Tuesday, 5 September 2017

The Question of Trial by Media in Malawi—Striking a Balance between Right to Know and Right to a Fair Trial



Introduction
The world over, a trial of a famous person, politician, artist, footballer, or indeed any celebrity you can think of, tends to generate a lot of excitement—prime fodder for the media. Often the people and the media go into overdrive in what is described as celebrification of crime. Many times, they come in and ‘convict’ the suspect or ‘exonerate’ the same, depending on the stand they take on the issue. But can the media really convict or exonerate a suspect? Put differently, can the media in Malawi really try a suspect outside the formal court system or influence court verdicts at all?

The Role of the Media in a Democracy—the Malawian Context
If someone asked me to put in a few words the role the media play in a democracy, the African context especially, my explanation would be: they are an informal independent referee on the field of adherence to a respective country’s constitution. To explain this, a simple picture of the relationship between those being governed and those governing could be an important aid to help us appreciate the noble role the media play in making our democracy tick.

The starting point should be that people everywhere have values (moral, political, economic, cultural, social) which, through some representations, are put together in a document—the constitution (though a constitution can also be unwritten). Second, this document which represents the will, wishes and aspirations of a people puts in place a mechanism to elect (a few) representatives to safeguard and administer those values, wishes, or aspirations on behalf of those people. In this way, these people together with the state organs in which they serve are given power at elections, meaning  elections are a formal process through which representatives are given authority and legitimacy by the masses to rule. Put simply, elections give a few people power in a way acceptable to all or the majority (legitimacy). This arrangement is akin to a form of social contract or an arrangement of trust, kind of making those entrusted with this power fiduciaries, i.e. put there to serve the interest of the people.

The role of the media in a democracy thus is to answer the following questions: (1) Are those holding power holding it the legitimate way? (2) Are they (together with the organs they represent) serving the people? (3) Are the people afforded an opportunity to see what these people, elected, are doing, i.e. is there openness or transparency in the way they execute their duties? (4) And when they make a decision, are the people afforded an opportunity to seek explanation (participation)? (5) Are such explanations given the people, if yes, how timely (in Open Government, this is described as responsiveness)? And lastly, (6) when these people in power make bad decisions (decisions running counter to the wishes of the people), are they held to account for the same (accountability)?

In short, constitutionally, the media play the same role play the judiciary, i.e. ensuring that those in power serve those who entrusted power to them, i.e. serve the people or public interest. However, the only difference is that the media are not one of the three official or formal branches of government—the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary, and so equating them to the judiciary would be going overboard, kind of usurping the judiciary of their powers. Their roles, are however, similar in many fronts except that the judiciary represent a formal arm and are given the powers to execute orders to ensure adherence to the constitution. To show a clean demarcation, some media practitioners, for example, Carter, coined the term ‘fourth branch of government’ to refer to the press. It is also important to note that there are other bodies beside the media entrusted with this watchdog role and are (together with the media) referred to as the civil society. However, the media do not exactly fit in this because they also have a role to watch even fellow members of the civil society category.

One would see that the media are set apart to resemble the judiciary yet are not, but also to question any arm of government and even fellow watchers, i.e. other members of the civil society. This is why I define the media as a set of legitimate professionals in civilian ‘clothes’, entrusted with the role to ensure adherence to a constitution of all parties entrusted with power by the people for legitimacy and sustained trust.

That the media are set apart for this special job can be deduced from the position of sanctity they, as a roving messenger-cum-police officer, occupy in the Constitution of the United States. In the words of Stanley J Baran, “The US Constitution mentions only one industry by name as deserving special protection—the press” (2009, Introduction to Mass Communication: Media Literacy and Culture, Boston: MacGraw-Hill, p 451).

Considering the importance of the media in a democracy, it would be important to ensure the media operate without any control whatsoever so they perform their roles unhindered. Unfortunately, “because of their power and the often conflicting demands of profit and service under which they operate, they are (and should be) open to some control” (Baran, p 447). However, such control should be justified and not obtrusive, i.e. should not be aimed at curtailing freedom of the press.

Although the media use the constitution as a supreme checklist since it contains the values of the people, for them to judge whether a piece of news is deserving of a place, they use newsworthiness criteria. Often, what fits in those criteria is what makes news. This is where the press differ widely with the judiciary which uses principles set out and tested against bias, principles and standards acceptable in a particular legal jurisdiction, and of course, arrived at through a rigorous system of test and re-test. In short, the rigours used to determine newsworthiness are less, less stringent than those used to arrive at a verdict by the court, an independent referee. This means that it is possible that what the media could consider important or crucial in line with agenda-setting (the arrangement of issues about the public on a list of what should be addressed first) could never be the very thing the court as an independent tribunal would consider material. Unfortunately, the media are close to people and so what they say is often easily grabbed by them as truth. In other words, “the media plays a vital role in moulding the opinion of society and it is capable of changing the whole viewpoint through which people perceive various events” (‘Effect of Trial by Media Before Courts’ available at https://www.lawteacher.net accessed July 10, 2017).

