Court High Court of Tanzania - Dodoma
Judge Lugakingira J
Flynote
Constitutional Law - Supremacy of Parliament - Power
of Parliament to amend the Constitution - Whether limitless
Constitutional Law - Fundamental Rights enshrined in
the Constitution - Whether Parliament can amend constitutional Provisions
safeguarding fundamental rights
Litigation - Locus standi - Sufficient personal
interest in the subject of litigation - Extent of interest in private law and
public law litigation distinguished
Locus Standi - Constitutional Rights - Locus Standi in
litigation for basic constitutional rights - No particular right of Petitioner
is infringed - Whether Petitioner has locus standi - Article 30(3) of the
Constitution.
Litigation - Public Interest Litigation - Whether
sufficient interest is necessary in public interest litigation - Article 26(2)
of the Constitution
Civil Practice and Procedure - Stay of proceedings -
Suit brought on an issue already pending
before another court - Whether subsequent suit may proceed - Section 8 of the
Civil Procedure Code, 1966.
Statutory interpretation - Interpretation of
Constitutional provisions - Constitutional Provision being in conflict with
another provision of the Constitution - Use of the harmonisation principle of
statutory interpretation
Constitution - Constitution of the United Republic of
Tanzania - Union Matters under the Constitution - Appointment of persons from
Zanzibar to offices of non-union matters on the Mainland - Whether
Constitutional
Headnote
The petitioner was a human rights campaigner and
political activist. In his petition he invited the High Court to consider
whether certain amendments to the Constitution were validly made as they appear
to infringe the right to participation in national public affairs and freedom
of association, both of which are guaranteed by the Constitution. The
petitioner also invited the Court to declare a number of statutory provisions
unconstitutional for infringing rights and freedoms guaranteed under the
Constitution. These were some provisions of the Political Parties Act 1992
which,
the petitioner claimed, infringed freedom of
association; some provisions of the election laws which made it impossible for
independent candidates to contest in elections; certain provisions of the
Newspapers Act 1976 which he claimed were arbitrary and liable to abuse, and an
infringement to freedom of expression; and certain provisions of the Police
Force Ordinance, Cap 322, and the Political Parties Act 1992 which, he claimed,
infringed the constitutional right to peaceful assembly and public expression
by requiring a permit to be obtained before one can hold a public meeting or a
rally. The petitioner also sought a declaration whether or not the appointment
of people from Zanzibar to offices in Mainland Tanzania dealing with non-union
matters was constitutional. Besides opposing the petition on substantive
grounds, preliminary objections were raised for the Respondent regarding
whether the petitioner had locus standi, whether he had a cause of action, and
whether the issues he raised were justiciable.
Held:
(i) The orthodox common law position regarding
locus standi no longer holds good in the context of constitutional litigation
in that the notion of sufficient personal interest over and above the interest
of the general public has more to do with private law rather than public law;
in matters of public interest litigation the Court will not deny standing to a
genuine and bona fide litigant even where he has no personal interest in the
matter;
(ii) In the circumstances of Tanzania, if a
public spirited individual springs up in search of the Court's intervention
against legislation or actions that pervert the Constitution, the Court, as
guardian and trustee of the Constitution, must grant him standing;
(iii) The principles of public interest litigation
are expressed in the Constitution of Tanzania by vesting in every person the
capacity of an individual by virtue of articles 12 to 24 of the Constitution,
and the capacity of a member of the community by virtue of articles 25 to 28 of
the Constitution, thereby equipping the individual with double standing to sue;
(iv) The petitioner in this case has locus standi
by virtue of article 30(3) of the Constitution which entitles a person
who alleges that a basic right is being or is likely to be contravened in
relation to him to institute proceedings for relief in the High Court, as well
as by virtue of article 26(2) of the
Constitution which entitles every person to institute proceedings for the
protection of the Constitution and of legality;
(v) Article
26(2) of the Constitution is an independent and additional source of
standing according to which personal interest is not necessary in order to
institute proceedings; the article is tailored for the community and it enacts
into the Constitution of Tanzania the doctrine of public interest litigation
(vi) In
this petition the dispute is over the validity of various laws and that suffices to constitute a cause of action; it
is not always necessary for powers under those laws to be exercised first so as
to give rise to a cause of action;
(vii) Fundamental rights are not gifts from the
state but they inhere in a person by virtue of birth, and they are prior to the
