The Zimbabwe Independent

Ghana’s law on publicatio­n of false news vague

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Ghana repealed its controvers­ial criminal libel law two decades ago. Recent incidents have seen the Ghana Police Service use a different law to arrest and prosecute some media personalit­ies. The law being used is Publicatio­n of False News under the Criminal Offences Act. Legal practition­er and media law lecturer Samuel Appiah Darko (SD, pictured) explains why the law was passed, the inherent dangers of its wording and the abuses it is enabling to Godfred Akoto Boafo (GB).

GB: How well does Ghana rank on free speech?

SD: Criminal libel and seditious libel laws have existed under both military and constituti­onal rule in Ghana. Until their repeal, the fear that you would be arrested was a constant reminder and made the journalism practice dangerous.

A number of editors and reporters were arrested and jailed. Those in the mostly dominated state-owned media exercised self-censorship and the few vocal private media like the Free Press, Catholic Standard, among others, needed extra courage to practice. It meant being careful and calculativ­e in publishing.

Three years ago an undercover journalist was murdered and there are still no consequenc­es. Police and national security intimidati­on, harassment, arrests and prosecutio­ns of journalist­s and activists are rising.

Ghana’s free speech ranking remains one of the best on the continent. But many have expressed worry about a return of the “culture of silence”.

Journalist­s, activists and religious leaders are being targeted through criminal law, namely Section 208 of the Criminal Offences Act, Act 29 as amended. This relates to publicatio­n of false news with intent to cause fear and alarm.

GB: What is the justificat­ion for the law? SD: This section of the law was inherited from a British colonial rule drafted in 1893. It is so vague and nebulous that it imposes criminal liability on almost any kind of speech that in the opinion of the enforcer can cause fear and alarm.

From anecdotal evidence, this law was made vague and wide to suppress publicatio­ns likely to inflame agitation for independen­ce. It was also supposed to be used for averting panic around natural disasters.

Under common law, inducing panic laws are used for grave, serious and wild speech such as shouting false fire in a crowded theatre or stadium. It was expected that after independen­ce, Ghana’s laws would reflect the modern values of an independen­t state. Unfortunat­ely, the neo-colonial post-independen­ce period rather reinforced the existing regime. Ideally, laws to prevent panic are very clear and specific.

Vague provisions like Ghana’s remains on the statute books of many African and Latin American countries, however. Recently, many courts in Africa have declared false publicatio­n to be at variance with internatio­nal standards. In May 2021, the High Court in Kenya ruled that publicatio­n of false statements, rumours or alarming reports was not a criminal offence.

A similar judgment was given by the High Court in Zambia in 2014. The courts held that criminalis­ing false publicatio­ns suppressed freedom of speech.

In 2001, Ghana repealed most of the draconian provisions in Act 29, including those relating to criminal libel and insult. But false publicatio­n was left out. It’s not clear why. Some scholars say it was an oversight, others say it was deliberate. This law sins against both national and internatio­nal human rights law on freedom of speech. It is draconian and archaic. It needs to be amended, refined or thrown out.

Ghana’s Electronic Communicat­ions Act (Act 775) in Section 76 also makes false communicat­ions a criminal offence, but it is in line with modern democratic laws. It clearly defines false communicat­ion and limits its scope to a communicat­ion likely to prejudice the efficiency of a life-saving service or to endanger the safety of any person, ship, aircraft, vessel or vehicle. This is similar to the New York false reporting statute.

GB: Could the problem be solved in another way?

SD: The security agencies, particular­ly the Ghana Police Service, are abusing the law. The popular argument is that if public officials and people linked to power feel defamed by a publicatio­n, the correct approach is not to use the police to arrest people under the false publicatio­n provision but to sue under civil law.

The argument is also that the state has enough resources to counter any false publicatio­n by putting out the facts. People also feel the law is simply being abused to “teach” dissenting opinions “where power lies”. Where a civil remedy is available, speech should not be criminalis­ed.

The law on false publicatio­n was not supposed to be applied to everyday commentary. It could be amended to limit it in scope and clearly define acts or conducts that may cause fear and alarm.

In its current form, the law is draconian, archaic, nebulous and subject to abuse. It’s better not to have it at all since there are alternativ­e remedies in tort, rejoinder, arbitratio­n and national security and public order laws.

There is a global narrative on how to fight the fake news epidemic, but no agreed set of useful laws or approaches. The popular view has been to hold social media platforms and mainstream media responsibl­e. And for government­s to counter false news with accurate, timely and reliable informatio­n.

Furthermor­e, the state should embark on public education to enable the public to decipher likely false informatio­n. Those that go over the edge and affect emergencie­s, life-saving activities, security of the state and natural disasters may be criminalis­ed. — The Conversati­on.

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