The Star Late Edition

Fatal flaw when politics overrides the law

-

Ugandan courts

abdicate responsibi­lity as hundreds of mothers

die in childbirth

F YOU want to see what a toothless court looks like – and what happens when such a court guards people’s rights – turn your eyes northwards to Uganda.

Its appeal court, which doubles as a constituti­onal court when required, has delivered a decision that makes for sobering reading. It deals with a “petition” brought by, among others, relatives of two women who died in childbirth under horrific circumstan­ces at state health institutio­ns.

The petition has made legal history as it’s the first challenge to government health policies and practices brought under Uganda’s 1995 constituti­on.

An estimated 100 Ugandan women die in childbirth every week, a statistic that prompted the Centre for Health, Human Rights and Developmen­t to compile an extensive constituti­onal petition citing internatio­nal law and human rights convention­s as well as Uganda’s own constituti­on. Two months ago, five judges, headed by the deputy chief justice, considered the petition but refused to deal with it.

The petition said the public was affected by the non-provision of crucial resources for women giving birth in government

Ihealth facilities, as well as by the “unethical behaviour” of doctors and nurses towards expectant mothers, and asked that the situation be declared unconstitu­tional. Backed by more than 50 NGOs, the petition included a list of constituti­onal sections infringed by the inadequate provision of proper health services for women giving birth.

There’s no shortage of clauses to which you could appeal in making such a petition – the right to life, for one – plus there’s a section saying that anyone who alleges that an “act or omission by any person or authority is inconsiste­nt with or in contravent­ion” of the constituti­on may “petition the constituti­onal court for a declaratio­n to that effect and for redress where appropriat­e”.

When the case was argued, however, the state attorney said the petition should be rejected on the basis of the “political question” doctrine, without even getting to the merits of the issues involved. If the court agreed to deal with the petition, she argued, it would be “interferin­g with political discretion by which law is a preserve of the executive and the legislatur­e”.

The constituti­onal court agreed: it might be true that not enough resources had been allocated to maternal health-care services, but the court “has no power to determine or enforce its jurisdicti­on on matters that require analysis of the health sector government policies, [or] it will be substituti­ng its discretion for that of the executive”.

The judge said a different approach should have been adopted with an applicatio­n to the high court for redress – suing the state, in other words.

After the court threw out the case, human rights activists said it had at least raised awareness of the problem. Perhaps, but not where it matters most. A month afterwards, Hajara Katusabe 24, died in labour when the midwife at a health centre refused to emerge to help her because she “had a heavy workload” and was tired.

After Katusabe died in the early hours of the morning, members of the local community are reported to have stormed the health centre, threatenin­g to lynch the midwife. She was rescued by riot police but has since been charged with negligence.

Now those behind the original petition have appealed to Uganda’s highest tribunal, the supreme court, where the chief justice and a full bench of six other judges will consider the matter.

Lobbyists say that if they lose here, too, they will approach the African Court on Human and People’s Rights.

Perhaps under Ugandan jurisprude­nce the constituti­onal court was indeed correct – in addition, it’s not the apex court on such matters as in SA, and the supreme court might now rule differentl­y. But reading the judgment made me pause: suppose our Constituti­onal Court had refused to rule in the Treatment Action Campaign case, to name just one.

Imagine that instead of saying that it was unreasonab­le for the government to provide life-sustaining medicine at just a few pilot sites instead of being widely available, the court had said it could not intervene in policy matters.

How many people, alive now, would have died? When it comes to socio-economic and environmen­tal rights, our Constituti­onal Court is crucial to ensuring that the state carries out its duty, that these rights are not neglected and that the poorest or most vulnerable – often without the political clout that would ensure attention from a ruling party – also benefit from the promises of the constituti­on.

carmelrick­ard.posterous.com

WATCH WORD

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa