354.
Times Company v. United States, (72); Schenck v. United States, (64); Frohwerk v. United States, (80); United States v. David Paul O'Brien, (81); and Kingsley International Pictures
Corporation v. Regents of the University of the State of New York, (76).
Learned Counsel for the respondents submitted
that the dicta in two judgments of
the European Court of Human Rights cited by learned Counsel for the petitioner
were inapplicable, since they were concerned with the interpretation of Article
10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms which was not in terms identical with Article 15(2) and
Article 15(7) of the Sri Lanka Constitution.
Article 10 of the European Convention states as
follows:
"Everyone has the right to freedom of
expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive
and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and
regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not prevent States from requiring
the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it
carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such
formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and
are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security,
territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or
crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the
reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information
received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of
the judiciary."
Admittedly, there are differences in the manner
of expression, and we should, therefore, be cautious in applying decisions
concerned with the interpretation of Article 10 of
the European Convention. At the same time, as we shall see, there is
much assistance to be derived from them in deciding whether the impugned
regulations were in contravention of the Constitution, for some of the
differences, in my view, relate more to form than substance.
ALLEGED UNCONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE IMPUGNED REGULATIONS
There was no dispute that the impugned
regulation caused an interference with the petitioner's ability to receive and
impart information, and therefore, ex
facie, there was a transgression of her freedom of speech and expression
guaranteed by Article 14(1) of the Constitution. However, the respondents
maintained that the petitioner's rights were not absolute, and that the
exercise and operation of the petitioner's rights were subject to restrictions
imposed in terms of Article 15(7) of the Constitution, and therefore there was
no violation of Article 14(l) (a) of the Constitution.
In paragraph 14 of her petition, the petitioner
admits that the right of free speech could be restricted, but submitted that in
the circumstances of this case the regulations of 6 November 1999 were
unconstitutional, having regard to the provisions of Article 15(7) read with
Article 155(2), and should be struck down.
Learned Counsel for the petitioner submitted
that the burden of justifying restrictions imposed under Article 15(7) is
heavy. I find myself in agreement with him. Seervai, as we have seen, said,
"The First Amendment enacts an absolute prohibition, so that a heavy
burden lies on anyone transgressing it to justify such transgression." The
burden, in my view, continues to be heavy even where freedom of speech is
expressed in more or less absolute terms, as it is in Article 14(1)(a), but
where specific provision is made elsewhere for exceptions. Exceptions must be
narrowly and strictly construed for the reason that freedom of speech
constitutes one of the
Page 356
essential foundations of a democratic society which, as we have seen,
the Constitution, in no uncertain terms, declares Sri Lanka to be.
In order to justify the imposition of� restrictions on the operation and exercise of
a citizen's freedom of speech, Article 15(7), like Article 15(2), requires that
such restrictions shall be "prescribed by law". I will be referring
to some of the decisions of the European Commission of Human Rights, and the
European Court of Human Rights because I consider them to be apposite, for
Article 10(2) of the European Convention also has the requirement that
restrictions must be "prescribed by law". It has been held that
"prescribed by law" in Article 10(2) must be given the same
interpretation as the phrase "in accordance with law", and that
accessibility and foreseeability are two of the requirements inherent in the
phrase "prescribed by law" and relate to the quality of law. Brind and Others v. United Kingdom, (19) at p. C. D. 81; Hins and Hugenholtz v. Netherlands, (82) at p. 126; Vereniging Radio 100 et al. v. Netherlands, (51) at p. C. D. 203.
The impugned "emergency" regulations
were made by the President under section 5 of the Public Security Ordinance.
Section 5(1), enables the President to make such regulations as appear to the
President "to be necessary or expedient in the interests of public
security and the preservation of public order and the suppression of mutiny,
riot or civil commotion, or for the maintenance of supplies and services
essential to the community." Section 5(2)(d) enables the President to make
emergency regulations that appear to the President to be "necessary or
expedient", inter alia, in the
interests of public security, "amending any law, for suspending the
operation of any law and for applying any law with or without
modification." The phrase "any law" does not empower the
President in terms of section 5 of the Public Security Ordinance to amend or
suspend a provision of the Constitution, such as the guarantee
Page 357
under Article 14(1)(a) relating to freedom of speech, on the ground of
public security. This is evident from Article 155(2). The power to do so is
derived from Article 15(7) of the Constitution which enables the President to
impose restrictions on the operation and exercise of the fundamental right of
freedom of speech by regulations made under the law relating to public
security.
The restrictions complained of were set out in
a regulation made by the President of the Republic under section 5 of the
Public Security Ordinance, Cap. 51 of the Legislative Enactments. The Ordinance
was enacted prior to the Constitution. Article 170 of the Constitution states
that "law" means any Act of Parliament, and any law enacted by any
legislature at any time prior to the commencement of the Constitution and
includes an Order in Council." Article 168(1) of the Constitution states
that "Unless Parliament otherwise provides, all written laws and unwritten
laws in force immediately before the commencement of the Constitution, shall, mutatis mutandis, and except as
otherwise expressly provided in the Constitution, continue in force."
Article 155 of the Constitution states that "The Public Security Ordinance
as amended and in force, immediately prior to the commencement of the
Constitution shall be deemed to be a law enacted by Parliament." Article
155 further provides that "The power to make emergency regulations under
the Public Security Ordinance or the law for the time being in force relating
to public security shall include the power to make regulations having the legal
effect of over riding amending or suspending the operation of the
provisions of any law except the provisions of the Constitution." Freedom
of speech is protected by Article 14(1) (a) of the Constitution. However, the
Constitution provides in Article 15(7) that the exercise and operation of that
Article "shall be subject to such restrictions as may be prescribed by law
in the interests of national security. . ." Article 15(7) states that
"For the purposes of this paragraph "law" includes regulations
made under the law for the time being relating to public security."
Page 358
Ex
facie, the restrictions
complained of which were contained in regulations made under section 5 of the
Public Security Ordinance, had a basis in law and were in accordance with law.
