Legality |
Legitimate Grounds |
Necessity |
Proportionality
|
Statement of Fact |
Public Officials / Figures
|
Actual Malice |
Burden of Proof |
Defenses | ||||||||
Restrictions must be provided by law [1] |
Sufficient precision: Law must not be overbroad [2] |
Rights of others OR [3] |
National security, public order, public health or morals [4] |
Necessary for a legitimate purpose (see legitimate grounds) [5] |
Only way to achieve protection [6] |
Restriction on expression should not be overbroad [7] |
Least intrusive instrument amongst those which might achieve their protective function [8] |
Proportionate to |
Statement must not be an opinion that is not subject to verification [10] |
Heightened value of uninhibited expression for public officials/figures [11] |
Public figures are subject to criticisms and opposition [12] |
Plaintiff must proof actual malice to go forward on actions concerning public figures [13] |
Should avoid penalizing unlawful or untrue statements that have been published in error but without malice [14] |
Plaintiff bears the burden of proof [15] |
Truth [16] |
Public interest of the subject matter [17] |
1 |
General Comment 34, “Among the other articles that contain guarantees for freedom of opinion and, or expression, are articles 18, 17, 25 and 27. The freedoms of opinion and expression form a basis for the full enjoyment of a wide range of other human rights. For instance, freedom of expression is integral to the enjoyment of the rights to freedom of assembly and association;” “Defamation laws must be crafted with care to ensure that they . . . do not serve, in practice, to stifle freedom of expression.” |
2 |
General Comment 34, paragraph 26, “a ‘law’, must be formulated with sufficient precision to enable an individual to regulate his or her conduct accordingly and it must be made public.” |
3 |
Rights: The term rights includes human rights as recognized in the Covenant and, more generally, in international human rights law. It may be legitimate to restrict freedom of expression in the cases of articles 25 (pertaining the right to vote. See Communication No. 968, Jong-Cheol v. Republic of Korea, paragraph 8.3) and article 17 (arbitrary or unlawful interference with privacy, family, correspondence, attacks on honor and reputation) when the expression involves, for example, “intimidation or coercion” (an example for article 25 is given), but such restrictions “must be constructed with care” (on “intimidation and coercion” under article 25, see Communication No. 927/2000, Leonid Svetik v. Belarus). See also General Comment 34, paragraph 28. |
4 |
National security: Legitimate ground to ban speech only if the speech conveys “a perceived threat to national security (violent overthrow of the constitutional order [a crime under Uzbek legislation]) and to the rights of others” See Communication N0. 1233, AK & AR v. Uzbekistan, paragraph 7.2. Treason laws and similar provisions relating to national security, such as official secrets and sedition laws, also included as a legitimate ground. See General Comment 34, paragraph 30. |
5 |
Necessity/ Necessary for a legitimate purpose: See General Comment 34, paragraph 33. See communication No. 359, 385/89, Ballantyne , Davidson and McIntyre v. Canada, paragraph 11.4 |
6 |
Necessity/Only way to achieve protection: See Communication No. 359, 385/89, Ballantyne, Davidson and McIntyre v. Canada, paragraph 11.4 and General Comment 34, paragraph 33. |
7 |
Proportionality/Restriction on expression should not be overbroad: See General Comment 34, paragraph 34. |
8 |
Proportionality/Appropiate to achieve protective function: See General comment No. 27, para. 14. Appropriate to achieve protective function There seems to be no further intepretation of this standard. He made me, merge these two See Kozlov v. Belarus |
9 |
Proportionality/ Proportionate to the interest to be protected: “[t]he requirement of necessity implies an element of proportionality, in the sense that the scope of the restriction imposed on freedom of expression must be proportional to the value which the restriction serves to protect.” See Communication 1128/2002, Marques v. Angola, paragraph 6.8. |
10 | General Comment 34, “All [defamation] laws should not be applied with regard to the expression of opinions that are not, of their nature, subject to verification.” |
11 | Bodrozic v. Serbia & Montenegro, “The Committee observes, moreover, that in circumstances of public debate in a democratic society, especially in the media, concerning figures in the political domain, the value placed by the Covenant upon uninhibited expression is particularly high.”
Aduayom et al. v Togo, “[T]he freedoms of information and of expression are cornerstones in any free and democratic society. It is the essence of such societies that its citizens must be allowed to inform themselves about alternatives to the political system/parties in power, and that they may criticise or openly and publicly evaluate their Governments without fear of interference or punishment”. |
12 | Marques v. Angola, “a public figure . . . is subject to criticism and opposition.”* |
13 | Great Britain & Nortern Ireland Concluding Observations, “The State party should re-examine its technical doctrines of libel law, and consider the utility of a so-called “public figure” exception, requiring proof by the plaintiff of actual malice in order to go forward on actions concerning reporting on public officials and prominent public figures.” |
14 | General Comment 34, “At least with regard to comments about public figures, consideration should be given to avoiding penalising or otherwise rendering unlawful untrue statements that have been published in error but without malice.” |
15 | UN Human Rights Committee opinion on libel laws in the United Kingdom: “The State party should re-examine its technical doctrines of libel law, and consider the utility of a so-called ‘public figure’ exception, requiring proof by the plaintiff of actual malice in order to go forward on actions concerning reporting on public officials and prominent public figures, as well as limiting the requirement that defendants reimburse a plaintiff’s lawyers fees and costs regardless of scale, including Conditional Fee Agreements and so-called ‘success fees’, especially insofar as these may have forced defendant publications to settle without airing valid defences. The ability to resolve cases through enhanced pleading requirements (e.g., requiring a plaintiff to make some preliminary showing of falsity and absence of ordinary journalistic standards) might also be considered. (2008) UN doc CCPR/C/GBR/CO/6. |
16 | General Comment 34, “All such laws should include the defence of truth.” |
17 | General Comment 34, “a public interest in the subject matter of the criticism should be recognised as a defence.”
Kozlov v. Belarus, “public interest in the subject matter of a criticism is a factor to be taken into account when considering allegations of defamation.” |