When it comes to reporting crime, the media, who use their own criteria to determine news can take their own position, one that can conflict with the principles of fair trial. This is the subject of this discussion.

Since the right to a fair trial has a lot to do with the subject of crime and punishment, a little discussion on approaches to crime and punishment would be in order.

Approaches to Punishment in Criminal Law
In criminal law, a person alleged to have committed a crime is always presumed innocent until proven guilty by a competent tribunal or court. This presumption forms the hub of criminal law, and its application can be mind-blowing at times, for example, where suspects are acquitted simply because they had been found guilty by the people and not by the court (and this, even where they had looked genuinely guilty in the eyes of the people).

This presumption—that one should be presumed innocent until proven guilty by a competent tribunal—brings in the necessity of fair trial, and the whole purpose of fair trial is that all sides (including the ‘wrong’ party) should feel satisfied at the end of the trial that justice was not merely done, but was also seen to be done. This satisfaction is what brings in ‘ownership’ and so satisfaction with the punishment meted out. Ownership of the punishment meted out simply means that, though the convict (as one found guilty is described) will feel bitter with the sentence or fine, if he or she saw justice being done, that no corners were cut, that his rights were respected, (he or she) is bound to say, “Well, these people did all they could to show me I did the society wrong, and I deserve this.” He or she might not express this openly, but somehow within himself or herself he can have that feeling and therefore accept the suffering for his or her crime.

To achieve this ownership or consensual closure, the court first ensures that the rights of both the accused and the wronged victim are protected. The Constitution of the Republic of Malawi caters for both sets, and it is interesting that the most important provisions on these are put just one after the other, i.e. section 41 (rights of the victim) and section 42 (rights of the accused). The rights of the accused in section 42 of the Constitution include right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, the right to be taken to a competent court of law, right to a fair trial, and right to bail.

The media tend to forget that the Constitution provides for rights for both these sets—the alleged wrong-doer (accused) and the wronged victim. This should be understood since the media are there to serve public interest, and so often stand on the side of the victim, and often, victims are the poor unfortunate villager with little or no education at all. In some way, the media approach resembles that by the state, since in criminal law, the state (republic) stands on behalf of the victim (and this is why in criminal law the victim is represented by the Republic, and that such a case carries the tag ‘The Republic/Regina versus the accused). And where the media miss it is that the court does not represent the victim; the court is an independent referee or independent arbiter or independent tribunal, i.e. ensuring the substantive law (law that defines the said crime) as well as procedural law (law laying down procedures for a fair trial in that crime) is followed, assessing the evidence tendered, and then arriving at a judgment received and appreciated by all. If the court were siding with the victim, then the court would be prosecuting yet it is the state that prosecutes (i.e. appears and argues on behalf of the victim to secure conviction against the accused).

During the one-party era when Malawi had a single ‘public’ radio and almost a single newspaper outlet in the names of Malawi News and The Daily Times, trial by media was part and parcel of reporting; any person (even poor illiterate villagers with no connection to politics) arrested on allegations of having committed treason, wore one label—chigawenga—a vernacular term akin to those involved in a revolution and coup de tat. Even writers were branded chigawenga merely for expressing their minds on paper. The situation was always made worse by the fact that everyone listened to the same radio and read the same newspapers. As a result, the court of public opinion always came to a conclusion on the sort of punishment deserving a chigawenga. In such trials, traditional chiefs would be dozing half the time, yet, at the end of the ‘trial’, they always arrived at the same verdict as those ‘alive’.

Our history plus the elite advantage the media have over those who do not control the flow of information, the nature of criteria followed by the media to arrive at a material for news, lack of knowledge on the need for a fair trial, should be reasons to entreat us all to exercise some control as far as reporting crime is concerned lest we should influence others in ‘criminalising’ suspects.

More Reporting than Journalism and why this should be a cause for concern
One problem with news readership or viewership in Malawi today is that the majority of our audience choose to deprive themselves of critical thinking, that crucial component in the interpretation of news. And, as argues Murdock (1997) cited in Yvonne Jewkes (2004), the danger with this (i.e. a population deprived of critical thinking) is the passing of a literate culture which could enhance higher level thinking. Murdock and others bemoan the replacement of this literate culture by a “visual popular culture believed to plug directly into the mind without need for rational thought or interpretation” (p 6). And interpretation here should mean,
(T)he deeper sense of news. (That which) places a particular event in the larger flow of events. It includes the colour, the atmosphere, the human element that gives meaning to fact. It is setting and sequence, but above all, significance. It is not opinion (which normally makes an argument for one position, urges a course of action, favours one side against another). Interpretation or analysis presents the facts, and their meaning, taking the reader a step further. (Evan Hill and John J Breen (1979). Reporting and Writing the News. New Jersey: Little Brown and Company, p 161).

