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Bushoborozi V Uganda (HCT01CVMC0011 of 2015) 2015 UGHCCRD 14 (10 July 2015)

The High Court of Uganda ruled in favor of Bushoborozi Eric, who had been detained since 2002 for murder but was found insane and not guilty in 2006. The court criticized the lack of action from the Minister regarding his release and emphasized the need for judicial powers to be exercised by the courts rather than the Minister. The ruling granted Eric unconditional freedom, highlighting the violation of his human rights due to prolonged detention without resolution.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views10 pages

Bushoborozi V Uganda (HCT01CVMC0011 of 2015) 2015 UGHCCRD 14 (10 July 2015)

The High Court of Uganda ruled in favor of Bushoborozi Eric, who had been detained since 2002 for murder but was found insane and not guilty in 2006. The court criticized the lack of action from the Minister regarding his release and emphasized the need for judicial powers to be exercised by the courts rather than the Minister. The ruling granted Eric unconditional freedom, highlighting the violation of his human rights due to prolonged detention without resolution.

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Abigail Tendo
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA

IN THE HIGH COURT OF UGANDA AT FORT PORTAL

HCT-01-CV-MC-0011 OF 2015

BUSHOBOROZI ERIC..........................................APPLICANT

VS.

UGANDA........................................................RESPONDENT

BEFORE HIS LORDSHIP HON. JUSTICE BATEMA N.D.A, JUDGE

RULING

Background and Application

This is an application brought under Section 33 and 39 of the Judicature Act and Article 139

(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda. The Applicant, Bushoborozi Eric, was first

detained at Katojo Government Prison, Fort Portal in 2002 for the murder of his child whose

head he cut off from the neck claiming that he was killing a snake. He was tried in the High

Court before Justice Rugadya Atwooki. Court found that he was insane and therefore

returned a special finding of Not guilty by virtue of section 48 (1) of the Trial on Indictment

Act (T.I.A). He was then remanded on December 1, 2006 pending the minister’s orders as to

where should be taken for mental treatment or otherwise be dealt with.

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It was submitted by Senior Counsel Cosma Kateeba for the applicant that since December

2006, the minister has never made any orders in respect of the applicant. That the name of the

applicant with others is submitted to the Minister every year but he has taken no action.

Counsel made reference to a letter (Annexure B2) from the Commissioner General of Prisons

dated 17th August, 2012 which shows that efforts are made regularly submitting the names of

all inmates remanded pending minister’s orders.

Counsel also referred to a letter he wrote to the Chief Registrar on 17 th June, 2014 bringing

the applicant’s case to his attention. He got no remedy. Counsel further submitted that it has

become routine for the prison authorities to bring to the attention of every Chief Justice,

Principal Judge and resident Judge the many cases pending the Minister’s orders including

the instant case. He noted that all the judicial officers have always promised to handle the

matter but their promises have turned out to be empty promises.

The special case for this application is that much as he was later treated and became normal,

having gained all mental stability, he cannot be released by the prison authorities without a

Minister’s order.

Counsel submitted that there is no specific provision in any law or procedure to apply for the

release of prisoners pending the Minister’s order. That when the Minister fails to issue his

orders the prison remains stuck with the prisoner and the prisoner cannot lawfully regain his

freedom. That is why he moved this court under Article 139 of the Constitution and the

general provisions under S. 33 and S. 39 of the Judicature Act.

Mr. Wasswa Adam, the Senior State Attorney, conceded that it was a complex case without

an express procedure or solution. He admitted the fact that he had filed no affidavit in reply

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but prayed that he be granted audience due to the importance of the matter. Court granted him

that prayer.

Mr. Wasswa Adam submitted that much as the prisoner had been on remand since his arrest

in 2002, court cannot release such a dangerous mental case to the unsuspecting public. He

advised that the best procedure is for the applicant to apply for orders of Mandamus to force

the minister to make the orders. He further submitted that if the applicant is released court

will have set a bad precedent where ministers and public officers who disobey court orders

are not forced to obey and will continue to disobey with impunity.

In final reply Senior Counsel Kateeba submitted that his client is no longer a mental case or a

danger to society. He relied on the letter from the In-Charge Katojo Prison (Annexure B1)

showing that his client has been in a stable mental state off the treatment since 2012. Counsel

said that there is no medical evidence adduced by the state to rebut this report.

Senior Counsel Kateeba further submitted that an applicant who comes to court is like a

mendicant who has come to the temple of justice. He is entitled to a just remedy and cannot

go away empty handed. That this court has got unlimited inherent powers to grant him a

remedy even if he has not applied for orders of mandamus. He prayed that this matter be

treated as a special case to grant the applicant the freedom he is entitled to.