The petitioner, however, maintained that the
impugned regulations were imprecise and vague. She stated in her petition that
"any law which confers unguided and unfettered discretion without narrow
objectives and definite standards to guide such authority is
unconstitutional." She added that "it is of fundamental importance
that such a law should not be incomplete and should contain within itself all
the vital and necessary components relating to its operation, including precise
restrictions that it seeks to impose." The impugned regulations, the
petitioner stated, were "not subject to any rational guidelines and hence
permits the authorities to apply the said regulations arbitrarily and
discriminately". There was, she said, a discrepancy between the Sinhala
and English versions, "thus facilitating an arbitrary and incoherent
application of the said regulations."
In The
Sunday Times v. The UnitedKingdom, (10) at p. 271, (see also Gay
News� v. United Kingdom, (83) at
pp. 127 128; G v. Germany, (84) at p. 503; Markt Intern and Beerman v. Germany, (85) at
p. 231; Times Newspapers Ltd. and Neil v.
United Kingdom, (86) at p. C. D. 55: Hinz and Hugenholtz v. Netherlands, (82) at p. (26), the
European Court of Human Rights stated as follows:
"In the Court's opinion, the following are
two of the requirements that flow from the expression 'prescribed by law'.
First, the law must be accesible: the citizen must be able to have an
indication in the circumstances of the legal rules applicable to a given case.
Secondly, a norm cannot be regarded as a 'law' unless it is formulated with
sufficient precision to enable the citizen to regulate his conduct: he must be
able if need be with appropriate advice to foresee, to a degree
that is reasonable in the circumstances,
Page 359
the consequences which a given action may entail. Those consequences need not be foreseeable with absolute certainty: experience shows this to be unattainable. Again, whilst certainty is highly desirable, it may bring in its train excessive rigidity and the law must be able to keep pace with changing circumstances. Accordingly, many laws are inevitably couched in terms which, to a greater or lesser extent, are vague and whose interpretation and application are questions of practice."
����������� The European Court of
Human Rights has had occasion to recognize the difficulty or impossibility of
attaining absolute precision in the framing of laws, especially in spheres in
which the situation governed by the law in question is constantly changing. Barthold v. Germany, (11) at p. 399; Markt Intern and Beerman v. Germany, (70) at p. 173; Muller v. Switzerland,(14) at
p. 226. Indeed, in certain areas flexibility might be desirable. Goodwin v. United Kingdom, (24)
at p. 140. The provisions in question should afford sufficient protection
against arbitrariness and make it possible for the persons concerned to foresee
the consequences of their actions. However, the level of precision depends to a
considerable degree on the content of the instrument in issue, the field it is
designed to cover and the number and status of those to whom it is addressed. Groppera Radio AG v. Switzerland, (87)
at p. 341; Vereinigung Demokratischer
Soldaten Osterreichs and Gubi v. Austria, (50) at p. 81.
It appears from the words of the regulations
that the impugned regulations were primarily intended for editors, publishers
of newspapers and persons authorized to establish and operate Broadcasting or
Television Stations. It could be expected that such persons, if necessary, with
the help of legal advisers, could inform themselves about the regulations
applicable to them. The regulations imposed restrictions on the publication and
transmission of certain specified sensitive information relating to what the
petitioner described as "the
Page 360
ethnic conflict and the war . . . in the North and East." The need
for regulations of the sort in question to be framed without excessive rigidity
to take account of changing circumstances is, in my view, inevitable. Indeed,
as experience has shown, it has been necessary to amend even broadly framed
regulations, such as the Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and Transmission
of Sensitive Military Information) Regulations, from time to time to take
account of changing circumstances. The regulations in question were not so
vague as to exclude any predicability, if need be with appropriate advice, as
to what act on the petitioner's part might give rise to the adverse
consequences referred to in paragraphs 3 and 5 of the Emergency (Prohibition on
Publication of Sensitive Military Information) Regulations 1 of 1996. Cf. Arrowsmith v. United Kingdom, (88)
at p. 231. Moreover, the impugned regulations were accessible, for they were
published in the Government Gazette No:
1104/28 of 06 November, 1999, and, as the petitioner states, they were
"announced publicly in the government media." She submitted a
newspaper article in support of the averment that the law had received
publicity in the press.
The petitioner complained that the authority was clothed with wide
powers of discretion by reason of the formulation of the regulation and by
differences in the English and Sinhala versions. The broadly worded nature of
the impugned regulations and the differences in the Sinhala and English
versions might have caused difficulties in interpretation. However, the mere
fact that a provision may give rise to problems of interpretation does not mean
it is so vague and imprecise as to lack the quality of 'law'. Hodgson, Woolf Productions and National Union of Journalists and Channel Four Television v. United Kingdom, (12)
at p. 508. Nor is the quality of law necessarily diminished by the conferment
of discretion. A law conferring a discretion is not in it self inconsistent
with the requirement of foreseeability, provided that the scope of the
discretion and the manner of its exercise
Page 361
are indicated with sufficient clarity, having regard to the legitimate
aim in question, so as to give the individual adequate protection against
arbitrary interference. Brind and Others
v. United Kingdom, (19) at p. C. D. 81; Tolstog Miloslausky v. United Kingdom, (89) at p. 468; Hins and Hugenholtz v. Netherlands, (82)
at p. C. D. 126; Goodwin v. U. K. (24) at p. 140; Vereniging Radio 100 et al. v. Netherlands, (51)
at p. C. D. 203; Wingrove v. U. K. (26)
at pp. 26 27.
Against the foregoing background, I hold that
the impugned restrictions had a basis in law, and that as far as the quality of
law was concerned, it was accessible to the petitioner and formulated with
sufficient precision to enable her if need be, with appropriate legal
advice to foresee, to a degree that was reasonable in the
circumstances, the consequences which a given action may entail. Admittedly,
the first respondent, the 'Competent Authority' was given a wide discretion;
yet, as we shall see later in considering the question of necessity, the scope
of the discretion and the manner of its exercise were indicated with sufficient
clarity, having regard to the purported aim in question, to make the decisions
of the Competent Authority reviewable and to give her adequate protection
against arbitrary interference. I therefore conclude that the impugned
restrictions were "prescribed by law" for the purposes of Article
15(7) of the Constitution.
In addition to being "prescribed by
law", restrictions on the Constitutional right of freedom of speech, in
order to be valid, must have a legitimate aim recognized by the Constitution.
No doubt after balancing interests, albeit at a very general, wholesale level,
the makers of our Constitution have in Article 15 made a threshold
categorization, inter alia, of the
varieties of speech that are not protected absolutely, but which may be limited
by law. Channa Pieris, (3), at p.