The absence of critical thinking or the art of interpreting news poses a greater threat today, because we are living in a world where everything appears and disappears so fast, where the people do not have time to sift through news for that truth. In the world of news of today, everyone wants ‘take-away’ news, packaged for the brain to eat straight; no wonder, they absorb without questions what they are given without asking.

Reporting has always differed from journalism in that the latter tends to involve a higher sense of judgment on what to accept as news (newsworthiness), how to put it and where and even when. In other words, critical to journalism is the art of sifting through raw news, understanding legal consequences and implications of news content, the question of taste, and the role of ethics in it all, et cetera. What all this means is that today, most people are eating straight from reporting, and with the expansion and proliferation of media channels and outlets plus the general inability to distinguish entertainment from information, the danger of a docile audience to absorb what has come to be described as fake news is very high.

In stories involving crime, this can even be worse, taking into account our culture that does not intensify general legal education so the people are equipped with at least the basics of law. It is important to note that low level of this knowledge does not help things at all, because the language of suspicion and allegation disappears altogether for ‘guilty by the media’.


The people ought to be trained to learn to interpret news if we are to develop ourselves into a society of debaters.

Trial by Media or Trial by Google, Freedom of the Press, and Right to a Fair Trial
Is there such a thing as trial by media, or it is another fictitious subject created by media critics, these people, who, to quote Benjamin Disrael, find it much easier to be critical than to be correct? Can the media influence public opinion? Of course, but can they influence the independence of the court or outcome of cases?

The media can influence crime investigation or progress of the case itself in a number of ways. For example, by revealing particular information, the media can help the offender reorder his ways and thus go scot-free even where a crime was committed. Again, by disclosing some evidence or information, the media can influence witnesses to change their stand or to embellish their testimony.

During the trial itself, the media can also interfere with the right to a fair trial, for example, by presenting ‘facts’ that interfere with smooth administration of justice. A good example is what happened during the double-murder trial of OJ Simpson in the US when KNBC-TV reported erroneously that DNA tests showed that Nicole Brown’s blood was found on one of Simpson’s socks. Superior Court Justice Lance Ito had to threaten to bar them together with their cameras.

All this would make one appreciate why there is a general ‘fear’ among court officers over ‘open’ media coverage whenever a high profile criminal case is in progress. Perhaps that is the reason that there in the United States, the Supreme Court in Sheppard v Maxwell (1966) had advised the judiciary that it must take action to protect an accused person’s right to a fair trial. Of course, the Court did not impose a direct restraint upon the press. However, it warned that if Judges fail to take action, such as insulating prospective witnesses from news media or sequestering (putting away) the jury, then the conviction risked being overturned.

The fact that the Supreme Court in Sheppard v Maxwell did not impose restraint on the media demonstrates the Court’s unwillingness to give it all to the accused. No wonder, a decade later in Nebraska Press Association v Judge Stuart, the Supreme Court ruled that a judge cannot prevent news media from reporting or commenting on public judicial proceedings.

It should be stated here that open court coverage which is part of open justice also known as open meeting or open record law is fast becoming the norm especially in high profile court cases. This is because the people are given the opportunity to see what actually happens inside the court (educational purpose) and also witnessing justice being done (transparency, openness, confidence and trust to the justice system). In Kenya, for example, every element of the proceedings in an election dispute case in the Supreme Court of Kenya at Nairobi, was before television (see the Kenya Supreme Court Presidential Election Petition No 1 of 2017 between Raila Amolo Odinga (1st Petitioner) Stephen Kalonzo Musyoka (2nd Petitioner) and Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (1st Respondent); Chairperson, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (2nd Respondent); and HE Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta (3rd Respondent). I personally witnessed the Nairobi proceedings from my house in Zomba, Malawi through K24, a television station owned by Mediamax Ltd of Uhuru Kenyatta. For the first time, I appreciated the power of open justice, i.e. attempts to take court proceedings to the people for transparency and accountability.

The Kenya landmark case was by no means the first time a court in Africa had allowed open justice in the proceedings. In South Africa, and this is according to the former South African Deputy Chief Justice, Dikgang Moseneke, the Oscar Pistorius Trial had allowed the country and the world into the South African Courts and into how the country dispenses justice. According to the former Deputy Chief Justice, that coverage put into practice the concept of ‘open justice’ where justice must not only be done, it must be seen to be done.

