THOMAS MJENGI v REPUBLIC 1992 TLR 157 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania - Domoma
Judge Mwalusanya J
23 June, 1992
Flynote
Legal Representation - Legal Aid - Denial of right to legal aid paid for by the state -
Right B to be informed of the right to legal representation by the trial court.
Criminal Practice and Procedure - Sentencing - Power of subordinate courts in
sentencing - Mandatory minimum sentence of 30 years imprisonment
unconstitutional - Corporal C punishment unconstitutional - The disproportionate
test.
Constitutional Law - Derogation clause - Interpretation and applicability.
Criminal Law - Armed Robbery - An offence under section 285 and 286 of the Penal
Code. D
-Headnote
In an appeal against conviction and sentence the judge found that the subordinate
trial court erred in not informing the appellants of their right to free legal aid paid for
by the state and that the subordinate trial court had no power to sentence the
appellants to a E term of imprisonment of a period exceeding eight years. The judge
also found that the mandatory minimum sentence of 30 years imprisonment and
corporal punishment were unconstitutional and were not saved by the derogation
clause in the constitution. The judge also found that the offence of armed robbery
exists in the Penal Code. F
Held: (i) The trial is a nullity because the appellants who are indigent were denied of
their statutory and constitutional right to legal representation paid for by the state; G
(ii) the trial was also a nullity because the appellants were not informed of
their right to have legal representation;
(iii) as regards sentence, the final magistrate had no power to pass a sentence
of over eight years imprisonment;
H (iv) the mandatory minimum sentence of 30 years imprisonment under the
minimum sentences Act No. 1 of 1972 as amended by Act No. 10 of 1989 is
unconstitutional and void because it is an inhuman and degrading punishment;
(v) the mandatory minimum sentence of 122 strokes of corporal punishment is
unconstitutional and void as it is an inhuman I
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MWALUSANY J
and degrading punishment prohibited by article 13(b)(e) of the Constitution. The A
proper test whether a punishment is inhuman and degrading is the disproportionate
test;
(vi) a derogation clause should not be interpreted as entitling the government
to impose vague or arbitrary limitations on basic human rights; but that limitation
should B be reasonable and only be invoked when there exists adequate safeguards
and effective remedies against abuse;
(vii) armed robbery is provided for in sections 285 and 286 of the Penal Code.
It is committed where the offender is armed with any dangerous or offensive weapon
or instrument. C
[zJDz]Judgment
Mwalusanya, J.:
I. Introduction D
The two appellants Thomas s/o Mjengi and Ramadhani s/o Mussa whose appeals have
been consolidated were charged and convicted of robbery with violence c/s 285 and
286 of the Penal Code Cap. 16. They were each sentenced to the prescribed minimum
sentence of 30 years imprisonment and ten(sic) strokes of corporal punishment. They
E are now appealing against conviction and sentence. Under s.3 of the Legal Aid
(Criminal Proceedings) Act No. 21/1969 I granted legal aid to the two appellants so
that an advocate paid for by the government could argue their appeals. One Mr. F
Mbezi was assigned to prosecute the appeal on behalf of the appellants.
Counsel for the appellants Mr. Mbezi in his amended memorandum of appeal, raised
three matters of constitutional importance and which are of public interests. The
matters involve the interpretation of our Constitution with regard to the basic
freedoms and G rights. The Senior State Attorney, Dodoma who is the representative
of the Attorney General was duly served with the amended memorandum of appeal
and was quite aware of the constitutional matters raised - and so s. 17A(2) of the cap.
360 as amended by Act No. 27/1991 was duly complied with. H
The three constitutional matters raised are:
First that the trial was a nullity because the indigent appellants were denied their
right to free legal aid payable by the state nor were they informed of their right to
engage counsel at their own expense; secondly that the mandatory Minimum
Sentence of 30 I years imprisonment is an inhuman and degrading punishment and
so
1992 TLR p159
MWALUSANY J
unconstitutional; Thirdly that corporal punishment is an inhuman and degrading A
punishment and so unconstitutional. Besides those three constitutional matters,
counsel Mr. Mbezi has also stated that the conviction was against the weight of
evidence; and that the appellants were convicted of armed robbery an offence which
is non-existence in the Penal Code and in any case they were convicted with an
offence they had not B been charged with.
II. The Right to Legal Representation
On this point counsel for the appellants Mr. Mbezi based his argument on my recent
C decision in the case of Khamisi Hamis Manywele v R. Dodoma H.C. Crim. Appeal
No. 39/1990 (unreported), which I understand has gone to the Tanzania Court of
Appeal, on appeal by the D.P.P. Therefore I will not spend much time discussing the
genesis of the right to legal representation, as most of the points canvassed were D
thoroughly documented in the Manywele case (supra).
Suffice here to briefly state what that right is all about. The right to legal
representation stands on two legs: The constitutional right and the statutory right. E
The constitutional right to legal representation stands on two legs - first under Art.