140. Speech and expression concerning "the interests of national
security" is one of them. (Article 15(7)).
Page 362
The petitioner suggested that the aim of the President in making the
impugned regulations was not the interests of national security. In paragraphs
15, 16, 17 of her affidavit, she stated that, although censorship had been
relaxed at a certain time and "media personnel were also taken on
conducted tours of the Northern and Eastern provinces on the initiative of the
1st� Respondent on every
occasion that the Government claimed to have won a significant military victory
in those areas'", yet the impugned regulations "tightening the
censorship" were made "following renewed fighting in the Wanni area
leading to heavy loss of life, loss of territorial gains previously held by the
Army and State military equipment." The petitioner' submission was that
the aim of the impugned regulations was to prohibit the publication of
information that was embarrassing to the Government, rather than to protect
national security. As such, the regulations offended "the established
principle in international law that restrictions on freedom of expression based
on national security interests would� not
be legitimate if their genuine purpose or demonstrable effect is to protect
interests unrelated to national security, such as to protect a Government from
embarrassment or wrongdoing or to entrench a' particular ideology." (Vide
paragraph 24 of the petitioner's affidavit.) In paragraph 10 of her petition,
the petitioner stated that "it is of extreme importance that the pretext
of national security is not used to place unjustified restrictions on the
exercise of these freedoms."
Learned counsel for the petitioner cited the
following dicta from New York Times v. U. S. (72):".
. . the Founding fathers gave the free press the protection it must have to
fulfill its essential role in our democracy. The press was to serve the
governed, not the governors . . . only a free and unrestrained press can
effectively expose deception in government." (Justice Black). "The
dominant purpose of the 1st Amendment was to prohibit the widespread
practice of governmental suppression of embarrassing information . . . secrecy
in government is fundamentally anti democratic, perpetuating
Page 363
bureaucratic errors. Open debate and discussion of public issues are
vital to our national security." (Justice Douglas)
Justices Black and Douglas argued that no
system of prior restraint was ever justified. Yet, the fragmented Court, which
decided the case in nine separate opinions by a six to three majority, agreed
on only two general themes any system of prior restraint of expression
bears a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity, and the
Government carries a "heavy burden" to justify enforcing any system
of prior restraint. As we have seen, prior restraint is not per se impermissible. Even Near v. Minnesota, (90), which firmly embedded the prior
restraint doctrine in American jurisprudence, did recognize three
"exceptional cases" justifying prior restraint.
The
Times case was considered by
this Court in Wickremasinghe v. Edmund
Jayasinghe, (91). In
that case, the petitioner, the Chief Editor and publisher of a newspaper,
alleged that his fundamental rights guaranteed by Articles 12 and 14(1) (1) had
been infringed by the application of the Emergency (Restriction of Publication
of and Transmission of Sensitive Military Information) Regulation No. 1 of 1995.1
have already resproduced those regulations in my judgment. Justice
Kulatunga (with whom G. P. S. de Silva, C. J., and Ramanathan, J. agreed) at
pp. 307 308 said that the New York
Times case:
". . . involved a restraint on newspapers against a publication which appears to relate to a war situation . . . That case is clearly distinguishable for the reason that the policy under discussion there was the involvement of the United States of America in the affairs of a foreign state.
In the instant case, it cannot be said that the
occasion and manner of pre censorship is arbitrary. The Government is
faced with a serious civil war. The matters in respect of which censorship is
imposed are specified. The restriction is
Page 364
against the publication of matters which could be classified as
'sensitive information'. All such matters relate to the prosecution of the war.
Hence, the impugned censorship cannot be described as a blanket censorship;
clearer guidelines may not be demanded in the present circumstances."
Learned counsel for the petitioner was critical
of the judgment in Wickremasinghe's case.
He said, "The Court was clearly influenced by the assumption that there
was a war situation and there must be some curtailment of the freedom to
publish . . . Kulatunga, J. only saw that the situation was different without
considering the underlying reasons which consequently apply even when a
"Government is faced with a serious civil war", as the learned judge
put it. It is respectfully submitted that pre censorship by the Emergency
Regulations was not properly addressed for over breadth and vagueness by
the intrusion of "serious civil war" into the picture."
I am unable to agree with the submissions of
learned counsel for the petitioner. I shall later in my judgment deal with the
question of over breadth, but for the present I should like to observe
that the question of over breadth was not overlooked by Kulatunga, J. At
p. 304, His Lordship did say that "The Court will no doubt consider
whether the regulations are bad for over breadth." His Lordship
also, at p. 308, rejected the demand for "clearer guidelines" and
therefore had addressed his mind to the question of "vagueness". I
have in this judgment dealt with the question of vagueness at some length, and
hold that the authorities amply justify the conclusion reached by Kulatunga, J.
Yes, indeed Kulatunga, J. was clearly influenced not only by "the
assumption" that there was a "war situation" but, as
acknowledged by the petitioner herself, that there was indeed such a situation. It was a matter of central importance.
The importance of freedom of speech in a
democracy cannot be overstated. Nevertheless, there are occasions where that
importance must give way to other considerations.
Page 365
�����������
National security is
one such consideration. Notwithstanding the dicta
of Justices Black and Douglas in the New
York Times case (72), cited by learned counsel for the
petitioner, there is, as we shall see, abundant judicial support in the
opinions of the United States Supreme
Court and internationally for the proposition that when a nation's security and
integrity is at stake, all else, including the cherished, constitutionally
assured, freedom of speech must take second place. We must not lose sight of
priorities. Indeed, at paragraph 04 of the written submissions of learned
counsel for the petitioner, citing Donna Gomien, David Harris and Leo Zwak, Law and
Practice of the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Social
Charter, it is quite properly acknowledged that international human rights
jurisprudence permits "derogations from human/ fundamental rights in times
of war or public emergency." This is the case not only where national
constitutions or international conventions permit such derogations, but even in
countries, such as the United States, where no express constitutional provision
is made for the imposition of restrictions in times of war or national
emergency. E. g. see Schenck v. United
States, (64); Frohwerk
v. United States, (80);
Debs v. United States, (92) .
It has never
been doubted that when a government is in the throes of a struggle for the very
existence of the state, the security of the community may be protected. Justice
Brandeis observed in Whitney v.
California, (8), (followed
in Ekanayake v. HerathBanda, (93),
Amaratunga v. Sirimal, (94)
and Channa Pieris v. Attorney General,
(3) at p. (138), ". .
. But although the rights of free speech and assembly are fundamental, they are
not absolute. Their exercise is subject to restriction, if the particular
restriction proposed is required in order to protect the state from destruction
or from serious
Page 366
injury, political,
economic or moral." In Dennis v.
United States, (71), Chief
Justice Vinson said, ". . . Overthrow of the government by force and
violence is certainly a substantial enough interest for the government to limit
speech". In Schenck v. United States,
(64), Holmes, J.
one of the most eloquent and enthusiastic advocates of free speech
said, "When a nation is at war many things that may be said in times of
peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be
endured so long as men fight and that no Court could regard them as protected
by any Constitutional right."
The petitioner
furnished the Court with a copy of a document entitled "The Johannesburg
Principles on National Security, Freedom of Expression and Access to
Information," and placed great reliance on that document. According to the
"Introduction" to that document, the "Principles were adopted on
1st� October 1995 by a group
of experts in international law, national security, and human rights convened
by Article 19, the International Centre Against Censorship, in
collaboration with the Centre for Applied Legal Studies of the University of
the Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg." The preamble to the document, inter alia, states that the 'principles'
are meant to "discourage governments from using the pretext of national
security to place unjustified restrictions on the exercise of "freedom of
speech and expression". While recognizing that restrictions may be placed
in the interests of national security, the 'principles' state that they should
be prescribed by law, and have "the genuine purpose and demonstrable
effect of protecting" "a country's existence or its territorial
integrity against the use or threat of force, or its capacity to respond to the
use or threat of force". "A restriction sought to be justified on the
ground of national security is not legitimate if its genuine purpose or demonstrable
effect is to protect interests unrelated to national security, including for
example, to protect a
Page 367
government from
embarrassment or exposure of wrongdoing, or to conceal information about the
functioning of its public institutions, or to entrench a particular ideology or
to suppress industrial unrest."
In paragraphs
28 and 29 of the petition, it is stated that any citizen or political party was
entitled to seek, receive and impart information on the "policy of the
Government on the ethnic conflict and the war and has the concomitant right to
seek, receive and impart information on the military strategies and drawbacks
in the conduct of the military operations in the North and East." In
paragraph 29, the petitioner states that "as a social/human rights
activist concerned about the ethnic conflict and the war in the North and East,
she has actively taken part in debates to resolve the said conflict and hence
she is required to know the correct position with regard to the long drawn out
war between the Armed Forces and the LTTE..."
There is an
acknowledgment by the petitioner of the existence of a violent conflict in the
North and East between the Armed Forces and the LTTE. The regulations are
called the "Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and Transmission of
Sensitive Military Information) regulations." The text of the impugned
regulations makes it abundantly clear that the material that has to be
published with the approval of the Competent Authority relates to matters
pertaining to the Forces engaged in the Northern and Eastern provinces and
their operations in those areas. Admittedly, the impugned regulation followed
soon after what the petitioner described as "renewed fighting in the Wanni
area leading to heavy loss of life, loss of territorial gains previously held
by the Army and State military equipment." The petitioner submitted
newspaper reports of what was described as "a humiliating
Page 368
debacle", and
suggesting that it was caused, by the negligence of "the top brass."
The petitioner pointed to the fact that, whereas the earlier regulation
contained the words "or any statement pertaining to the official conduct
or the performance of the Head or any member of any of the Armed Forces or the
Police Force", the impugned regulations had the words, "or any
statement pertaining to the official conduct, morale or the performance of the
Head or of any member of the Armed Forces or the Police Force or of any person
authorised by the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces for
the rendering of assistance in the preservation of national security." The
reasons for the changes were explained by the Competent Authority in a
statement published in the press and submitted to us by the petitioner. He said
that "some media institutions distorted news relating to the war in the
North East (sic.) which has led to pain of mind to the soldiers and their
parents and the morale of the troops." The petitioner does not dispute
that. Her irrelevant response was that the Competent Authority failed to
identify the "irresponsible media institutions."
The petitioner,
in my view, has failed to show, in terms of Principle 2(b) of the
"Johannesburg Principles" that "the genuine purpose or
demonstrable effect" of the regulation was "to protect [the]
government from embarrassment or exposure or wrongdoing". Nor has she
shown that the protection of national security was a "pretext". It
was observed in United States v. O'Brien,
(81) at para. 15, that
"It is a
familiar principle of constitutional law that this Court will not strike down
an otherwise constitutional statute on the basis of an alleged illicit
legislative motive. As the Court long ago stated: "The decisions of this
Court
Page 369
from the beginning
lend no support whatever to the assumption that the judiciary may restrain the
exercise of lawful power on the assumption that a wrongful purpose or motive
has caused the power to be exerted. "McCray
v. United States, (95).
This fundamental principle of constitutional adjudication was reaffirmed and
the many cases were collected for the Court in State of Arizona v. State of California, 283 U. S. 423, 455, 51 S.
Ct. 522, 526, 75 L. Ed. 1154 (1931)."
NECESSARY IN A
DEMOCRATIC STATE
Mr. Goonesekera
submitted that the regulation had to be shown to be necessary in a democratic
state. On the other hand, Mr. Marsoof argued that, although the phrase
"necessary in a democratic state" was found in Article 10(2) of the
European Convention, it was not a requirement stipulated in Article 15 of our
Constitution, and therefore ought not to be read into the Constitution.
On this matter,
I find the submission of the Additional Solicitor General to be
unpersuasive. Admittedly, the phrase "necessary in a democratic
society" is not to be found in Article 15 of the Constitution.
Nevertheless the ideas encapsulated in that phrase, and therefore the opinions
of the European Commission and the judgments of the European Court in
construing that phrase, are relevant as sustaining the logic of our own
Constitution with regard to the imposition of restrictions on the operation and
exercise of the fundamental right of freedom of speech and expression
guaranteed by Article 14(1)(a).
Sri Lanka, as
we have seen is a representative democracy in which freedom of speech and
expression is a cornerstone.