state and the law; the enactment of those rights in the Constitution is mere
evidence of their recognition and the intention that they should be enforceable
in a court of law, and an intention that those rights should not be arbitrarily
restricted by the state;
(viii) Parliament is given very wide powers to amend
constitutional provisions, including those providing for basic human rights,
but those powers of Parliament can only be exercised subject to the limits
imposed by articles 30(2) and 31 of the Constitution; what is beyond the powers of Parliament to amend is
only the ethic of human rights but not the letter by which those rights are
expressed;
(ix) The constitutional amendments which brought article 20(2) and (3) of the Constitution
laying conditions for registration of political parties, and those in article
39 of the Constitution relating to qualifications to contest in presidential,
parliamentary and local government elections, were all validly enacted; the
amendments do not abrogate, beyond the limits set by article 30(2) of the Constitution, freedom of association and the
right to participate in national public affairs which are guaranteed under the
Constitution;
(x) As the issue of the constitutionality of
certain provisions of the Political Parties Act 1992 is also substantially an
issue in an appeal already pending before the Court of Appeal, in terms of s 8 of the Civil Procedure Code 1966,
decision on that issue is stayed until the outcome of the said appeal;
(xi) The constitutionality of a statutory
provision is not found in what could happen in its operation but in what it
actually provides for; the mere possibility of a statutory provision being
abused in actual operation will not make it invalid;
(xii) Section
40 of the Police Force Ordinance, Cap 322, and s 11(1) of the Political
Parties Act 1992, hi-jack the right to peaceful assembly and procession
guaranteed under the constitution and place it under the personal disposition
and absolute discretion of the District Commissioner without adequate or any
safeguard against arbitrary exercise of that discretion; they infringe the
right to freedom of peaceful assembly and procession, and are therefore
unconstitutional;
(xiii) Section
41 of the Police Force Ordinance does not take away the right to hold
assemblies or processions but only empowers the Police and the magistracy to
step in for preserving peace and order whenever the holding or continuance of
an assembly or procession is likely to cause a breach of the peace; it seeks to
ensure public safety and public order, and is therefore a valid provision saved
by article 30(2)(b) of the Constitution;
(xiv) Sections
42 and 43 of the Police Force Ordinance, which define an unlawful assembly
and punish it, are constitutionally valid provisions which seek to ensure
public safety and order, and to ensure that the rights and freedoms of others,
and the public interest, are not prejudiced by the misuse of an individual
rights and freedom;
(xv) As article
21(1) of the Constitution entitles every citizen to participate in the
government of the country, either directly or through freely elected
representatives, it is illogical for that Constitution to provide, as it does
in articles 20(4) and 39, 67 and 77
as amended, that no person shall be compelled to belong to a political party
and in the same breath to provide that no person shall run for office except
through a political party;
(xvi) The right of every citizen to participate in
government under article 21(1) of the Constitution is to be exercised
according to a procedure set by or under a law; while participation through a
political party is a procedure, the requirement that participation shall be
through a political party only is not a procedural matter but a substantive
condition taking away the right to participate for citizens who do not belong
to political parties;
(xvii) In interpreting the Constitution when a
constitutional provision enacting a fundamental right appears to conflict with
another constitutional provision, the Court is enjoined to incline to the
realisation of the fundamental rights and may disregard the other provision if
its application would result in injustice; it is the fundamental rights, and
not the restrictions on them which are fundamental, and it is the fundamental
rights which the Court is enjoined to guard jealously, not the restrictions.
(xviii) The amendments made in articles 39, 67 and 77 of
the Constitution, restricting the right to contest in elections to
political party candidates only, are capable of being abused to confine the
right of governing to a few and to render illusory the emergence of a truly
democratic society; not withstanding those restrictions, it shall be lawful for
private candidates to contest elections along with political party candidates;
(xix) Breach of the Constitution is such a grave and
serious matter that cannot be established by mere inference but by proof beyond
reasonable doubt; in this case it has not been proved that the appointment of
persons from Zanzibar to offices in non-union departments in Tanzania Mainland
is in breach of the Constitution of the United Republic
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