13(6)(a) of our Constitution which provides for the right to be heard. There are three
persuasive authorities which interpret the phrase 'fair hearing' in their Constitutions
to include the right to legal representation paid for by the State for an indigent person
F whose constitutional rights are at stake. First we have the case of Powell v Alabama
(1932) 287 U.S. 45 decided by the U.S.A. Supreme Court. Then from Zimbabwe the
Supreme Court there in the case of Dube & another v The State: Supreme Court
Judgment No.2 12/1988. That case is defended by Hon. Mr. Justice A.R. Gubbay of G
the Zimbabwe Supreme Court in his paper of 'Third Commonwealth Africa Judician
Conference' in Lusaka, Zambia April 1990, Titled 'Judicial Review in the enjoyment
of Human Rights' published in the Commonwealth Law Bulletin Vol. 16 No.3 of July
1990 from pp. 992 - 1001. The third persuasive authority is the decision of the H
Supreme Court of the Republic of Ireland in the case of The State (Healy) v Donoghue
(1976) IR.325. That decision is defended by the Hon. Mr. Justice John Kenny of the
Supreme Court of the Republic of Ireland in his article 'A Bill of Rights' published in
the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly (1979) Vol.10 No.3 at p. 195. I
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MWALUSANY J
The second leg on which the constitutional right rests is on the right to personal A
freedom under Art. (15(2) of our Constitution. That Article stipulates that no one
shall be deprived of his personal liberty except by procedure established by law. In
India in the case of Maneka Gandhi v Union of India (1978) 2 S.C.R. 248, interpreting
a B similar provision, it was held by the Supreme Court there, that no procedure can
be regarded as reasonable, fair and just which does not afford legal representation to
an accused person who is placed in jeopardy of his life or personal liberty in a
criminal proceedings. The above decision was in principle adopted by the Tanzania
Court of C Appeal in the case, of D.P.P. v Daudi Pete: Crim. Appeal No. 28/1990
(unreported). The right to legal representation for the poor, includes the right to be
informed of that right by the trial court, so decided the supreme Court of India in the
Maneka Gandhi case (supra). The Hon. Mr. Justice Bhagwati, the former C.J. of India
defends the D above case, in his article 'Human Rights as evolved by the
jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of India published in the Commonwealth Law
Bulletin Vol. 13 No. 1 of January 1987 at pp.230 - 245.
In fact the right to legal representation for the poor is recognized all over the world.
It E is contained in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (1976), Art. 7(1) of the African
Charter of Human and People's Rights (1981), and Art. 6(3) (1) of the European
Convention on Human Rights (1950). Therefore the right to legal representation is
accepted by the F community of nations as a birthright for every human being.
That is why I hold that the Statutory right to legal representation is contained in s.
310 of the C.P.A. No. 9/1985 as interpreted in the light of international human rights
stands and norms as above adumburated. In short s. 310 of the C.P.A. should be
interpreted to G mean that those who can afford to pay have a right to legal
representation; and those who cannot afford to pay (i.e. who are poor) have an equal
right to free legal aid paid for by the state, as provided in the Legal Aid (Criminal
Proceedings) Act No. 21/1969. H that right includes the right to be informed of that
right by the trial court. Perhaps it important to emphasize that, the above
construction of s.310 of the C.P.A. is inevitable in the light of international human
rights standards and norms. As Mr. Justice A.R. Gubbay of Zimbabwe Supreme Court
states at p. 999 (in his article cited above): I
1992 TLR p161
MWALUSANY J
A In giving meaning to legislation on human rights expressed in general or even
vague terms, where uncertain or incomplete, there is ample scope for a Judge to look
to international developments and drawn upon them in seeking a solution.
International human rights instruments and precedents ...... provide invaluable
information and guidance. A judicial decision has greater legitimacy and will
command more respect if it B accords with international norms that have been
accepted by many countries, than if it is based upon the parochial experience or
foibles of a particular Judge or Court.
That is one way of reaching at the conclusion that there exists a statutory right to
legal C representation for the poor i.e. by way of seeking guidance from
international human rights instruments.
The other way of establishing the statutory right to legal representation is the
generous and purposive construction of S.310 of the C.P.A interpreted in the light of
Act No. D 21/1969. Those provisions were enacted to inculcate in our heads that
justice should not only be done, but should be seen to be done. It will be recalled that
before the 1969 legislation, the right to legal representation for poor accused persons
was restricted to capital offences (murder, treason and manslaughter). However after
the 1969 Act, E the right to legal representation for poor accused persons was
extended to cover non-capital offences like theft, causing grievous harm, robbery
e.t.c. which are triable by the District Courts and R.M.'s Courts.
Counsel for the appellants Mr. Mbezi has exclaimed at the existing anomaly. He said
F for offences like incest or written threats to murder, punishable with a maximum
of not more 5 years and 7 years imprisonment respectively, the offenders are provided
free legal aid by the State simply because the offences are triable by the High Court.
However offenders charged with offences like armed robbery, punishable with a G
minimum of 30 years imprisonment, are not provided with free legal aid, simply
because the offender is charged in a subordinate court. That is unfortunate. It is
submitted that the correct interpretation of the decision of the Tanzania Court of
Appeal in the case of Laurent s/o Joseph v R. [1981] T.L.R. 351, is that in either case
whether the H offence is trible by the High Court or subordinate court, the trial is a
nullity if the indigent accused person was not provided with counsel, at least for all
serious offences.
