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Showing posts with label criminal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label criminal. Show all posts

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Ending criminal defamation in the Caribbean


Freedom of Expression in The Caribbean


By Alison Bethel McKenzie

Executive Director
International Press Institute



Early this year, Dominican journalist Johnny Alberto Salazar was sentenced to six months in jail for slander and libel.  The charges stemmed from Salazar's on-air comments accusing Pedro Baldera, a local Human Rights Committee official, of "protecting delinquents and people linked to organised crime."  Salazar, an elected council member and well-known local gadfly, said prior to his arrest that he had been receiving threats from the government for his criticism of officials.

In June, the decision was thrown out by an appeals court.  But the effect of the prosecution remains.  Though the Dominican Republic retains a fairly clean press record, with Salazar potentially becoming the first ever journalist jailed for professional activities, the existence of criminal defamation laws leaves the threat of retribution forever looming.

As recently as June, Dominican politicians, and diplomats across the Caribbean, expressed their belief that defamation is best dealt with in a civil courtroom.  The International Press Institute (IPI) calls on these countries to take the next step and remove these latent laws from their books.



Criminal libel law was born in an Elizabethan England courtroom as a means for silencing critique of the privileged class.  A law of such antiquated ethos has little place in modern society where the press plays a pivotal role in shaping public discourse.

IPI is actively campaigning for the governments of the Caribbean to redress their current criminal libel laws.  At present, the law is vague and open to indiscriminate and inconsistent implementation, largely wielded to quell dissent and stifle government criticism.



In the past two years, Caribbean criminal defamation cases have included a government official charging a previous campaign opponent with the crime and another where accusations made in a town hall meeting resulted in a lawsuit.  These cases exemplify the elasticity of a law largely wielded by those in positions of power.

While infrequently used in the Caribbean, criminal libel statutes remain an unnecessary resource at the disposal of any offended official.  The mere threat of prosecution chills investigation and free speech, sustains corruption, unnecessarily protects public officials, and denies one of the most basic of human rights, freedom of expression.

Criminal libel is one of the most pernicious media constraints in contemporary society.  Implemented at the will of any insulted public official, it frequently leaves no recourse for the defendant.  In most countries, truth is not a valid defence, leaving defence a vexing proposition.



Many countries have no clear demarcation or standard for determining the line between fair criticism and criminal offence.  That most existing criminal libel laws also lack a requirement for actual malice, a higher criterion for the libel of public figures -- to allow for debate and discourse of government and other instruments of power -- only further underscores the capricious nature and implementation at the disposal of government figures.

IPI condemns modern use of criminal libel and advocates banishing the law, and utilising civil remedies as alternatives.  Often governments argue the need for strong punitive measures as a defence against scurrilous journalism, but freedom of expression and the press requires a more nuanced regulation in order to allow for public dialogue.  Certainly, punishment for careless or slanderous speech is necessary, but this should take place in a civil courtroom.



IPI stands beside numerous international accords, court opinions, and governments in these beliefs.  As early as 1948, the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights declared the significance of freedom of expression, with special note to press rights, by naming it one of the basic truths of humanity.

More recently, an international coalition comprised of members from the United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Organization of American States (OAS), and the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (AFCHP) named the criminalisation of defamation as one of the ten biggest threats to the freedom of expression.


IPI has conducted press freedom missions in a number of Caribbean nations.  An IPI delegation visited Trinidad and Tobago Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Barbados Prime Minister Freundel Stuart, and government ministers and officials in both Jamaica and the Dominican Republic.  In each instance, IPI received support for its position on criminal libel, with each government reaffirming its commitment to an independent press.

In June 2012, the IPI General Assembly meeting in Port of Spain endorsed the Declaration of Port of Spain, calling for the abolition of "insult laws" and criminal defamation legislation in the Caribbean.  Stating that "the Caribbean urgently needs a strong, free and independent media to act as a watchdog over public institutions," the Declaration of Port of Spain identifies "the continued implementation of ‘insult laws’ – which outlaw criticism of politicians and those in authority and have as their motive the 'locking up of information' – and criminal defamation legislation as a prime threat to media freedom in the Caribbean."

