Judge refuses to consider ban on protests unconstitutional
Thursday, 04 December 2008
Singapore Democrats
In the ongoing trial of four activists charged for attempting to
participate in a procession, Dr Chee Soon Juan asked District Judge Toh
Yong Joo to allow the defendants to question the police on why it
rejected the application for a permit to conduct a rally and march. The
Judge refused.
Dr Chee also asked the Judge to determine that the policy to ban all
demonstrations and processions in Singapore is unconstitutional. The
Judge also refused.
Dr Chee is charged together with Mr Gandhi Ambalam, Ms Chee Siok Chin
and Mr Teoh Tian Jing for protesting during the WB-IMF meeting in Sep
06.
In his submissions Dr Chee cited a decision made by former Chief
Justice Yong Pung How who had relied on Lord Justice Woolf's judgment
in an English case.
Woolf LJ had ruled that where it is pointed that there has been an
abuse of power and bad faith on the policy maker a criminal court
should allow cross-examination of the prosecution witness to determine
the issue.
The issue stemmed from prosecution witness Deputy Superintendent Marc E
Kwan Szer's testimony that the "policy position of the police regarding
outdoor processions and demonstrations is one of disallowance."
Dr Chee asked Judge Toh to rule that this policy contravenes the
constitution that guaranteed Singaporeans the right to freedom of
speech and assembly.
"No person, able to reason, would conclude that the policy is not
substantially out of line and patently unreasonable with the
Constitution, both in spirit and in the letter," the SDP leader pointed
out.
He added that the police are playing the fool with the Constitution
which according to Article 4 "is the supreme law of the Republic of
Singapore and any law enacted by the Legislature after the commencement
of this Constitution which is inconsistent with this Constitution
shall...be void."
He cited Lord Justice Woolf's judgement on this issue: "No citizen is
required to comply with a law which is bad on its face. If the citizen
is satisfied that that is the situation, he is entitled to ignore the
law."
The Prosecutor insisted that the only thing that mattered was whether
or not the defendants had a permit to conduct their activity. But
didn't DSP Marc E testify that all applications for demonstrations and
processions would be disallowed?
"The illogic of the charge jars the reasonable mind. Can the police
accuse anyone of not having a permit when it makes clear that it will
it give that permit?" Dr Chee posed the question to the Judge.
"If the Constitution clearly tells me that I have the right to freedom
of speech and assembly," the SDP leader continued, "but the police tell
me that it will not grant me a permit for it, then the police policy is
clearly [unconstitutional].
"This being the case, LJ Woolf, to which Yong CJ attached much
importance, tells me that I am not required to comply with such a
policy."
Judge Toh dismissed Dr Chee's arguments and insisted that the only
thing that was important was the "existence or non-existence of a
permit."
The hearing continues at Subordinate Court 19 at 9:30 am tomorrow.
Your Honour,
When the defence tried to question the witness, licensing officer DSP
Marc E Kwan Szer, to show that the police had acted in bad faith when
they rejected my application for a rally and march on 16 September
2006, and hence violating my constitutional rights, the prosecution
objected on two grounds:
One, the line of questioning was irrelevant to the charge and, two,
that even if it was relevant, this court is not the forum to hear such
an issue. The proper forum should be by way of a Judicial Review.
Let me begin by addressing the second question first, that is, whether
this court is the proper forum to canvas issues about bad faith and
mala fide on the part of the police as it relates to the constitution.
I will do this by citing the decision of Yong Pung How, then CJ, in Colin Chan v PP (1994) 3 SLR 662. In the decision, Yong CJ had examined a host of
authorities and culminated with the citing of an English case Bugg v PP (1993) 2 WLR 628 which was heard by Woolf LJ.
Yong CJ remarked that some “conflicting decisions seem to have been finally determined“ by Woolf LJ in Bugg v DPP.
I quote Yong CJ to emphasize the weight he placed on Woolf's LJ
judgment, that there was a sense of a finality, and hence great
importance, in Woolf's decision.
Woolf had addressed the issue of the role of a criminal court, such as
this one, as it related to the question of substantive validity of a
law or subordinate law. Woolf LJ said:
"These developments are, in our judgment, of importance when
considering the proper role of a criminal court where a defendant who
is charged with breaching a byelaw seeks to challenge the validity of
that byelaw. It is possible to identify at least two different
situations in which this will arise. The first is where the byelaw is
on its face invalid because either it is without the power pursuant to
which it was made because, for example, it seeks to deal with matters
outside the scope of the enabling legislation, or it is patently
unreasonable. This can be described as substantive invalidity."
Is there a question of substantive invalidity in the present case?
Of course, there is. I want to place these two statements side by side.
The first statement is Article 14 (1) of the Constitution which is the
supreme law of the land:
(a) every citizen of Singapore has the right to freedom of speech and expression;
(b) all citizens of Singapore have the right to assemble peaceably and without arms; and
(c) all citizens of Singapore have the right to form associations.
The second statement is from the witness DSP Marc E: "police position
regarding outdoor processions and demonstrations is one of
disallowance...Our policy position is clear: Outdoor processions and
demonstrations are disallowed whether or not there is a major meeting
going on.”