That a certifying authority under s.3 of the Legal Aid (Crim. Proceedings) Act No. I
21/1969 has a discretion to refuse or grant
1992 TLR p162
MWALUSANY J
legal aid to a poor accused person, is a myth. The E.A.C.A. in the case of Mohamed A
s/o Salim v R: [1958] E.A. 202 which originated from Tanganyika, said at p. 203:
That in such a case (the certifying authority) should give the matter anxious
consideration before deciding to refuse a certificate for legal aid on the ground of
sufficiency of means; B that a reasonably liberal interpretation ought to be placed on
the section and that in case of doubt the discretion should be exercised in the
prisoners' favour.
I wish only to point out that s.3 of the Poor Prisons Defence Ordinance Cap.21 which
C the above case was interpreting is in pari materia with our s. 3 of Act No. 21/1969.
In fact Prof. James Read in his tours de force article 'The Advantage of Counsel' in the
'East African Law Journal' Vol. VIII NO. 4 (1971) concludes at p.294 that the
certifying authority has no option but to grant legal aid if the accused is poor. He says:
D
Although the decision in the Gales Hired v The King: [1944] A.C. 149 turned
in part upon the mandatory nature of the legislative provision for legal aid in
Somaliland, it has been E regarded as establishing a general principle - see for
example, the remarks of E.A.C.A. in Samson v R. [1958] E.A.681 at p. 682 at p. 683
where they said: 'We do not think that anything turns upon the fact that appellants
were entitled as of right to have an advocate assigned'. See also the judgment of
Bennet J. of High Court of Uganda in Yusufu s/o F Gita v R. [1958] E.A. 211 at p.
213: 'Every accused has the undoubted right to be defended by counsel.
It is astonishing to learn that since 1969 the members of the Judiciary and the Bar G
have with a calculated conspiracy of silence, buried their heads in the sand like
ostriches, pretending that they are unaware of the above authorities of the E.A.C.A.
Without shame they have glorified the right of these who can afford to be defended
by H counsel, while quite obvious to the similar right of poor persons tried by
subordinate courts. Such an anomalous practice can be seen in such cases as: D.P.P. v
Rugaimkamu [1982] TLR 139; Alimasi Kalumbeta v R: [1982] T.L.R. 329; Joshwa s/o
Nkonoki v R. [1978] L.R.T. n. 24, Mugema v R: [1967] E.A. 676. The I poor accused
persons triable by the subordinate courts and Economic Crimes Courts have been
completely forgotten. The judiciary and
1992 TLR p163
MWALUSANY J
members of the Bar are in the dock for having left the poor accused persons in the A
cold for far too long since 1969.
Counsel for the Republic Mr. Kifunda was candid enough to concede that a poor
accused person has a statutory right to be provided with free legal aid and to be
informed of that right by the trial court. He said that that right stems from the B
purposeful construction of s.310 of the C.P.A. as read in the light of s. 3 of the Act No.
21/1969. He said for all serious offences triable by the subordinate courts, poor
accused persons have the right to free legal aid paid for by the state. He conceded that
the trial in this case was a nullity, and said that he would pray for a retrial. C
However Mr. Kifunda would not go as far as stating that a poor accused person has a
constitutional right to free legal aid. He said that so long as an accused person has
failed to perform his duties to society by committing a crime, then he forfeits his
rights to free legal aid as per Act 29(1) of our Constitution. It is the same point that
prompted D Mr. Kifunda to appeal to the Tanzania Court of Appeal in the Manywele
case (supra). The short answer to that argument is that it is faulty in that it
presupposes that the poor accused person has already been found guilty. And I
wonder if it makes any great difference if the right to free legal aid for poor accused
persons is founded on a E statutory provision or a constitutional provision.
In the event I held that the trial was a nullity because these poor appellants were
denied of their statutory and constitutional right to free legal aid, and were not
informed of that F right by the trial court.
III. Mandatory Minimum Sentence of 30 years imprisonment whether an
inhuman and degrading punishment G
Under Act.13(6)(e) of our Constitution, it is provided that, for the purposes of
ensuring equality before the law, the state shall make provisions to the effect that no
person shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment.
The test as to whether a mandatory minimum sentence is inhuman and degrading is
H the disproportionate test which is now universally recognised. Punishment which
is so excessive, arbitrary, unusual or disproportionate to the offence as to shock the
public conscience, that is the conscience of a reasonable man is prohibited. The
provision encompasses a cardinal principle of human justice, namely that punishment
should be I proportional to the offence for
1992 TLR p164
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which it is enacted. The said provision draws its meaning from the evolving standards
A of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society. The disproportionate test
was first propounded in the U.S.A. by the Supreme Court in the case of Weems v
United States (1910) 217 U.S. 349 which was discussing the eighth Amendment of the
U.S. B constitution. The matter was revisited in Tropp v Dulles (1958) 356 U.S. 86, L.
Ed. 630 and later in the case of Furman v Georgia: (1972) 408 U.S. 238 and the case of
Hart v Ceiner: (1973) 433 F. 2d. 136.
The above mentioned test was adopted by the supreme Court of Papua New Guinea
C in Reference by the Marobe Provincial Government (1958) L.R.C. (Const.) 642. In
there a bench of five judges sat to decide if the Summary Offences Act which
provided for mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years and other mandatory
minimum fine sentences were constitutional and not an inhuman and degrading
punishment. Among D the five judges, three (Bredmeyer, Kaputin and McDermott
JJJ.) agreed that the disproportionate test was the proper test in the circumstances.