The Oscar Pistorius Trial also witnessed another important development in case law when, at the start of trial, there appeared an important court case on a number of questions on which the media were seeking interpretation of the courts on two rights clashing—freedom of expression, and right to a fair trial. According to the Deputy Chief Justice,
The questions were many and complex, but even more intriguing, they were new to the judicial system. Should we let the reporters in: yes? With more than their pens and little traditional note pads: yes? With their smartphones, electronic notebooks and iPads? Or should we perhaps jam the signal in the court houses? Why, then, shouldn’t we let the cameras in as well? If we do, should the cameras relay to the world instantly or at all, everything we say and do in court? Or should we rather have the cameras fixed on the judge only?

Put simply, the question could never be whether the media must be allowed to cover court proceedings; it was how they would do that in order to inform the people the right way. The question could never be whether they would be allowed because already they were doing so through the social media or the traditional pen-and-note pad way.

In the end, the President of the country’s Constitutional Court gave the media organisations permission to broadcast the trial, i.e. Pistorius trial, live and in full Technicolor. As usual, the media had gone in with the position that the Court had to let them in unhindered because freedom of expression lies at the heart of democracy. The Court however, balanced the two rights at stake here—right to a fair trial for the accused, and freedom of expression. In reaching the decision, the Judge did appreciate the importance of both rights, and struck a balance between the two so there was no winner and no loser.

So what was the balance the Judge had struck here? Well, that visual images of Mr Pistorius and his witnesses may be disabled when giving their evidence. In other words, audio of those witnesses could be broadcast but not the visual images. It was a different story however with the Kenya Presidential Election case of 2017 where everything was laid bare to the world.

Generally, there appears a growing trend towards allowing the media unhindered coverage of crime even in court sessions themselves. In the UK, during the hearing for bail application in a case involving Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, the Judge permitted reporters to tweet in the courtroom. In 2011, the UK Supreme Court itself was to issue a formal direction permitting “live text-based communications” such as email and social media (including Twitter) in the courtroom, in order to better promote open justice. And this is important: In doing so, the Lord Chief Justice urged the media: ‘Twitter as much as you wish’. He soon corrected himself:
Now my law clerks tell me that it would have been more accurate to say ‘Tweet as much as you wish’, but the message remains clear: delayed information is as good as denied information. There is no reason not to, as a default position, permit live tweeting and whatever else from the courtroom. There is no logic in asking the media to step outside of the courtroom to press send.

In the United States, a number of cases, for example, Bridges v California (1941) have established that imposing direct restraint on the media by the judiciary is unconstitutional except where there is a clear and present danger to the administration of justice.

As for the issue of cameras in court there, in Chandler v Florida (1981), the Supreme Court ruled that “states can permit cameras in the courtroom provided safeguards are taken.” By 1990, forty-five states in the US allowed such coverage. (See William E Francois (1990) Mass Media Law and Regulation, 5th Ed., Iowa State University Press, p 355.)

And what is the position in Malawi?

In The Republic Versus (Oswald Flywell Gideon) Lutepo, on the morning of July 30, 2015, the Judge was greeted by a number of big cameras, right inside the Court room, cameras directed at the Bench, the Bar and the accused person. The Judge says these were sophisticated cameras that were most probably from well-established media houses, all of them intent on capturing the Court proceedings as they unfolded. Both parties to the proceedings disagreed with this ‘invasion’ and the Judge ruled against it, observing, that though section 60 of the Courts Act, and section 71(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code provide for open court system, the media could not just get in willy-nilly to do the coverage. The Judge observed:
In the absence of such an application, and express leave of the Court, the media cannot be allowed such access as they sought to get in these proceedings. The open justice principle does not confer an unlimited right on the public. Even from the terms of Section 60 of the Courts Act and Section 71(1)(a) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code, it is clear that such right is limitable and indeed limited.

I am not saying that the Court refused the media such coverage, for if they had approached the Court in the first place, and the merit of the same assessed in line with the interests of the rights of the accused, they could as well be allowed to. Put simply, the court is a neutral entity to ensure rules are observed, and from what it is given, make assessment and arrive at a fair verdict.

The media too are supposed to be a neutral entity, and so should have been approaching all issues involving coverage of crime the same way the court does. Unfortunately, our world being skewed as it is, the media can ‘prosecute’ (on the behalf of public) or even ‘defend’ (on the behalf of the accused).

Famous examples on trial by media
Often, trial by media is either pro-accused or anti-accused. However, the position of the media should always be a balance between the interests of justice, i.e. right to a fair trial, and the right of the public to know.

Trial by media can be pro-accused where the media may portray the accused as a victim of, say, political witch-hunt for his or her bold stand against some bad policy or bad acts by those in power, et cetera. Trial by media can also benefit the accused in that too much coverage can end up creating more sympathy among fans for a particular iconic figure suspected of committing a crime.