IPI has received further endorsement for the Declaration of Port of Spain from numerous organisations throughout the Caribbean, including the Association of Caribbean Media Workers, and media and press associations in Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Barbados, Grenada, Guyana, Antigua and Barbuda, Saint Lucia, Suriname, and St Kitts and Nevis.

A free society is founded on an open exchange of opinions, popular or not.  Criminal libel does little more than stifle this public discourse.  We’ve evolved a great deal since the 16th century origin of criminal libel.  To continue to rely on an antiquated law that acts as little more than a tool of repression would signal a society uncertain of its democratic principles.  Many Caribbean countries have publicly repudiated criminal libel.  IPI calls on these governments to join in the progress of freedom of expression and recognise their existing criminal libel laws as archaic and detrimental, and to remove the law from their books.


Considerable work lies ahead in achieving this goal, but IPI is encouraged by the progress thus far.  With diligence and continued collaboration, IPI is confident the nations of the Caribbean will proceed in striking this relic of a bygone era from their records and take their rightful places as homes of truly free and independent press.

September 05, 2012

Caribbeannewsnow

Monday, October 10, 2005

Beware of Nigerian Fraudsters and Thieves Online

Nigerian Crooks are Busy Online in Search of Gullible People to Rob, Swing, and Swindle


Scam Alert!

African Diplomat Warns About Nigerian Fraud Schemes


By Candia Dames

candiadames@hotmail.com

Nassau, The Bahamas

10 October 2005


If you are among the many Bahamians receiving e-mails from Nigerians almost daily inviting you to assist in the transfer or investment of hundreds of millions of dollars, authorities say there is a good chance that you are being invited to participate in a fraudulent scheme.


Nigerian High Commissioner to The Bahamas Habib Elabor reminded when he appeared on the Love 97 programme, "Jones and Company", which aired on Sunday that "it takes two to tango."


"As they say in law, the thief and the man who agrees to keep stolen property are equally guilty of theft," Mr. Elabor said.


"We know that there are thieves in Nigeria who have stolen our money, kept this money in Western banks and when we now ask the West to release this money to Nigeria they are refusing to do that.


"How do you explain [that]?  Is it Nigeria that is corrupt or those people who are abetting in this corruption?"


Bahamian police said recently that in 2002, a Bahamian businessman reported that he was scammed out of thousands of dollars and threatened by the Internet perpetrators.


Police eventually advised the man to change his e-mail address and telephone contact.


"These people who are involved in this type of scam act on the greed of individuals that they pitch the business idea to.  It’s amazing that in this day and age persons are being swindled out of money by advanced thieves," Assistant Superintendent of Police Drexel Cartwright told The Bahama Journal recently.


In an earlier report on this matter, The Journal released details of one of these e-mails in which an individual, who identified himself as a Nigerian and claimed to be a financial controller of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, pitched a business investment.


He invited the receiver to transfer $120,000 to a Nigerian account for a private investment, which would accumulate up to $120 million.


The letter also requested personal information from the individual including a personal address, phone contact, bank address and account number.


The letter states that after the deposit is received the Nigerian will meet with the investor to finalize the transaction.


Mr. Elabor expressed surprise that some people could be so "gullible" that they actually act on such offers.


The High Commissioner, who is also the Nigerian diplomat in Cuba, said about three weeks ago a Bahamian man came to meet him in Havana and informed that he was getting involved in an investment involving hundreds of millions of dollars with Nigerian partners.


"I [asked] this man, ‘did you execute a contract in Nigeria?  Where’s the proof?  Who are your Nigerian partners?’  Under our law there is no way you would execute a contract of such magnitude without having Nigerian partners.  He could not point out who his partners were," Mr. Elabor said.


"I said ‘If you want to pursue this matter, I would advise our government to listen to you.  But if it turns out you are [aiding and abetting] people with criminal intensions, you too could face [our] law’.  That is how we ended it."


Mr. Elabor said he gave the Bahamian man a copy of the advisory that the Nigerian central bank has been issuing throughout the Western press.


"If anyone is in doubt [he or she] should refer such letters to the embassy,"  he said.  "Don’t ever succumb to the temptation that is inherent in these letters."