However the other two judges (Kidu C.J. and Kapi D.C.J.) did not agree that the
disproportionate test ought to be invoked.
Two of the three judges who invoked the disproportionate test (i.e. Bredmeyer and E
Kaputin JJ.) held that:
1. That the minimum penalties here, although high were not so excessive
as to offend Act. 36 of the Constitution. They said that although the sentences were
very severe, F they were not so disproportionate as to be regarded as excessive and
unconscionable. They said the sentences reflected a legitimate need for strongly
deterrent penalties, providing an index of contemporary community standards.
G 2. The minimum penalties do not infringe the constitution because the
harshness of those penalties is tempered by s.138 of the District Court Act which
allows for imposing lesser sentences if special reasons are shown as regards character,
antecedents, age, health or mental condition of the accused or trivial nature of the H
offence or to the extenuating circumstances under which the offence was committed.
On the other hand the third judge Mc Dermott J. invoking the disproportionate test I
found that the minimum sentences prescribed
1992 TLR p165
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offended the constitution because each of them imposed a penalty which would be A
wholly disproportionate to the offence in readily imaginable situations, as the
impugned legislation treated all offences in each category as equally reprehensible up
to an arbitrarily set level of punishment, preventing the court considering any of the
usual factors relevant in sentencing individuals. B
More recently the Zimbabwe Supreme Court invoked the disproportionate test in the
case of The State v Arab [1990] 1. Z.L.R. 253. It concerned the precious Stones Trade
Act, 1978 which prescribed minimum sentences for those found dealing in precious
stones illegally. The appellant was convicted of dealing in emeralds and was C
sentenced to three years imprisonment, being the minimum sentence. The court
found no special reasons which could make it pass a sentence lesser than the
minimum. The Supreme Court held that the power of the trial court to consider and if
appropriated find special reasons allowed for a sentence which was not necessarily
disproportionate. D So the provision was held not to be unconstitutional. A
disproportionate test had earlier been invoked by the Zimbabwe Supreme Court in
Ncube, Tshuma and Ndhlovu v The State [1988] 2 S.A.L.R. 702(ZS) a case which
concerned the constitutionality of the punishment of whipping. E
In Botswana, the Court of Appeal in the case of the State v Petrus [1985] L.R.C.
(Const.) 699 agreed that the disproportionate test was the appropriate test to find out
if any punishment prescribed by legislation was constitutional or not i.e. it was not
cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. F
The above discussion vindicates my earlier statement that the disproportionate test is
universally recognised and accepted. I adopt it for use in Tanzania. It will be seen
from the above discussion that the disproportionate test focuses on two factors which
may render the punishment unconstitutional: First if the minimum sentence is
arbitrarily G fixed. Secondly if the sentence is inherently excessive or
unconscionable.
On the first point I am satisfied that the Minimum Sentences Act No. 1/1972 as
amended by Act No. 10/1989 has fixed the minimum sentences arbitrarily. What the
H challenged legislation here effectively does is treat all offences as equally
reprehensible up to an arbitrarily set level of punishment. Thus all offences of armed
robbery have a minimum sentence of 30 years, while simple robbery has a minimum
of 15 years, attempted armed robbery a minimum level of punishment is simply not
called for. This I crudely applied across - the board, approach denies to the person
being punished
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any consideration of the following factors: degree of participation, the age of the A
offender, the offender's previous good record, the remorse and prevalence of the
offence e.t.c. If the courts in Tanzania were allowed to pass a lesser sentence if special
reasons are adduced, then that would have been alright and the legislation would
have been constitutional as shown by the two cases cited above (Morobe case) from B
Papua New Guinea and the Arab case from Zanzibar. In order for the Act No. 1/1972
to be Constitutional, s.6(1) of the Act should be amended such that special reasons
should be allowed to be adduced for every convict and not only to those convicted on
property not exceeding T.Shs. 100/=!!! Moreover the Minimum Sentences Act in C
applying minimum terms of imprisonment carte-blanche preclude considerations
being given to (a) probation (b) conditional discharge (c) suspended sentences (d)
entering into recognizances etc. That much it has rendered the impugned legislation
to be arbitrary and disproportionate. D
On the second point, I am of the considered view that the minimum sentence of 30
years imprisonment is disproportionate because it is excessive or unconscionable even
for the offence of armed robbery. A punishment is 'excessive' if it makes no
measurable contribution to acceptable goals of punishment and hence is nothing
more than the E purpose and needless imposition of pain and suffering. Brian
Slattery in his book A Handbook on Sentencing in Tanzania (1972) E.A. Literature
Bureau says at p. 27:
F Punishment for criminal offences is generally viewed as serving one or more
of three main purposes: (a) deterrence, both of the criminal himself (special
deterrence) and also of society at large (general deterrence), (b) the rehabilitation of
the criminal; and (c) G restraint - the isolation of the hardened or dangerous
criminal from society. These objectives are seen as constituting the ultimate
justification for sentence imposed by a court in place of the more traditional view
which simply holds that evil men deserve to be punished, which notion is sometimes
called retribution or the notion of justice. H
The government takes rehabilitation as of top priority as shown in s.61 of the Prisons
Act No. 34/1967 - wherein emphasis is laid on training of prisoners so that when the
prisoner comes out he becomes a good citizen usefully self employed. Now the 30 I
years imprisonment is self-defeating because that period is the life-expectancy
1992 TLR p167
MWALUSANY J
of a Tanzanian, on the average, and so the rehabilitation policy is not in place. It A
appears the government on enacting those severe sentences had in mind only
retribution and restraint of the offenders. But it should be remembered that restraint
of offenders is reserved for recidivists only (hardened and dangerous criminals). And
retribution as a sentencing policy is old fashioned and uncivilised as is espouses
sadism? It will be B seen therefore that the punishment of 30 years minimum
sentence, goes beyond legitimate penal objectives and does not bear a rational
relationship to the accomplishment of penological goals which are of sufficient
importance to justify its severity. The 30 years imprisonment is indeed purposeless
and needless imposition of C pain and suffering, as the legislative purpose could be
served by a less severe punishment.