Page 370
That is the defining
context for the interpretation of restrictions imposed by Article 15 on the
fundamental right of freedom of speech guaranteed to citizens in our
representative democracy by Article 14(1) (a) . Cf. per Fernando J., in Karunathilaka and Another v. Dayananda
Dissanayake, Commissioner of Elections and Others, (36) at p.
173; Re Compulsory membership of journalists' association, (2)
at p. 174.
In Malalgoda v. A. G. & Another, (97)
at pp. 784 785 Soza, J., having referred to the observations of Seervai
on the differences between the Indian and American Constitutions, and noting
that the `clear and present danger' test had been rejected by the Indian
Supreme Court, since the Indian Constitution had provided instead for the test
of `reasonableness', went on to state that "the limitations to the right
of freedom of speech are in Sri Lanka prescribed' in more absolute terms than
in India. In Sri Lanka, the operation and exercise of the right to freedom of
speech are made subject to restrictions of law not qualified by any test of
reasonableness. Neither the validity nor the reasonableness of the law imposing
restrictions is open to question unlike in America or India. This is not to say
of course that the Court should not be reasonable in applying the law imposing
restrictions. Freedom of speech in Sri Lanka therefore is subject to such restrictions as the law may impose under the
heads mentioned in Article 15(2)." In that case, the petitioner had
complained that the Police had seized a book published by him. It was
defamatory, but the petitioner contended that his fundamental right of freedom
of speech and expression had been violated. The court held that "so far as
concerns the case before us freedom of publication means that the applicant may
publish whatever will not expose him to a prosecution or a civil action for
defamation. In exercising his fundamental
Page 371
right of freedom of
publication he cannot shake off the constraints imposed by law. The freedom of
publication does not include the licence to defame and vilify others."
Article 28(e)
states that the exercise and enjoyment of rights and freedoms is inseparable
from the performance of duties and obligations, and accordingly it is the duty
of every person in Sri Lanka to respect the rights and freedoms of others.
Article 15(2) states that the exercise and operation of the fundamental right
of freedom of speech and expression declared and recognized by Article 14(1)
(a) shall be subject to such�
restrictions as may be prescribed by law, inter alia, in relation to defamation. In terms of Article 15(7)
the exercise and operation of the right of freedom of speech is "subject
to such restrictions as may be prescribed by law . . . for the purpose of
securing due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of
others." However, with great respect, "subject to" not only
means subject to a restriction set out in Articles 15(2) and 15(7) but
includes, in my view, an assessment of a restriction purported to be imposed
under Article 15(2) or 15(7) from the point of view of necessity, unless the law is an "existing
law" within the meaning of Article 16(1) of the Constitution. In the case of defamation, this would require
an examination of the law imposing the interference with a person's freedom of
speech, if it is not an "existing law", as well as the application of
the law in the particular circumstances of a case. Cf. Lingens and Leitgens v. Austria, (98) at pp. 393 394.
In some cases, it may be found that the law of defamation or conviction for
defamation or some measure taken to protect the reputation of others may be
disproportionate to the aim pursued, and therefore an unnecessary interference
with freedom of speech. E. g. see App. No. 11508/85 v. Denmark, (13);
Thorgeirson v. Iceland,
Page 372
(18);
Oberschlick v. Austria, (22);
Tolstoy Miloslausky v. U. K., (89); Cf. Castells v. Spain, (17) at p. 478 where the prosecution was for insulting the government. In others,
it may be found that the measures taken were necessary to protect the
reputations of others. E. g. see App. No. 12230/86 v. Germany, (99); Barfod v. Denmark, (100); Praeger and Oberschlick v. Austria, (46). However, in deciding on the
constitutional validity of a
restriction imposed on freedom of expression,
otherwise than by an "existing law", there must be an examination of its need.
"Necessity"
is inherent in Article 15(7) read
with Article 155(2). The Supreme
Court has already recognized the concept of
necessity in deciding whether regulations restricting freedom of speech and
expression are Constitutionally valid. In Joseph
Perera v. The Attorney General and Others, (1), at pp. 216 217 Sharvananda, C.
J. said:
"The
Regulation to be valid must satisfy the objective test. Though the Court may
give due weight to the opinion of the President that the regulation is
necessary or expedient in the interests of public security and order, it is
competent to the Court to question the necessity of the Emergency Regulation
and whether there is a proximate or rational nexus between the restriction
imposed on a citizen's fundamental right by emergency regulation and the object
sought to be achieved by the regulation. If the Court does not find any such
nexus or finds the activities which are not pernicious have been included within
the sweep of the restriction, the Court is not barred from declaring such
regulation void as infringing Article 155(2) of the Constitution."
It was held
that the impugned Emergency Regulation in that case, requiring police
permission for publication,
Page 373
�imposed a form of prior restraint abridging
the freedom of expression that was invalid and incapable of forming the basis
of any law. See especially the observations of Sharvananda, C. J. at pp. 216 217.
The Court's reasoning was that the power to make emergency regulations did not
include the power to over ride, amend or suspend the operation of the
provisions of the Constitution, except in accordance with the provisions of the
Constitution. Constitutionally valid restrictions on the fundamental right of
freedom of speech and expression in the interests of national security and
public order could only be imposed in terms of Article 15(7). Since, in its
view, there was no proximate or rational nexus between the restriction imposed
and the object sought to be achieved by the regulation namely, the interests of
national security and public order, and since the regulation conferred an
unfettered discretion on a public authority in enforcing the regulation, the
regulation was, as the Chief Justice said at p. 230, "unconstitutionally
over broad". The regulation was held to be unconstitutional since it
violated Article 155(2) of the Constitution which prohibited the amendment or
suspension of the operation of Article 14(1) (a) except in accordance with the
provisions of Article 15(7).
In Wickramasinghe v. Edmund Jayasinghe, (91), Kulatunga, J. at p. 304, after stating
that regulations made by the President under the Public Security Ordinance will
not be struck down by the Court "unless there are good grounds for doing
so", added: "The Court will no doubt consider whether the regulations
are bad for over breadth and impinge upon fundamental rights."
In The Sunday Times v. U. K., (10)
the European Court of Human Rights observed at p. 268 that the applicants
complained of continuing restraints "as a result of over breadth
Page 374
and lack of
precision of the law of contempt of court. In Open Door Counselling and Dublin Well Woman v. Ireland, (10)
at p. 266, that Court, in considering the question of proportionality, held
that "the sweeping nature of the restriction" made it "over broad
and disproportionate."
In Wickremabandu v. Herath and Others, (101)
at p. 358, H. A. G. de Silva, J. (Fernando J. agreeing) said: "Article
l5(7) permits, inter alia restrictions
in the interests of national security and public order. The learned Attorney General
contends that the Court could not interpolate "reasonable" into that
provision, and hence could not inquire into the reasonableness of a.
.restriction. It is not a matter of interpolation, but of interpretation: can
we assume that the power conferred by the Constitution was intended to be used
unreasonably, by imposing the reasonable restrictions on fundamental rights?
The State may not have any burden of establishing the reasonableness of the
restrictions placed by law or Emergency Regulations, but if the Court is
satisfied that the restrictions are clearly unreasonable, they cannot be
regarded as being within the intended scope of the power under Article 15(7)."
It has been
held that "necessary", while not synonymous with 'indispensable',
implies a �pressing social need', Re
Compulsory membership of journalists' association, (2) at p. 176; Lingens v. Austria, (47) at
p. 418; Leander v. Sweden, (60)
at p. 452; Hodgson and Others v. U. K., (12)
at p. 508; Markt Intern and Beerman v.
Germany, (85) at p. 232; Muller
v. Switzerland, (14) at p. 227; The Sunday Times v. U. K. (No. 2), (16) at p. 234; Castells
v. Spain, (17) at p. 461; Jersild
v. Denmark, (20) at p. 14; Hins
and Hugenholtz v. Netherlands, (82) at p. C. D. 126; Goodwin v. U. K., (24)
at p. 143; Bowman v. U. K. (103)
at p. C. D. 17; and, therefore, for a restriction
Page 375
to be 'necessary' it
is not enough to show that a restriction was 'useful' 'reasonable' or
'desirable'. The Sundcay Times v. U. K.,
(1979 (10) at p. 275;�� G. v. Germany, (84) at p.
504; Barthold v. Germany, (11) at p. 402. Necessity must be
convincingly established. Thorgeirson
v. Iceland (18) at p. 865;
Brind and Others v. U. K., (19) at p. C. D. 82; Autronic AG v. Switzerland, (104) at p. 503; Weber v. Switzerland, (105)
at p. 523; Hins and Hugenholtz v.
Netherlands, (82) at p. C. D. 126; Goodwin v. U. K., (103) at p. C. D. 17; Adams and Benn v. U. K. (25) at p. C. D. 164.
����������� The 'necessity' requirement involves
a review of whether the restrictions are proportionate to the legitimate
aimpursued. G. v. Germany, (84)
at p. 504; Leander v. Sweden,(60)
at p. 452; Rohr v. Switzerland, (102);
The Sunday Times v.U. K. (No. 2), (16)
at 234. Proportionality is, in my view, inherentin Article 15(7) read with
Article 155(2) of the Constitution.Cf.
Joseph Perera, (1) at
pp. 215 217; and Wickrarnasinghe(91) at p. 304, just as it is inherent in Article 10(2) ofthe European
Convention. Gay News U. K., (83)
at p. 130.A restriction, even if justified by compelling governmental as the
interests of national security, must be so framed as not to limit the right
protected by Article 14(1) (a)more than is necessary. That is, the restriction
must beproportionate and closely tailored to the accomplishment of the
legitimate governmental objective necessitating it.Re Compulsory membership of journalists'
association, (2) at p. 176.
"Necessity"
and, hence, the legality of restrictions imposed under Article 15(7) on freedom
of expression, depend upon a showing that the restrictions are required by a
compelling governmental interest. If there are various options to achieve this
objective, that which least restricts the right protected
Page 376
must be selected.
Even though the governmental purpose be legitimate and substantial, that
purpose cannot be pursued by means that broadly stifle fundamental liberties of
citizens when that end can be narrowly achieved. The breadth of legislative
abridgement must be viewed in the light of less drastic means for achieving the
same basic purpose. Shelton v. Tucker,
(106) (U. S.) at p. 488
(S. Ct.) at p. 252. Given this standard, it is not enough to demonstrate, for
example, that a regulation performs a useful or desirable purpose; to be
compatible with the Constitution, the restrictions must be justified by
reference to governmental objectives which, because of their importance,
clearly outweigh the social need for the full enjoyment of the right Article
14(1)(a) guarantees. Cf. Re Compulsory
membership of journalists' association, (2) at p. 176.
In Joseph Perera's case, (1) at pp. 228 229, Sharvananda, C. J. stressed the need for regulations restricting freedom of speech to be drawn with "narrow specificity". His Lordship said: "There can be no doubt of the Government's interest in protecting the State from subversion. But `even though the Government's purpose be legitimate and substantial, that purpose cannot be pursued by means that broadly stifle fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved.' Shelton v. Tucker, (106) at p. 488." The difficulty, however, is striking a fair balance when making such regulations. Thus in Brind and Others v. U. K., (19) at pp. C. D. 83 84, the European Court of Human Rights had adverted to the special problems involved in combatting terrorism, and observed that "the Commission has no doubt as to the difficulties involved in striking a fair balance between the requirements of freedom of information especially the free flow of information from the media and the need to protect the State and the public against armed conspiracies seeking
Page 377
to overthrow the
democratic order which guarantees this freedom and other human rights." In
the instant case, attention should be drawn to the fact that the regulations
have been amended from time to time. The petitioner points out that this may
have been in response to public and international criticism. On the other hand,
the respondents maintain that the regulations have been amended from time to
time to take account of changing circumstances and as a response to the needs
of the time. In the instant case, given the difficulties involved, I am of the
view that the impugned regulation succeeded in striking a fair balance between
the free flow of information and the legitimate aim of protecting national
security and that the restrictions were proportionate and tailored with
sufficient closeness to the accomplishment of the governmental aim necesitating
them.
The Court is
not required to deal with the question of necessity in a general and abstract
manner, but only in so far as the facts in a particular case are concerned. Markt Intern and Beerman v. Germany, (85)
at p. 232. The criterion of "necessity" cannot be applied in absolute
terms but calls for the assessment of various factors. These include the nature
of the right in question, the degree of interference, the nature of the public
interest and the extent to which it needed to be protected in the particular
circumstances. App. No. 12230/86 v.
