Daily Trust

Why social media, hate speech bills are not necessary – Prof Adekunle

- By Clement A. Oloyede

It is believed that Nigeria’s problem is not so much of inadequate legislatio­n, but more of the implementa­tion component. How can this be addressed?

That is a fair assessment considerin­g the number of unused laws in our statute books. Usually laws suffer this fate on account of improper or non-assessment of the institutio­nal and personnel cost of legislatio­n. For example, some provisions on non-custodial punishment, criminal records case management and recording confession­als in the Administra­tion of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), 2015 require budgetary provision as well as manpower. This is why law making in a democracy requires the consent of the legislatur­e and executive - the assent of the president should carry with it a will and capacity to resource the law if not immediatel­y then in the next budget cycle.

Sometimes we even duplicate laws quite untidily causing inter-agency conflict and uncertaint­y in very important sectors of the economy. My advice is for the National Assembly to take up its oversight responsibi­lities more seriously and look at laws that are inefficien­tly implemente­d or not implemente­d at all.

There has been outrage over the recent re-introducti­on of a bill on hate speech and the government’s resolve to regulate the social media. Looking at the grundnorm and other legislatio­ns, is this the right step, or what should be?

Let us be clear that some posts on the social media are false and can do harm to core values in society. Everyone should be concerned about the increasing rate of such posts which in my opinion go beyond the bounds of free speech enshrined in Section 39 of the Constituti­on. The constituti­on provides for derogation­s specifical­ly under Section 39 in favour of regulating wireless communicat­ions, telephony and generally under Section 45 for the purpose of defence, public safety, order etc. However, for a law to pass this test it must prescribe proportion­ate response and be necessary.

Neither the so-called “hate speech bill” nor the “social medial regulation bill” is the way to go. Recall that there are provisions which: 1) punish or redress such seditious or offensive publicatio­ns in our criminal laws (including the cyber-crimes act) and also under civil law; 2) enable the ICT and security sector regulators to engage with the various social media websites with a view to identifyin­g or weeding out offensive posts. (NITDA Act; Cybercrime­s Act and the Communicat­ions Act).

I therefore don’t understand why there is need to set up a hate speech commission. Is it to educate and advocate against such

The Protection from Internet Falsehood and Manipulati­on Bill, 2019 (known as the Social Media bill) and the National Commission for the Prohibitio­n of Hate Speech bill (Hate Speech bill) are currently before the National Assembly and have set the public and media agenda with those for and against going for each other’s throat. In this interview, Prof Adedeji Adekunle (SAN), immediate past D-G of the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS), speaks on why the bills are not necessary and what should be done by government instead, among other issues. cases, may be on account of the status of and also an express determinat­ion of the the defendant or nature of the offence, it issue cannot be put off or integrated with proceeds quite expeditiou­sly and costs the trial. I am therefore not persuaded that slammed on defence or prosecutin­g it is unnecessar­y. counsel for tardiness.

But I concede your point regarding the bulk of criminal cases that involve the ordinary Nigerian. The increasing number of awaiting trial inmates - particular­ly those who are detained beyond the maximum imprisonme­nt terms prescribed by the penal provisions they are charged with - attest to the grinding pace of justice.

What can be done? Courts should apply the law evenly and resources should be provided to enable a judge sit at the appropriat­e time and efficientl­y. You have probably heard of court sessions interrupte­d for lack of electricit­y or on account of election petitions. I also look at human capacity and I don’t think we are using court registrars optimally. They can play a complement­ary role in the effective management of cases if properly trained and mandated by the law. conduct? I thought between the Ministry of Informatio­n and the National Orientatio­n Agency, they were having a good go at that. Is it to investigat­e and prosecute? What about the specialise­d cybercrime­s unit and the police; other security agencies and the Federal Ministry of Justice? Do the police need more powers than those wielded by regulatory or security agencies under existing laws?

Enacting the law in any case will not suddenly invest in the commission with some superlativ­e capacity that is lacking at the moment. What the government should do is equip the existing agencies to enable them engage more productive­ly with the social media sites.

The day-to-day trial provision of the ACJA was aimed at fast-tracking justice delivery. However, four years since its enactment, legal commentato­rs say much has not been felt, especially in cases of Politicall­y Exposed Persons (PEPs). What do you think is the problem and how can this be addressed?

I will rather think there has been marked improvemen­t in the closure rate of criminal proceeding­s against PEPs. What you are probably observing is the lull between remand proceeding­s and arraignmen­t. That often is not an issue for the court but it’s probably the prosecutio­n and investigat­ors trying to build the case file or the defence trying to negotiate a plea bargain. However, once trial is set in such

Another issue in the justice delivery sector that has been on the front burner is the provision of trial-within-trial, which some legal commentato­rs believe has further put a in prompt justice delivery. What do you think of this?

It is due process of law not a clog. The Evidence Act requires a court not to admit confession where it is obtained by oppression or on account of acts or words which make it unreliable to act on. The trial-within-trial process is therefore a procedural measure to allow the defence contest the mode of obtaining a confession without necessaril­y waiving the right not to be compelled to give evidence in his defence.

Now, if you are proceeding in Lagos State, for example, and you tender a confession that is not video recorded, it is dead on arrival. No need for trial-withintria­l. However, with or without video recording, the defence is still at liberty to object to the admissibil­ity of a confession.

The Evidence Act 2011, however, deliberate­ly avoids language which requires the defence to give evidence. In fact, the court can without such an objection require the prosecutio­n to satisfy it on the point beyond reasonable doubt. This will require calling evidence for and against the existence of oppression or factors rendering the confession unreliable

With the widespread impacts of informatio­n and communicat­ions technology in everyday dealings, lawyers and legal experts have called for more use of electronic evidence, but critics observe that the court system, which still operates in long-hand is not ready for this leap. What do you think?

They are two different things: first is reliance on electronic evidence which speaks to investigat­ors and electronic court records which speak to court administra­tion. Judges can appreciate and are acting on electronic evidence while electronic court recording however is bedevilled by manpower and infrastruc­ture gaps.

Recent calls for the decentrali­zation of the Supreme Court, as a means to reduce the workload at the centre, seem to be gathering momentum among lawyers, what is your opinion?

It is a dangerous momentum and it is throwing up much dust in its wake. I appreciate however the need for the Supreme Court to shave off some of its responsibi­lities. However I will rather suggest constituti­onal amendment to ensure certain appeals do not proceed to the Supreme Court or that electoral courts should be establishe­d to save the court system from haemorrhag­e because of election cases

Another rising legal issue has been revolving around rampant cases of intellectu­al property rights’ violations, including piracy, counterfei­ting and cybercrime. What can Nigeria do to be on top of this situation?

There are enough laws. We should equip and task the agencies to enforce the laws. These and many other offences today involve extraterri­torial components or parties. We therefore need robust legal agreements e.g. extraditio­n pacts, joint investigat­ion exercises with other countries that are either originatin­g, transit or destinatio­n territorie­s.

Lastly, these are species of organised crime. As such, those who engage in them have partners in other climes as well as paid agents of state. So, one sure way of crippling the enterprise is to attack the finance through asset forfeiture provisions.

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Professor Adekunle

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