Therefore to suggest that our Parliament had seriously addressed itself to the whole
issue of sentencing is a premise which is obviously suspect. This is because it is both
D simplistic and unrealistic to suggest that an increase in the severity of punishment
by itself will have any significant impact on existing patterns of crime.
Where moral values are central to a problem such as crime, the legal system struggles
E to achieve even incidental significance. The working of the criminal justice system
can have little, if any, impact on complex sociological phenomena. Any discussion of
crime and punishment inevitably overlooks, the heart of the dilemma. Really, what
we have is a major problem involving education and policing. F
A sociological phenomenon cannot be effectively influenced by judicial band-aiding.
Imposing harsh sentences indiscriminately is nothing other than Kangaroo justice. It
just does not work and stands little chance of effectively influencing current crime
rate. So G we cannot look for the courts alone, otherwise that would be a
fundamental misunderstanding of the role of the courts. All that the justice seem can
reasonably do at the present time is to maintain a predictable and reasonable response
to the increasing crime rate, in terms of what most Tanzanians really and truly might
be the H consequences of detection on conviction (moderate prison sentences). Any
major change can only be effected at the political level, when, if ever, our legislators
are encouraged to get serious about what has become a problem of grave national
importance. It is my finding therefore that the minimum sentence of 30 years is I
unconstitutional because it is inhuman. It is inhuman because it is
1992 TLR p168
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disproportionate and excessive - as it makes no measurable contribution to A
acceptable goals of punishment; and goes beyond legitimate penal objectives. It bares
no rational relationship to the accomplishment of pennological goals. As White J. said
in the case of Furman v Georgia (supra) at p. 391 this punishment is with only
marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purpose. A penalty with
such B negligible returns to the State would be patently excessive and unusual and
cruel punishment violative of the Eighth Amendment.
Therefore I don't agree with the State Attorney Mr. Kifunda that the sentence of 30
years imprisonment is proportionate to the offence of armed robbery. I subscribed to
C the view canvassed by the defence counsel Mr. Mbezi that the sentence of 30 years
is too severe to deserve to be termed inhuman and cruel. Mr. Mbezi also contended
that under Art. 15(2) of our Constitution, Parliament is empowered to take away the
personal freedom of an individual only by using law which is fair, reasonable and not
D arbitrary. He said that the law on criminal procedure and evidence should be fair
and reasonable; and that the law on sentencing should also be fair and reasonable.
That he said is the full import of the case of D.P.P. v Daudi Pete Crim. Appeal No. 28
of E 1990 (CAT) which had cited the Indian case of Maneka Gandhi v Union of India
(1978) 2 SCR 248. So he said that since a sentence of 30 years imprisonment is
patently excessive, then it offends the doctrine expounded in the Daudi Pete case. At
this stage, all I can say is that there is merit in the argument brought forth by the
defence counsel. F
IV. Corporal Punishment - is it a torture or inhuman and degrading punishment?
Corporal punishment is one of the punishments permissible under s. 28 of the Penal
G Code Cap. 16 and where imposed, it is to be inflicted in accordance with the
Corporal Punishment ordinance Cap. 17 and the Corporal Punishment Order (G.N.
74/1930 and G.N. No. 76/1941) made thereunder. The independent government of
Tanganyika H made corporal punishment mandatory for certain offences under the
Minimum Sentences Act No. 29/1963. The Bill was greeted with enthusiasm by
parliamentarians some of whom went even further than the government proposals
suggesting more torture as part of punishing offenders - see L.P. Shaidi in his
"Explaining Crime and Social I Control in Tanzania Mainland: An Historical Socioeconomic
Perspective", A Ph.D. Thesis submitted
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to the University of Dar es Salaam in 1985, at pp. 323-331 where the author quotes A
the Parliamentary Debate.
In 1972 mandatory corporal punishment was abolished by the Minimum sentences
Act No. 1/1972 only to be brought back in 1989 by Act No. 10/1989. Once again the
honourable members of Parliament shocked the nation by applauding the B reintroduction
of corporal punishment. One member even suggested that such
punishment should be administered in public (market place) and that women
offenders should not be exempted - see the Daily News of 25/4/1989.