Senior Counsel Kateeba made very little reference to the affidavit of the applicant made in

support of the application. But it is on record and it stands uncontested. The applicant swears

that he committed the murder when he was insane. That he has been on remand since July

2002. He was tried and found not guilty by reason of his insanity. That since his acquittal in

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December 2006, he has been on remand at Katojo prison pending the minister’s order. That

he underwent mental treatment and has been declared mentally stable by the relevant doctors.

He attached a report of his stable mental status to his affidavit.

The Old Law

This case demonstrates the ills in our criminal Justice system which we must work so hard to

eliminate. It also points at the weakness of the law giving politicians (ministers) judicial

powers without a procedure of monitoring and evaluating execution of their orders. Sub-

section (3) of Section 48 of the T.I.A gives such judicial powers to the Minister to determine

whether an insane prisoner may be confined in a mental hospital, prison or other suitable

place of custody or be discharged.

Subsection (4) of Section 48 provides that the superintendent of a mental hospital, prison or

other place in which any criminal lunatic is detained by order of the Minister under

subsection (3) shall make a report to the Minister of the condition, history and circumstances

of every such lunatic at the expiration of three years from the date of the Minister’s order and

thereafter at the expiration of periods of two years from the date of the last report.

It was conceded by the state that in the instant case and many other cases the prison

authorities have been making regular reports to the Minister but he has made no orders to

either discharge or otherwise deal with the criminal lunatics. The court is being asked to give

justice to such criminal lunatics and in this particular case to give freedom to a former lunatic

who has been treated and declared mentally stable. This is a special case where upon

receiving the report that the prisoner is no longer a threat or danger to the general public, the

Minister should have ordered that he be discharged from custody forthwith.

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Judicial Activism

It is true that no procedure is provided for returning the prisoner to court for appropriate

orders where the Minister has failed or ignored to issue the necessary orders. But Section 39

of the Judicature Act deals with the jurisdiction of the High Court in the absence of

procedures.

Section 39 (2) provides;

“where in any case no procedure is laid down for the High Court by any written law

or by practice, the court may, in its discretion, adopt a procedure justifiable by the

circumstances of the case.”

The learned State Attorney submitted that the best option should have been to sue and apply

for orders of Mandamus to force the Minister to make the appropriate orders. No. I do not

agree. Suing the Attorney General for orders of Mandamus will unnecessarily increase

litigation costs when the court can actually still act on the same criminal case file. The orders

sought are not civil orders. This is a criminal matter whose file has never been closed.

Whatever orders are to be given, after the trial of a prisoner, must be judicial orders relating

to the execution of the treatment, continued detention of the criminal lunatic or discharge of

that prisoner. The question is whether the minister is the most proper person to issue such

judicial orders.

Judicial power belongs to the people of Uganda and the people have, through the constitution,

vested their judicial power with the Courts of law and not the minister. Article 126 of the

Constitution of the Republic of Uganda reads in part:

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“(1) Judicial power is derived from the people and shall be exercised by the courts

established under the constitution in the name of the people and in conformity with law and

with the values, norms and aspirations of the people”

Read together with Article 274 clause (1), this law requiring the Minister to exercise judicial

power to determine the fate of a prisoner in criminal proceedings would be inappropriate or

outdated. Article 274 (1) provides;

“ Subject to the provisions of this article, the operation of the existing law after the coming

into force of this Constitution shall not be affected by the coming into force of this

Constitution but the existing law shall be construed with such modifications, adaptations,

qualifications and exceptions as may be necessary to bring it into conformity with this

Constitution.”

The law on Minister’s orders under S. 48 of the Trial on Indictment Act is such a law that

should be construed with modifications, adaptations, qualifications and exceptions to bring it

in conformity with the constitutional provisions on judicial powers and the right to a fair and

speedy trial before an independent and impartial court established by law. (Refer to article 28

of the Constitution).This is a case which calls for judicial activism on the part of judicial

officers to breathe life into the law in articles 126,128 and 274 of our Constitution. The

Constitution allows our courts to be innovative and introduce changes that will give the law

the most correct interpretation and effect that serves the ends of substantive justice. Our

hands are not tied by the existing law. I want to borrow the words of Lord Denning in

PARKER vs. PARKER [1954] ALL E.R. 22 and say; what is the argument on the other

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side? Only this, that no other case has been found in which it has been done before. That

argument does not appeal to me in the least. If we never do anything which has not been done

before, we shall never get anywhere. The law will stand still whilst the rest of the world goes

on: and that will be bad for both. Thus the winds of change are upon us. We have a duty to

give the law a persuasive and liberal legal interpretation.