Germany, (99) at p. 102.
I have explained the importance of the right in question: In sum, freedom of speech and expression is the cornerstone of our representative democracy.
At the same
time, due account must be taken of the fact that the aim of the regulation was
the protection of national
Page 378
security within the
meaning of Article 15(7). In order to verify that the interference was not
excessive in the instant case, a fair balance between competing interests must
be struck: the requirement of protecting national security must be weighed
against the petitioner's right of free speech and expression. Cf. Groppera Radio AG v. Switzerland, (87)
at p. 343; Barfod v. Denmark (100)
at p. 499. In matters of this nature, the interests of society as a whole must
be considered. Otto Preminger Institute
v. Austria, (21) at p. 59. The notion "necessary", as
we have seen, implies" a pressing social need". This may include the
"clear and present danger" test, as developed by the American Supreme
Court, pace Seervai, and the question
"pressing social need", must be addressed in the light of the
circumstances of a given case. Arrowsmith
v. U. K., (88)
at p. 233. On the three phases in the development of the 'clear and present
danger' doctrine, see Nowak, Rotunda and Young, Constitutional Law, 3rd Ed., pp. 853 874.
In the instant
case, there is, as the petitioner herself states a "war" between the
LTTE and the Government Forces. Judicial notice of the fact that "the
Government is faced with a serious civil war" was taken by this Court in Wickramasinghe v. Edmund Jayasinghe, (91)
at p. 307. Terrorism is a tactic that is resorted to by the LTTE in that
"war". That is a matter that is well and widely known, and of which
judges of this Court have taken cognizance. See Visuvalingam & Others v. Liyanage, (28) at p. 333.
Terrorism not only hurts, but tends to destroy democracy and democratic
institutions. There are imminent dangers threatening the free, democratic
constitutional order of the Republic of Sri Lanka. In such a situation,
national security must take precedence over the right of free speech, for, as
Chief Justice Vinson observed in Dennis v.
U. S., (71), the safety of
the nation is "the ultimate value of society. For if
Page 379
a society cannot protect its very structure from armed internal attack, it must follow that no subordinate value can be protected."
In Visuvalingam & Others v. Liyanage, (27) at p.
375, Soza, J. said:
"The
Government, too, undoubtedly values the freedom of the Press and believes that
democracy will sustain itself best, as it has been said, in the free market of
ideas . . . But at times of national crisis, the safety of the nation becomes
paramount and some inroads have of necessity to be made into the freedom of the
Press . . ." In Siriwardene and
Others v. Liyanage (107) at
p. 187 Wimalaratne, J. (Ratwatte,
Colin �Thome, Abdul Cader, Rodrigo, JJ., agreeing) said: "In a word, there
are essential limits on the rights to publish. The limitations are greater when
a nation is at war or under a state of emergency. . ."
In Klass and Others v. Federal Republic of
Germany, (108) the
complaint to the European Court of Human Rights related to legislation granting
powers of secret surveillance. The Court, at p. 232, said that it could not "but take judicial notice of two
important facts. The first consists of the technical advances made in the means
of espionage and, correspondingly, of surveillance; the second is the
development of terrorism in Europe in recent years. Democratic societies
nowadays find themselves threatened by highly sophisticated forms of espionage
and by terrorism, with the result that the State must be able, in order to
effectively counter such threats, to undertake the secret surveillance of
subversive elements operating within its jurisdiction. The Court has therefore
to accept that the existence of some legislation granting powers of secret
surveillance over the mail, post and like
Page 380
communications, is
under exceptional conditions, necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security and/or for the prevention of disorder or
crime." The Court, having examined the contested legislation and the
manner of its application concluded at p. 237 that the interference resulting
from that legislation was "necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security and for the prevention of disorder". The
decision was followed in G. v. Germany
(84) at p. 504; and in App.
No. 10628/83 v. Switzerland, (109)
at p. 109.
The impugned
regulations were stated to be "Emergency (Prohibition on Publication and
Transmission of Sensitive Military Information) Regulations. They applied to
information pertaining to specified matters, namely, "military operations
in the North and East, including any operation carried out or being carried out
or proposed to be carried out by the Armed Forces or by the Police Force
(including the Special Task Force), the deployment of troops or personnel or
the deployment or use of equipment including aircraft in naval vessel by any
such forces, or any statement pertaining
to the official conduct, morale or the performance of the Head or of any member of the Armed Forces or the
Police Force or of any person
authorized by the Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces for the
purpose of rendering assistance in
the preservation of national security."
The emphasis is
mine. One of the petitioner's principal concerns was with the provision
protecting the conduct and performance of the persons referred to in the words
emphasised. As we have seen, the explanation given for the protection of the
persons designated was to prevent a recurrence of attacks of the nature that
had been made leading to the demoralization of the Armed Forces. While the
preservation of
Page 381
the morale of the Armed
Forces is an important matter, yet, as we have seen, in a democracy, freedom of
speech performs a vital role in keeping in check persons holding public office.
For a citizen to keep a critical control of the exercise of public power, it is
essential that particularly strict limits be imposed on the publication of
information which refers to the activities of public authorities. App. No.
11508/85 v. Denmark, (110) at p. 561. Relying on the decision of
this Court in Joseph Perera's case, (1),
and particularly on the dicta of
Sharvananda, C. J. at p. 217 and p. 230, learned counsel for the petitioner
submitted that the impugned regulation was "over broad" and
"disproportionate" for two reasons. First, if the aim of the
regulation was, as explained by the first respondent in his affidavit, inter alia, to ensure that the morale of
government forces in the North and East was sustained, the manner in which the
regulation was framed did not confine the restrictions to the conduct of the
persons in the North and East. The restrictions were applicable to the conduct
of the persons in the other parts of the State as well and there was therefore
no nexus between the stated aim and the regulation framed. Secondly, citing
examples from newspapers, learned counsel submitted that the Competent
Authority in practice arbitrarily censored information that was not covered by
the terms of the regulations.
With regard to
the first matter, I agree there was ambiguity. However, where there is
ambiguity, such provisions, since they impinge on Constitutionally guaranteed
rights, must be interpreted restrictively. Therefore, the meaning to be
ascribed to the words objected to must be that they applied to information
concerning such persons with regard to their activities in the North and the
East. This interpretation is reinforced by the Sinhala version which
Page 382
leaves no doubt as
to the intention of the maker of the regulations.