Defending the Bill against an objection of a lone parliamentarian on the ground that
C corporal punishment might be contrary to the Bill of Rights, the Minister for
Justice and Attorney General argued that bandits and robbers were breaching the
rights of other citizens and therefore it was in the interest of the community at large
that corporal punishment was being re-introduced. The Minister proffered his legal
opinion that the D Constitutional validity of the proposed law would be covered
under the derogation clause Art. 30 of the Constitution - see Radio Tanzania Report
of the Parliamentary proceedings, excerpts broadcast live on 24/4/1989.
It appears to me that basically two different situations can render punishment to be E
cruel, inhuman and degrading. First a punishment which is not inherently inhuman
or degrading may become so by the mode of execution. Secondly that certain types of
punishment are inherently or by their nature cruel, inhuman or degrading e.g.
infliction of acute pain and suffering. I shall discuss these two situations seriation. F
As stated above the mode of executing of the punishment can render that punishment
to be cruel and degrading. That was the decision of the full bench of five judges of the
Court of Appeal of Botswana in the case of The State v Petrus & Anor: (1985) L.R.C.
(Const.) 699. That court led by Maisels P. held that the manner of punishment G
which was administered by repeated and delayed instalments of corporal punishment
was ultra vires the constitution. The legislation there had provided that the convicted
person should be given four strokes each quarter in the first and last years of his term
H of imprisonment, and the prescribed penalties of imprisonment with corporal
punishment were mandatory sentences. In the course of its decision, the Court of
Appeal drew support from decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, the U.S.
Supreme Court and to a strong dissenting opinion of the Privy Council in Riley &
others I
1992 TLR p170
MWALUSANY J
v A.G. of Jamaica (1982) 3 All ER 469. In fact Hon. Mr. Justice Aguda said at A p.p.
727 - 728:
I am entirely in agreement with the submission of Mr. Hodes for the
appellants that corporal punishment administered by instalments when tacked onto a
term of B imprisonment, cannot but bring about aggravated torture upon the human
being made subject to that sort of punishment. To describe such a type of punishment
as degrading is perhaps the very least that can be said of it.
In fact that was the view of the State Attorney Mr.Kifunda in this case. Commenting
C on the manner or mode of executing punishment as one of the causes of cruel
punishment Mr. Justice Blackman of the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Jackson &
others v Bishop (1968) 404 F. 2d 571 said at pp. 579 - 580: D
There can be no argument that excessive whipping or an inappropriate
manner of whipping or too great frequency of whipping or the use of studded or over
long straps, all constitute cruel and unusual punishment. Corporal punishment
generates hate toward E the keepers who punish and toward the system which
permits it. It is degrading to the punisher and to the punished alike. This record cries
out with testimony to this effect from the expert penologists, from the inmates and
from their keepers. F
Now Tanzania like Botswana has a legislation which sanctions corporal punishment
by instalments. The Minimum sentences Act No. 1/1972 as amended by Act No.
10/1989 introduced corporal punishment by instalments. The Corporal punishment
Ord. Cap. G 17 is amended in s.12 whereof corporal punishment shall be inflicted in
the instalments, each consisting of six strokes, the first instalment at the
commencement of the term of imprisonment and the other immediately before the
person in question is finally released. That is a horrible situation. H
It is noteworthy that postponed whipping or whipping by instalments was deemed as
cruel as long ago as 1880 in apartheid South Africa. In the case of Queen v Nortje
(1880) 1 EDC 231 the Eastern District Court of South Africa held that corporal
punishment by instalments (part of the lashes to be inflicted at one end the reminder
at I the expiration of the sentence) was illegal. The case of
1992 TLR p171
MWALUSANY J
Queen v Hans Windvogel and Anor [1881] 2 E.D.C. 98 is to the same effect. That A
court fond it highly objectionable to sentence persons to lashes to be inflicted at the
expiration of a sentence of hard labour. It is my finding therefore that corporal
punishment in this case, is unconstitutional because it is cruel, inhuman and
degrading as it is inflicted by instalments. B
The second situation I earlier alluded to, is as to whether corporal punishment is
inherently and by its very nature is cruel, inhuman and degrading. The leading case
in this regard is the decision of the European Court of Human Rights which was cited
with approval both by the Zimbabwe Supreme Court and the Botswana Court of
Appeal. C It is the case of Tyrer v U.K. (1978) 2 E.H.R.R.1, where a 15 year old boy
was sentenced by a juvenile court in the Isle of Man to three strokes of the birch on
conviction of assault. The Court found that, while the punishment in the instant case
did not constitute torture, or inhuman punishment, it did amount to degrading
punishment D and therefore was in violation of Act 3 of the European Convention
which is identical to our Act. 13 (16)(e) of our constitution. The substantive
paragraph in the judgment deserves to be quoted in extenso, they said at p. 11:
E The very nature of judicial corporal punishment is that it involves one human
being inflicting physical violence on another human being. Furthermore, it is
institutionalised violence, that is in the present case violence permitted by the law,
ordered by the judicial authorities of the State and carried out by the police
authorities of the state. Thus, F although the applicant did not suffer any severe or
long-lasting physical effects, his punishment whereby he was treated as an object in
the power of the authorities - Constituted an assault on precisely that which it is one
of the main purposes of Act. 3 to G protect, namely a person's dignity and physical
integrity. Neither can it be excluded that the punishment may have had adverse
psychological effects. The institutionalised character of this violence is further
compounded by the whole aura of official procedure attending the punishment and
by the fact that those inflicting it were total strangers to the offender. H
The aura of official procedure attaining corporal punishment that the European Court
refers to with apparent disgust is even mere disgusting in Tanzania under the
Corporal punishment order which provides: I
1992 TLR p172
MWALUSANY J
A 2. A sentence of corporal punishment shall be inflicted upon adults upon
the bare buttocks with a light rattan cane which is free from knots. Such cane shall be
not less than half an inch and not more than five-eights of an inch in diameter and
shall not exceed Forth-two inches in length.
