A mkokoteni hustler hauling bags of potatoes shouts at a group that was chatting while blocking his way: “Tokeni njiani nyinyi mafala wa Kisumu, au mrudi kwenu.”
This is one of the examples given in the Police Training Manual on the Enforcement of the Law on Hate Speech.
To add another, here is a statement made by an MP during the 2005 referendum: “Watu wa Central Province wameshindwa kama shetani”.
The
two examples illustrate the challenges faced by police in determining
what hate speech is, and what is prosecutable. Hate speech is a tough
crime to prosecute and make stick.
The National
Cohesion and Integration Commission has not successfully prosecuted any
of the many high-profile cases it has initiated with much fanfare.
It’s
no wonder Cord leaders are pooh-poohing the summons they received from
the Director of Public Prosecutions to record statements with the police
in connection with the hate speeches they are supposed to have made in
rallies across the country.
On Tuesday, Senator Moses
Wetang’ula dismissed the questions the police were asking those summoned
as “ridiculous and at best laughable.”
He could well
be right. The police face many challenges including hostility when
collecting evidence from those accused. Other challenges are difficulty
in interpreting what constitutes hate speech, preserving evidence and
conducting prosecutions in a manner that can lead to conviction.
NOT ADMISSIBLE IN COURT
Section
13 of the National Cohesion and Integration Act states that a person
who “uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour” is
guilty of hate speech. The section is open to many and very wide
interpretations. But not all abuses and insults are hate speech.
Words
only become hate speech if the person “intends” to stir up ethnic
hatred, or if ethnic hatred is “likely” to be stirred up.
The
essence of hate speech is threat, abuse, or insult. But sometimes the
language used is coded. The words used could have an alternative
meaning, a figurative one, or could be an innuendo. The context in which
the words are used is also important.
So is the status of the speaker and the forum where the words are spoken, as well as the publicity given to the speech.
The
type of evidence collected is also critical. For example, secondary
evidence such as tapes and videos may not be admissible in court. Other
challenges include interference by influential politicians.
A
hate speech charge may also be challenged on the grounds that the words
were not intended to incite violence or cause hatred, or that it
violates the freedom of speech guaranteed in the Constitution.
Drawing
up the charge itself could be quite tricky. If a charge contains more
than one offence in one count, or if it does not disclose an offence
known to the law, the court could reject the charge.
A rejected charge could act as a bar to further prosecution.
The Cord leaders could very well go on laughing all the way to the next rally, unscathed.
gigirimwaura@yahoo.com
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