I agree that
where laws, including regulations, vest in administrative officials a power of
censorship over communications not confined within standards designed to curb
the dangers of arbitrary or discriminatory action, such laws, being unnecessary
to achieve even a legitimate aim may be struck down as being over broad. Lovell v. Griffin, (111); Cantwell v. Connecticut, (112), Saia v. New York, (113); Kunz v. New York, (114). The "breadth" with which
those cases were concerned was the breadth of unrestricted discretion left to a
censor, which permitted him to make his own subjective opinions the practically
unreviewable measure of permissible speech. That is not so in the instant case.
Unlike in Joseph Perera's case
(1) at p. 230, the authority
was not given a "naked and arbitrary power . . . without any guiding
principle to regulate the exercise of the Competent Authority's discretion.
There was no mention in the impugned regulation in that case of the reasons for
which an application to publish may have been refused. In the instant case,
however, the matters falling within the Competent Authority's purview are, in
my view, set out with sufficient clarity to make the decisions reviewable.
The
petitioner's case is that the examples cited from the newspaper articles showed
that there had been an improper exercise of the powers of the Competent
Authority. H. A. G. de Silva, J. (Fernando J. agreeing) observed in Wickramabandu v. Herath and Others, (101) at p. 358, that the fact that �a power may be abused does not render the
regulation invalid; such abuse of power is by no means beyond challenge."
In the same case Kulatunga, J. at p. 378 (Ramanathan,
J. agreeing) said:
Page 383
"I cannot agree
that the possibility of abuse is a ground for declaring [the regulation] ultra vires: the remedy against abuse is judicial review." The
observations of the European Court of Human Rights in Klass and Others v. Federal
Republic of Germany (108) at
p. 237, are also worth recalling: "While the possibility of improper
action by a dishonest, negligent or overzealous official can never be ruled
out, whatever the system, the considerations that matter for the Court's
present review are the likelihood of such action and the safeguards provided to
protect against it."
If it turns out
that the regulations are abused, we would have a different kind of case than
that presently before us. All that is now here is the validity of the
regulations ex facie, not the
review of particular actions of the Competent Authority, and I am unable to
agree that in this pasture of things the regulations can be said to be
unconstitutional. Shelton v. Tucker, (106) at (U. S.) p. 499 and (S. Ct.) p. 258.
Moreover, in
matters of this nature, although this Court has the power to decide whether a
regulation made under section 5 of the Public Security Ordinance is
"necessary", see Channa
Pieris's case, (3) at pp. 140 141; Siriwardene v. Liyanage, (107) at p. 329: or 'expedient' in the sense of being a timely measure,
neither too early nor too late, having regard to prevailing circumstances, yet
"due weight" ought to be given to "the opinion of the President
that the regulation is necessary or expedient in the interests of public
security and order." Per Sharvananda, C. J., in Joseph Perera's case, (1) at pp. 216 217.
Although the
Government in Brind's case, (19)
did not contend that the interference with the applicant's rights
Page 384
was a prime element
in the struggle against terrorism, the European Commission of Human Rights
found that it could be regarded as "one aspect of a very important area of
domestic policy." Vide pp. C. D. 83 84. Having regard to the
extensive experience of the executive and legislature on terrorist matters, and
"bearing in mind the margin of appreciation permitted to States," the
limited extent of the interference with the applicant's rights and the
"importance of measures to combat terrorism", the Commission found
that it could not be said that the interference with the applicant's freedom of
expression was disproportionate to the aim sought to be pursued. Vide p. C. D.
84. Similar views were expressed by the Commission in McLaughlin v. U. K.,(49) at p. C. D. 92. The margin of
appreciation in assessing the pressing social need, and in choosing the means,
and fixing the conditions for achieving the legitimate aim of protecting
national security is a wide one. Klass
and Others v. Federal Republic of Germany, (108) at p. 232; Leander v. Sweden, (60) at p. 453; The Observer and the Guardian v. U. K., (15) at p. 178.
See also Yasapala v. Wickramasinghe, (115).
In Visuvalingam & Others v. Liyanage,
(27) at p. 375, Soza, J. said: "It would be difficult for
anyone but the repository of power to form an opinion as to the occasion for
its exercise. He is entrusted with the maintenance of public security. He has a
better "feel" of the crisis with the intelligence services at his
command than anyone else. . ."
The petitioner
contended that "the imposing of censorship in this manner has, in any
event, been rendered an obsolete exercise by the advent of the communication
revolution with its laptop publishing facilities, satellite telephones,
portable scanners and TV transmission equipment that
Page 385
transmit news at the
speed of light." I agree that if information has been already made public
or had ceased to be confidential, it would be unnecessary to prevent
disclosure. Weber v. Switzerland,
(105) at p. 524; The Observer and the Guardian v. U. K.,
(15) paras 67 70; The Sunday Times v. U. K., (16) at pp. 243 244; Vereninging Weekblad Bluf v. The
Netherlands, (116) at p. 203.
However, there was no evidence in the instant case that information that
had in fact been disclosed or ceased to be confidential was being suppressed by
the regulations. The possibility that prohibited information may be transmitted
always exists; but that does not carry with it the corollary that such
information should not, in the interests of national security, be classified as
confidential.
Having regard
to all the circumstances, I am of the view that the restrictions imposed were
not disproportionate to the legitimate aim of the regulation, namely, the
furtherance of the interests of national security within the meaning of Article
15(7) of the Constitution, and that a
fair balance between competing interests has been struck. The restrictions
complained of correspond to a countervailing social need sufficiently pressing
to outweigh and overbear the petitioner's, (and having regard to the societal
value of Article 14(l) (a), as well
as the public's) interest in freedom of speech and expression, within the
meaning of the Constitution.
ORDER
For the reasons
set out in my judgment, I declare that the petitioner's fundamental rights
guaranteed by Articles 10, 12(1) and
14(l) (a) have not been violated, and
dismiss the petition.
Page 386
In all the circumstances, I make no order as to costs.
WADUGODAPITIYA, J.����� I agree.
WEERASEKERA, J. ����������� I agree.
Application dismissed.