B 4. During the infliction of a sentence of corporal punishment the person
undergoing punishment shall be so secured that he cannot, by reason of the
movement of his body, cause the strokes to fall upon any other part of his body then
upon which they C are to be inflicted in accordance with this Order.
If as in this case, one has to use a value judgment, it seems to me that the corporal
punishment incapably falls within the definition of inhuman and degrading
punishment. D
In the case decided by the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe Ncube, Tshuma & Ndhlovu v
The state (1988) L.R.C. (Const.) 442 after reviewing the position in Zimbabwe, South
Africa, U.K., Canada, Australia and The United States Mr. Justice Gubbay concluded
that: E
Fortunately on the few occasions where the issue of whether whipping is
Constitutionally defensible has been judicially considered, it appears to have resulted
in little difference of opinion, whether imposed upon an adult person or a juvenile
offender the punishment F in the main has been branded as both cruel and
degrading.
Mr. Justice Gubbay described the penalty of whipping as:
G ... not only inherently brutal and cruel. It is relentless in its severity and
contrary to the traditional humanity practised by almost the whole of the civilised
world, being incompatible with the evolving standards of decency. H
The approach to constitutional interpretation adopted by the Zimbabwe Supreme
Court and Botswana Court of Appeal has been in Bangalore, India in February 1988.
The Bangalore Principles which that meeting adopted, recognised and affirmed the
relevance and importance of: I
1992 TLR p173
MWALUSANY J
A ... 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 uncertain or incomplete.
That view was reiterated by the Commonwealth Judges in the Harare declaration of
B Human Rights (Harare principles - Judicial Colloquium in Harare, Zimbabwe 19-
22nd April 1989) and also in the Banjul Affirmation (Judicial Colloquium in Banjul,
The Gambia 7th to 9th November, 1990).
It is gratifying to note that the Nyalali Commission (1992) (The Presidential C
Commission on whether Tanzania should adopt a one-party or multi-party system) in
its Report, Book Three at p. 10. holds the view that corporal punishment is inherently
cruel, inhuman and degrading and contrary to Art. 13(6)(3) of our Constitution. Such
a considered view from eminent Tanzanians should weigh highly on this court. There
D can be no doubt that corporal punishment is against the dignity of man as
stipulated in Art. 9(1)(a) of our Constitution which is part of the Fundamental
Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy. The Zimbabwe Supreme Court in
the Ncube case (supra) on the same theme said: E
The raison d'etre underlying section 15(1) is nothing less than the dignity of
man. It is a provision that embodies broad and idealistic notions of dignity, humanity
and decency, against which penal measures should be evaluated. It guarantees that
the power of the F State to punish is exercised within the limits of civilised
standards. Punishments which are incompatible with the evolving standards of
decency that mark the progress of maturing society or which involve the unnecessary
and wanton infliction of pain, are repugnant. Thus a penalty that was permissible at
one time in own nation's history is G not necessarily permissible today. What might
not have been regarded as inhuman or degrading decades ago may be revolting to the
new sensitivities which emerge as civilisation advances. H
Those decisions on the unconstitutionality of corporal punishment are examples of
the prudent application of international human rights norms to domestic human
rights law. They identify with evolving standards of decency and humanity. Tanzania
cannot be left behind in that boat. I
1992 TLR p174
MWALUSANY J
Therefore when the Attorney - General suggests above that corporal punishment is A
constitutional because it is saved by the derogation clause in Act. 30(2)(b) of our
Constitution, it beats my comprehension. Act. 30(2)(b) states that a legislation which
infringes the constitution is valid if it is wholly for ensuring the interests of defence,
public B safety, and public order. However as pointed out by the Tanzania Court of
Appeal in the case of the D.P.P. v Daudi Pete Criminal Appeal No. 28 of 1990, any
derogation clause must meet the proportionality test or reasonableness test. It should
be given a restricted but purposive construction, so that the basic rights of the citizens
are not C marginalised nor completely emasculated by the derogation clause. For the
derogation clause to apply to a given situation it must be shown that it is required by
a compelling social need and that it is so framed as not to limit the right in question
more than is necessary to achieve a legitimate objective. For example in the Daudi
Pete case D (supra) it was found that the legislation denying accused persons bail
was too broad as to take away the basic right to freedom to all and sundry. Equally
here the derogation clause cannot be interpreted so broadly so as to cover every cruel,
inhuman and degrading punishment. A derogation clause should not be interpreted as
entitling the E government to impose vague or arbitrary limitations on basic human
rights; but that limitation should be reasonable and only be invoked when there exists
adequate safeguards and effective remedies against abuse. In other words a derogation
provision has to be construed narrowly. I do not conceive it to be the duty of this
court to construe any of the provisions of the Constitution as to defeat the obvious
ends the F Constitution was designed to serve. As the Tanzania Court of Appeal
observed in the case of A.G. v Lesinoi s/o Ndeinai & Others: [1980] T.L.R. 214. 'A
Constitutional provision should not be construed so as to defeat its evident purpose,
but rather so as G to give it effective operation'. I may point out that Prof. Issa G.