Your Honour, you will first have to rule whether, on the face of it,
this police policy enunciated by DSP Marc E is substantively invalid vis-a-vis the Constitution.
I recognise that subsection 2 of Article 14 provides that Parliament
may by law impose restrictions. But these restrictions are imposed only
under certain circumstances such as the security of Singapore is
concerned, or where public order is threatened.
It is does not allow the government, or worse the police, to adopt a
"position" that "outdoor processions and demonstrations is one of
disallowance" and that "all applications are rejected."
The police are playing the fool with the Constitution. They are making
a mockery of our Constitution which states in Article 4: "This
Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic of Singapore and any
law enacted by the Legislature after the commencement of this
Constitution which is inconsistent with this Constitution shall, to the
extent of the inconsistency, be void."
It would take someone very reckless to say that there is no substantive
invalidity in this police policy. No person, able to reason, would
conclude that the policy is not substantially out of line and patently
unreasonable with the Constitution, both in spirit and in the letter.
Or course the next question that is: Does this court have the power to
consider such a question of substantive validity? Of course, you have.
Woolf LJ writes:
"In the criminal proceeding what has to be established is that the
byelaw is unreasonable in the way in which it operates. This aspect of
substantive invalidity was illustrated by Lord Russell of Killowen CJ
in Kruse v Johnson (1898) 2 Q B 91, 99 as occurring, for instance, if
the byelaws:'were found to be partial and unequal in their
operation as between different classes; if they were manifestly unjust;
if they disclosed bad faith; if they involved such oppressive or
gratuitous interference with the rights of those subject to them as
could find no justification in the minds of reasonable men...' "
Woolf reiterates this point later:
"In the case of substantive invalidity, it is a matter of law
whether, for example, a byelaw is unreasonable in operation or is out
with the authorising power. No evidence is required; the [criminal]
court can decide the issue by looking at the terms of the primary
legislation and the subordinate legislation which is alleged to be
invalid."
So the law is utterly clear that the criminal court, that is this
present court, can consider the question of whether the written policy
of the Singapore Police Force is substantively invalid of the
Constitution.
Which brings us to the next question: What does this Court do with a
policy that is substantively invalid? On this subject Woolf LJ he
didn'tt mince his words:
"Where the law is substantively invalid...No citizen is
required to comply with a law which is bad on its face. If the citizen
is satisfied that that is the situation, he is entitled to ignore the
law."
I had a discussion with lawyer and she had tried explaining to me what
an "element of the charge" was. She used the analogy of a person being
charged for, say, not displaying a parking coupon. An element of the
charge is that there was no coupon displayed at the time the car was
checked.
She went on to explain that the driver cannot then say that at that
time the shops were all closed and there was no one from whom he could
purchase the parking coupon. Such a defence was irrelevant to the
element of the charge.
But what if the authorities said they did not sell the coupons? Would
the matter now change? The driver had no way of buying such coupons at
any time to display on his car. Could he still be charged for parking
his without a coupon?
This is exactly what is happening in our present charge. The
prosecution maintains that the element of the charge, or at least one
of the elements, is that we did not have a permit for the procession.
But as you have heard from DSP Marc E, the police's policy position is
that they reject all applications and that they disallow all
processions.
The illogic of the charge jars the reasonable mind. Can the police
accuse anyone of not having a permit when it makes clear that it will
not give that permit?
If the Constitution clearly tells me that I have the right to freedom
of speech and assembly but the police tells me that it will not grant
me a permit for it, then the police policy is clearly substantively
invalid and this being the case Woolf's LJ decision, to which Yong CJ
attached much importance, tells me that I am not required to comply
with such a policy.
Clearly there is an abuse of power on the part of the police to not
give permits under any circumstance because, as I outlined above, the
Constitution does not grant the blanket ban on demonstrations and
processions.
We have been trying to demonstrate to the court that there is abuse of
power, mala fide and bad faith by the police. The only way that we can
do this is to adduce evidence through cross-examination of the present
witness, Mr Marc E. Should Your Honour allow us to do with such
cross-examination?
Woolf LJ cannot be clearer on this:
"We have particularly in mind cases where it is suggested
that there has been an abuse of power because of mala fides on the part
of the byelaw maker. In the case of bad faith, there may be an issue
which the criminal court can determine and if so, evidence will be
required."
To recap:
The crux of the matter is that our constitutional rights may not be
taken away by the police taking on some "policy position." Such policy
is substantively invalid.
The issue of substantive invalidity of the police policy must be
relevant to the charge because it renders the charge null and void. No
citizen is expected to obey a law that is substantively invalid to the
Constitution.
There is more than a suggestion of bad faith and mala fide on the part
of the police. This necessitates our cross-examination of the licensing
officer in order for us to adduce evidence.
Because of the issues of substantive invalidity and bad faith, this
court has the power to hear the arguments without the need for a
Judicial Review.
Your Honour, the law is clearly with the defence and we ask that you administer justice accordingly.