There are so many examples of court cases in which the media has tended to side with the accused.

Sometimes the media or the people working in the media can get blinded by the power of celebrity and report the news in a manner sympathetic to the high-profile figure. In 2003, following the arrest of Michael Jackson on accusations of child molestation involving a 12-year-old boy, one analyst, Leonard Pitts Jr in “Michael Jackson and the power of blinding celebrity”, argued that it would be easy for his fans to feel angry and sad about the news their star, a person who had become famous right at 11, and the biggest star on Earth at 24, had been arrested on such charges. Pitts Jr attributes this to the power of celebrities in blinding people to ‘forgive them’ at the expense of the crime.

The same could also be said of the recent Bill (William Henry) Cosby sexual assault trial in the United States. In June this year, following an announcement of a mistrial (by the Judge) after the jurors had failed to reach a verdict following a 52-hour deliberation, lawyer Gloria Allred said, “We can never overestimate the power of blinding power of celebrity” (See “Cosby Accusers, Family React to Mistrial Announcement” by Patrick Shanley, available at www.hollywoodreporter.com, posted 8:04 am, June 17, 2017 accessed July 27, 2017). Allred was representing a number of Bill Cosby accusers (60 of them) in the sexual-assault trial.

What this was suggesting was that Cosby, being a personality he is, author, musician, a popular stand-up comedian, or someone who has made America happy and laugh, might have made for himself a huge investment of friendship and sympathy, and that the same does have some influence on jurors.

Sometimes, the media could be acting on public pressure. Sometimes I wonder how easy it was to report on a case like that of the Indian guru Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, a 50-year old holy man and leader of the Dera Sacha Sauda sect recently sentenced to twenty years on a conviction of rape. The sect has a following of over 60 million, i.e. over three times the population of Malawi. According to the BBC (see “India guru rape: Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh jailed for 20 years” at www.bbc.com) violence that followed the verdict in Panchkula in Haryana state killed some 38 people.

The media are often at home vilifying an accused of high status or a celebrity or a ‘personality’. In other words, a similar crime if committed by a celebrity or a high-status person will attract more attention than it would if it were committed by an ‘ordinary’ person. Perhaps at this point one reads sense in the words of Professor Marcel Danesi (who used the story of OJ Simpson) when commenting on why the public is always eager and quick to convict a known personality outside courtrooms:
He was a hero, but as soon as a hero in any way becomes besmirched in the public arena, just as in ancient Greece and Rome, then you throw him to the lions . . . It doesn’t matter whether he’s innocent or not, the opinion has come down, he’s off his pedestal, he’s down on the ground, and people love to spit on fallen heroes. (“Trials of the famous can distort Courts’ image”)

In Australia in 2014, lawyer for Robert Hughes (former actor in Hey Dad) observed that Mr Hughes was to appeal to a Sydney court’s guilty verdict on a number of sexual assault charges because, “Hughes could not get a fair trial due to the level of adverse media coverage he faced in the lead up to the trial” (See Greg Barns “Fair Trials at risk in age of social media” available on www.abc.net posted on Thursday, April 10, 2014 accessed July 10, 2017).

According to Barns, the first allegations against Hughes was made in 2010, and in 2012 after Hughes was arrested, Monahan congratulated on her twitter the team that had made the arrested as ‘guys who rock’, and all this was reported in The Daily Telegraph. The same newspaper is also said to have quoted the man who had headed the investigation as saying that ‘sexual assault leaves enormous scars on people’ as though it was already established outside the formal court setting that the said sexual assault had indeed occurred.

It should be pointed out that the attraction and attention created by famous people can itself be a threat to a fair trial. Still there in Australia, in July this year, Cardinal George Pell, 76, arrived there to defend himself against allegations of multiple sexual assaults, and according to the BBC, (See “Cardinal Pell arrives at court to face assault charges” dated July 26, 2010 available at www.bbc.com accessed July, 2017), the Vatican Treasurer and so the third-ranking official in the Catholic Church, entered the court amidst unprecedented publicity. The article observes that “Rarely has an Australian court been besieged by such a large media contingent, with their satellite trucks and coverage taking the story all over the world.” Whether such coverage on an unprecedented scale can have ramifications on fair trial is the question. However, the wide publicity is good news as far as freedom of expression and the concept of open justice are concerned.

Courts often apply the bulwark of contempt of court to deal with issues of trial by media, but this often applies when proceedings are ‘active’, meaning, it would be impossible for the court to execute it in pre-trial settings.

Another explanation for media frenzy when the trial involves a famous person could merely be revenge. For example, in the UK the media were hard on “Lord Archer, who had previously successfully sued a tabloid newspaper for libel (and after the trial had to pay back the damages he had won)” (Jewkes, p 50). One would equate this to politics where an ‘enemy’ on the wrong side of the law becomes a fair game.