Shivji is of the same view that the derogation clause does not save corporal
punishment from being unconstitutional see his paper 'State Coercion and Freedom in
Tanzania' a Monograph by the Institute of Southern African Studies, National
University of Lesotho (1989) at P.22. H
In conclusion I hold that corporal punishment not only is it inherently inhuman and
degrading, and so unconstitutional; but in addition international statements of human
rights indicate that such type of punishment has become simply unacceptable in a
civilized and democratic society. The weight of international opinion is against
corporal I punishment. It is up to us to remain an island on ourselves.
1992 TLR p175
MWALUSANY J
V. Miscellaneous Matters A
Under this head, I will have to consider as to whether the offence of armed robbery
exists, secondly as to whether the trial court had power to impose the sentence that
was awarded and finally review the evidence on record. B
On the first plaint Mr. Mbezi argued that the offence of armed robbery is not
contained in the Penal Code Cap. 16. He said that the trial magistrate was wrong to
sentence the two appellants for an offence which they were not charged with nor
convicted of. In fact that is the same view that was canvassed before Mushi J. in the
case of Ibrahim C Hassani & another v R. Tanga High Court Criminal Appeal No. 92
& 107/1990 that argument found favour with Mr. Justice Mushi who quashed the
sentences. I understand the D.P.P. is appealing to the Tanzania Court of Appeal.
However my considered view is that the offence of armed robbery is there in the
Penal Code in sections 285 and D 286. This comes about if the court invokes a
generous and purposeful construction on the Penal Code and the Minimum Sentences
Act. Armed robbery is committed under sections 285 and 286 where the offender is
armed with any dangerous or offensive weapon or instrument. that is what
Parliament intended to curb. Therefore Mr. E Mbezi's argument fails.
The next point is as to whether the trial magistrate had power to impose a 30 year
prison sentence. It will be recalled that under section 170 (1) of the Criminal
Procedure Act. No. 9/1995 a subordinate court may not pass a sentence of
imprisonment F exceeding eight years for any offence falling under the Minimum
Sentences Act No. 1/1972. However section 170 (4) of the criminal Procedure Act
states:
G The provisions of subsection (1) shall be without prejudice to the provisions of
any written law authorizing a subordinate court to impose in relation to any offence
specified in such written law, a sentence in excess of the sentences provided for in
that subsection. H
That provision was a subject of interpretation by Msumi J. in Abdarahman Abdallah
Magosso v R. Dar es Salaam (High Court) Criminal Appeal No. 36/1990. In the
judgment delivered on 19/9/1991 Msumi J. held that since the provisions in the Penal
Code did not confer on the subordinate courts extended power of sentencing, then it
I was illegal for the subordinate courts to pass a sentence of
1992 TLR p176
MWALUSANY J
over eight years for scheduled offences. I agree with that view. What the trial A
magistrate should have done was to commit the accused to the High Court for
sentencing. The trial magistrate had no power to impose the 30 year prison sentence.
It behoves me to review the evidence on record, in case I am wrong on the above B
thesis about the constitutionality of the trial. The case involves the identification of
the culprits at the scene of the crime. There was a torch at the scene of the crime. The
culprits are village-mates and so the faces were quite familiar. The bandits spent a
considerable long time demanding to be shown the money. The husband and wife C
purported to have had identified the culprits. The appellants offered an alibi. The trial
magistrate warned himself of the danger of convicting the culprits on evidence of
identification which is not water-tight. In my considered view the convictions were
proper. The case was proved beyond any reasonable doubt. D
VI. Conclusion
The trial is a nullity because the appellants who are indigent were denied of their
statutory and constitutional right to legal representation paid for by the State. The
trial E was also a nullity because the appellants were not informed of their right to
have legal representation. As regards sentence, the trial magistrate had no power to
pass a sentence over eight years imprisonment. In any case the mandatory minimum
sentence of 30 years imprisonment under the Minimum Sentences Act. No. 1/1972 as
F amended by Act No. 10/1989 is unconstitutional and void because it is an inhuman
and degrading punishment. The mandatory minimum sentence of 12 strokes of
corporal punishment (not 10 strokes as the trial magistrate imposed) is also
unconstitutional and void as it is an inhuman and degrading punishment, prohibited
by Art. 13(6)(3) of our G Constitution.
Should I order a retrial? The appellants have been in prison now 2 1/2 years. I think
this is a fit case where I have to leave it to the D.P.P. to decide whether appellants
should be retried or not. Thus I leave it to the D.P.P. to decide. H
Consequently the appeal is allowed. The convictions are quashed and sentences are
set aside. The appellants should be released forthwith, unless held for any other
offence.
I Order accordingly.
1992 TLR p177
A
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