Delayed Justice

In the case of Uganda v. Tesimana Rosemary, Criminal Revision Cause No. 0013 of 1999

at Masaka, Justice Egonda–Ntende, as he then was, handled an almost similar case. He

stopped the prosecution and dismissed the charges against an accused who had been kept on

remand for 9 years because she was mentally ill at the time. He ruled that where there is

uncertainty of the law in this area, the state would have sought guidance from the Director of

Public Prosecution or from the Courts. He concluded that failure to prosecute on the part of

the state Attorney within a period of three and half years after committal of the accused was

gross inaction and oppressive conduct violating the human rights of the accused.

In Uganda v. Shabahuria Matia, Criminal Revision No. 05 of 1999 at Masaka, the same

Justice Engonda Ntende had ruled that the High Court had inherent powers to prevent abuse

of the process of the court by curtailing delays as may be necessary for achieving the ends of

Justice. I agree. Under International law, including the UN principles on the protection of

persons with mental illness, such individuals as the applicant, are legally entitled to an

impartial and expeditious resolution of their cases and appropriate psychological assistance.

Dumping them in prison for years without resolution of their cases is cruel, inhuman and

degrading treatment contrary to article 24 of our Constitution.

7
It is unjustified for the Minister to fail to issue a discharge order for a prisoner who was

acquitted of charges of Murder by reason of his or her insanity and more so where, after

treatment, he is declared to be no longer insane.

The main purpose for the Minister’s orders would be for ensuring proper medical and other

treatment of the criminal lunatic. A Judge of the High Court can ably and legally exercise

inherent powers of the court to order for the proper medical and other treatment of the

criminal lunatic. The High court, instead of the Minister, can receive and act upon periodic

reports from the prison or mental hospital keeping and treating the prisoner and act upon

them. The provisions of the law that gave the Minister such powers can safely and

constitutionally be construed to be the powers of court under articles 126 and 274 of the

Constitution.

I am of the strong belief that the trial court retains the power to issue special orders for the

confinement, discharge, treatment or otherwise deal with the prisoner that is insane or has

ceased to be insane. That criminal file remains open pending the Judge’s special orders. It is

not done with until all is done with the prisoner.

Any court waiting for the minister’s orders is giving away the independence of the Judiciary

and is in one way or another accepting to be ordered around by the Minister who, as

experience has shown, is too busy to issue the orders. Courts should not allow any law or

practice that ousts the jurisdiction of court and hold the courts at ransom in judicial matters. I

stand to be corrected.

I would recommend for the adoption of the following procedure:

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a) Where the trial court makes a special finding that the criminal lunatic is not guilty by

reason of being insane, the judge must make special orders as to the discharge or

continued incarceration of the prisoner in an appropriate place.

b) The trial court must order, in line with Subsection (4) of Section 48 of the T.I.A that

the superintendent of the mental hospital, prison or other place detaining the prisoner

makes periodic reports to the court which may issue appropriate special orders for the

discharge of the Criminal lunatic or otherwise deal with him or her.

c) The Registrar of the Court shall periodically, and in any case not later than three years

from the date of the last court order or report from the institution keeping the prisoner,

make a production warrant for the prisoner and present the case file before the High

Court or any other Court of competent jurisdiction for appropriate special orders.

d) The Registrar may appoint Counsel on State briefs to assist court in revisiting the

cases pending the judge’s special orders.

The need for law reform in the law relating to criminal lunatics remanded pending the

Minister’s orders has been made by so many Judges in their reports on Criminal Sessions and

decisions. We need not lament more than that. The Deputy Registrar sitting at Fort Portal is

hereby directed to serve a copy of my ruling to the Rules Committee and the Principal Judge

with a view of prompting the development of some rules and or Practice Directions along

what I have recommended in this ruling.

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The applicant has been kept on remand for an unjustified period of 14 years in clear violation

of his human rights and should be set free forthwith unconditionally.

The application is granted setting free the prisoner.

Hon. Justice Batema N.D.A

Judge

10/07/2015

Other orders

The Deputy Registrar of the High Court at Fort Portal is ordered to liase with the Officers in

Charge of the various prisons in this circuit to resurrect all case files pending the Minister’s

orders and present them before me or any other Court of competent Jurisdiction for discharge

or other appropriate orders.

Hon. Justice Batema N.D.A

Judge

10/07/2015

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