In Malawi, in the high profile corruption case involving Oswald Lutepo, the media sided with the people, in ensuring Lutepo was taken to book for his involvement in corruption. This was understood though no one took time to seriously remind themselves that Lutepo was merely a conduit (recruited by Pika Manondo) in a well-protected thieving system involving highly and strategically placed persons. In fact, the lamentation of the Judge in this case, speaks volumes:
If indeed it be proven that such highly placed politicians were the ultimate masterminds of this plunder of State resources and primarily so for purposes of “cash-rolling” a political campaign, this would represent a major governance catastrophe that befell this nation. It would entail that such politicians thought that the best way to garner the sustained trust of the people of Malawi in order to gain or remain in power, was to fundamentally breach the very trust those people had reposed in them in the first place.

This entails one thing in the context of fight against corruption—in the corruption sea in Malawi, there are no big fishes, or how else can one justify the fact that Lutepo, an invited guest to the thieving cult, a novice and perhaps without the thieving experience, was the sacrificed link for the sins of many? Put simply, Lutepo’s loot of nearly K400,000,000 was just a commission, a 10% commission of the loot those entrusted with State resources had engaged in stealing. Sometimes I feel like justice failed us in that we sacrificed the weaker Lutepo yet great beneficiaries are eating and drinking under hotel chandeliers as we speak.

It should also be pointed out that one other reason trials involving high-profile figures generate a lot of interest comes from the fact that “when celebrities are on trial, the public’s skepticism of our justice system reaches its peak” (Jacques Gallant “Trials of the Famous can Distort Courts’ Image” available at www.thestar.com, posted May 23, 2016 accessed July 10, 2017). People don’t just believe that the courts can approach powerful people with the same boldness they do when it’s a case involving some poor unfortunate villager.

Is there trial by the media in Malawi?
In Malawi, this is a very difficult question to answer especially after one considers the fact that the trial of the century in Malawi, one which received some of the highest reporting akin to a finding of guilty by court of public opinion, ended up being dismissed for lack of evidence. In this case, Mwanza Murder Trial (MSCA Criminal Appeal No 21 of 1995, being High Court Criminal Court No 1 of 1995), Dr Hastings Kamuzu Banda (the former Head of State in the one party Malawi) together with Mr John Zenus Ungapake Tembo, Mr Augustino Laston Likaomba, Mr MacDonald Moses Kalemba, Mr McWilliam Lunguzi and Miss Cecilia Tamanda Kadzamira were being accused of master-minding the bludgeoning in 1983 of three senior Ministers and one Member of Parliament. At the time of the trial, Dr Banda (and his Malawi Congress Party) had just lost his grip to power (in the 1994 first multiparty Presidential Elections the other side of the 1966 single party Constitution), having been at the helm from 1964 during which period, it is believed, 6,000 more Malawians were murdered (see “Despotism on Trial in Malawi” by Robert I Rotberg, May 9, 1995 available at www.csmonitor.com accessed July 26, 2017).

In Malawi, there are many people who do not share the position of the Court on this matter, i.e. that the Supreme Court sided with the findings of the Jury in the High Court. Thus, the outcome of the Mwanza Trial has been condemned by many including Jack Mapanje as a failure of justice. It must be stated here however that as far as criminal law is concerned, the court of law goes for proof beyond a reasonable doubt (though this should not be confused with proof beyond a shadow of doubt, for then, it would be impossible to secure conviction).

Reporting on the matter then, including language from the podium, was one of guilt, and that the Court was never influenced at all is a great measure of the independence of our courts.

However, it should be pointed out that events on the ground have tended to show that the media does have a position on court issues, and one case that proves that the media do indeed have a position is Mwaungulu v Malawi News and Others [1994] MLR 227 HC.

Far back in 1994 when Dunstain Fipamutima Mwaungulu (now Supreme Court Justice) was working as Registrar of High Court of Malawi and Supreme Court of Malawi, Malawi News (dated 12-18 March, 1994) under the Zebedee column published a story in which it said Mr Mwaungulu was awarding excessive sums of money to people from the Northern Region. The contents were suggesting that Mr Mwaungulu was practicing nepostism in the manner he was executing his duties. In reaction to this, Mr Mwaungulu had first sought formal apology from the newspaper, which it did though it fell short of the requirements of a true apology. When Mr Mwaungulu commenced a court action, the respondent (Malawi News and Others) did not defend itself. This was kind of accepting wrong. In such a case, the plaintiff (one seeking relief or help of the court) asks the court to give him default judgment, i.e. judgment in a context where the person who was supposed to defend himself hasn’t and therefore entail his acceptance of ‘wrong doing’. And the Judge made the following judgment on behalf of the Plaintiff (Mr Mwaungulu):
I would proceed to do so. I would award the plaintiff K12,000.00 as compensatory damages. This amount is not sufficient to punish the defendants for injury done to the plaintiff’s feelings and sense of pride and dignity. I would grant K13,000.00 as purely punitive damages. The plaintiff is granted a total of K25,000.00 damages being both compensatory and exemplary. He is entitled to the costs of these proceedings.

This was 1994 and K25,000 was quite some money. I remember when I started work in 1995 as a secondary teacher I was receiving something like K1,000.00, meaning I would have to work for some two years to earn that.

Well, I wish to stress that the media does have a position. In short, the columnist had his own perception of how he wanted award of damages to go about; fortunately, law applies stringent or rigorous standards to arrive at a decision.

Put simply, there are elements of media trial in Malawi but that evidence on the ground does not suggest that does influence court outcomes. One reason for this could be that in Malawi, in 2009 or thereabout, the Malawi Government put aside the use of the jury system in murder trials owing to a number of reasons among which that it was too expensive and that most of those appointed to serve there were so insufficient of the right knowledge to follow the proceedings that they ended up passing a verdict of guilty where it should have been otherwise. In this case, there should be little worry over whether Judges in Malawi can get swept out by the flood of public opinion through the media in a courtroom of the media. However, I still feel that we should still be wary where the media present the news in such a way that all the people can see in the accused is guilt. When a person is undergoing a formal court trial and the people bay for his or her blood, stoning and showering insults at the same, we must be wary over whether this cannot affect the perception of the accused over our claim of the need for a fair trial as provides the Constitution.

Sometimes I get a feeling that many people think that the moment someone is arrested then all is gone for him or her, and that what is next in that setting is jail. This, I think, springs from deliberate disregard of issues of defence in criminal law. I think I should say one or two things on this in passing.

Defences in Criminal Law
Well, in criminal law, a crime committed can be negatived, i.e. made as though it was not committed by what are described as defences. In other words, if a crime was committed, but you have a defence that the court will accept as plausible and reasonable, you escape punishment. Defences include self-defence; insanity; provocation; duress; entrapment; marital coercion; consent; diminished responsibility; intoxication; and necessity.

It is important to observe that every defence will be acceptable depending on the context as prescribes the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code (Cap 8:01 of the Laws of Malawi) and other Laws. In other words, every defence will have a test, and if it fails to fulfill that test, it won’t be a defence at all though one would claim it to amount to such a defence. I should give a small example on consent and the crime of rape in Malawi.

On consent as defence in Malawi, if one sleeps with a woman with her consent, he can never be accused of rape. However, if that woman or girl consents not out of free will, then that defence of consent fails outright. On this, section 132 of the Penal Code (Cap. 7:01 of the Laws of Malawi) provides thus:
Any person who has unlawful carnal knowledge of a woman or girl, without her consent, or with her consent if the consent is obtained by force or means of intimidation of any kind, or by fear of bodily harm, or by means of false representations as to the nature of the act, or in the case of a married woman, by personating her husband, shall be guilty of the felony termed rape.

So, the test here would be: Was there consent? Yes. Was it obtained through force, et cetera? Yes. Then it was no consent at all, and so the defence fails.

During the JB administration, the Government was said to have involved is selling of a jet and procuring of arms. People went out to accuse JB of going it alone without necessarily taking into account the tense context in which the nation was, i.e. the Lake Malawi boundary question. I have backed the JB administration on defence of necessity.

According to “Defence of Necessity” (see www.e-law-resources.co.uk/Defence-of-Necessity accessed July 9, 2017), “the defence of necessity in criminal law is where the defendant is arguing that it was necessary for them to commit a crime.” The article gives an example of a prisoner inside a prison building that is burning and the choice he faces on whether to die there or to escape the building. If he escapes the building he will commit a crime, but if he ‘chooses’ to obey this law, he chooses to lose his life at the expense of pleasing the law. Common sense would tell anyone the best choice here is for him to escape the building so long as he does not disappear for good.

The defence of necessity must pass three or four tests. The first test is whether what was done had to be done to avoid inevitable and irreparable evil. The second test is whether something else could have been done to achieve the result better. And the last test is whether the wrong committed or harm resulting from that crime was too much compared to the act itself, or simply whether the crime committed in the name of necessity wasn’t bigger than the crime one would commit if he didn’t do anything about the situation. Perhaps I should put the last point in monetary terms: if by committing a crime in the name of necessity you spent K20 billion yet if you had let things happen as they were the loss could have been only K2 billion, you can never invoke necessity.

Put simply, if the danger was such that if you could not do something else you could lose everything, the result could be too much on the people, a person can be justified to commit a crime. Second, if one could use an alternative and arrive at the same answer, then there could be no reason or need to commit that crime.

Even in law of tort (nuisance private law), one can find elements of necessity. For example, where a danger encroaches into your yard (if you have interest in the land or a legal right of occupation greater than that of a mere occupier or licensee) and you know it can cause harm or it interferes with your right, law allows you to abate by cutting the encroaching tree, but of course, having first fulfilled some preconditions—first, that you gave notice to the neighbour; second that in doing so, you do not cause damage to the neighbour’s property; and third, that where there are more than one way of abating or removing or reducing the impact, you chose the method with the least cost to the defendant.

The defence of necessity is also often invoked in cases bordering on high medical decisions, for example, where doctors risk it by conducting an operation on conjoined twins in an attempt to bring a decent life to them (and in the course something happens).

Similarly, when some people are advocating for legislation to force mandatory HIV testing for couples, the basis is necessity—private will should be ‘suppressed’ for the good of the child and the country’s future and society.

The article “Defence of Necessity” however warns: “The defence of necessity can only be pleaded in extreme circumstances and is often unsuccessful.” Besides, it is very rarely raised in murder cases.

In Malawi, the most important question on the doctrine or defence of necessity was considered by the Supreme Court The Attorney General v The Malawi Congress Party and LJ Chimango and HM Ntaba, (MSCA Civil Appeal Case No 22 of 1996, being High Court Civil Cause No 2074 of 1995) also known as the Press Trust Case. In this case, although the legislature had passed a piece of legislation on Press Trust without the stipulated quorum, the Court held it to be valid because it was necessary to go ahead with it even without the required number of Members of Parliament as stipulates section 27 of the Malawi Parliament Standing Orders. The Court said:
We also believe that this doctrine (of necessity) should be applied or invoked in the present circumstances to avoid creating a legislative vacuum. Our Constitution is designed in such a way as to have a government in power which does not command a majority in the National Assembly. In any event, if we construe the Constitution strictly, no government would be able to function properly, and this would be to the detriment of the nation as a whole. (emphasis mine)

For instance, if more than two thirds of the Members of Parliament were consistently to ignore the summons given by the Speaker of the National Assembly, such an occurrence would incapacitate the government in power from passing legislation which is the primary function of the legislature. Again, this would justify the invocation of the doctrine of necessity by the Courts to prevent a vacuum being created by crippling the legislative branch of government. (emphasis mine)

When one considers the role the media can play in influencing trial direction, a number of questions arise: Is the danger only when the trial has started? Is it the attention itself that matters? Is it when the media are allowed in court with everything they have including those HD cameras?

It would be a great idea to see our courts opening more and more to the people through direct media coverage so long as this does not prejudice the interests of justice. However, the words of former South African Deputy Chief Justice Moseneke should ring some bell in us, and we must plea with the media in Malawi the same way:
We ask (you the media) that in carrying out your responsibilities, you worship at the altar of accuracy. . . In addition to ensuring mistakes are not made, the media must also be careful not to sensationalise cases and turn them into media circuses. For example, on 16 January 2012 a headline appeared in the Pretoria News that read ‘Judge okays child sex’. A very misleading headline, to say the least.

It must be remembered as observes former Los Angeles Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bugliosi that “a trial is a serious and solemn proceedings that determines whether a person’s liberty, and sometime his life, should be taken away from him. ‘Anything that interferes, or even has the slightest potential of interfering, with the resolution of this determination should be automatically prohibited’” (Ted White, p 386).

But still, “these concerns are not enough to warrant closing the courtroom doors to reporters and cameras” (p 34).

In short, everything will depend on context and nature of trial after the Judge weighs and balances various interests including that of justice, and that of the accused’s right to a fair trial. This is why we talk of striking a balance.

Conclusion
The media are an important component of our democracy. Our democracy will mean nothing if we develop a habit of dishing out stringent rules to restrict the way the media should operate. However, the media must carefully sift through issues before applying the criteria for newsworthiness, and the reason is simple: trial by media jeopardises the right to a fair trial of the accused and with it the formal justice system, especially that presumption of innocence until proven guilty by a competent tribunal. In this way, I think, the question of open justice should not be an excuse where the right to a fair trial is seriously under jeopardy. Let there be some healthy balance.

References
The Attorney General v The Malawi Congress Party and LJ Chimango and HM Ntaba, [MSCA Civil Appeal Case No 22 of 1996, being High Court Civil Cause No 2074 of 1995] also known as the Press Trust Case
The Republic versus (Oswald Flywell Gideon) Lutepo, Criminal Cause No 02 of 2014.
Mwaungulu v Malawi News and Others [1994] MLR 227 HC.

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