Sunday, April 19, 2020

UNLAWFUL SEARCH RULING TO BE CHALLENGED IN SUPREME COURT


By N.Esparon

Following the release of the report of the Commission of Inquiry into the search of Honourable Wavel Ramkalawan’s luggage at Seychelles’ International Airport on 8 February 2020, the legal counsel for the Seychelles Police Force, Frank Elizabeth addressed the media through a press conference on Friday, 17 April 2020.

When Judge Fiona Robinson rendered the search conducted by ANB officers on Honourable Ramkalawan which occurred in February to be unlawful as the officers did not satisfy the test of reasonable grounds for suspicion before the search took place, it raised the question of the legality on the way stop and search is currently being conducted by law enforcement officers in Seychelles. The Misuse of Drugs Act, 2016 (MODA), under the Power of search and seizure, article 25 (1) states that an officer at any time, without a warrant, can - (a) to stop and search any person whom the officer reasonably suspects of having in his or her possession a controlled drug or an article liable to seizure.

According to Elizabeth, the Seychelles Police Force is not disputing the fact that MODA doesn’t give any officers the authority to conduct a stop and search without reasonable suspicions. However, Elizabeth explained that when consent for the search is given to the police, this should give the police the authority to search contrary to the findings in the report, which states that even though Honourable Ramkalawan instigated the search, and giving consent in the process, it was still an unlawful search due to no evidence of reasonable suspicion.
 
Elizabeth
Elizabeth announced that the Seychelles Police Force will therefore be taking this matter to the Supreme Court for judicial review and for them to make a pronouncement on whether Judge Robinson’s ruling was correct. He also pointed out that Judge Robinson based her ruling only on section 25 of the MODA but she should also have taken into account the Right to privacy, Article 20 (1) of the Seychelles Constitution where it states that every person has a right not to be subjected to – (a) without the consent of that person, to the search of the person or property or premises of that person or to the unlawful entry by others on the premises of that person. However, Elizabeth believes that in reverse to Article 20, where consent for the search is given to the authority, this should permit the law enforcement officers to search without any reasonable suspicions but this is contrary to the report as it suggests regardless of consent, reasonable suspicions must be present first.

According to Anthony Derjacques, the legal counsel for Honourable Ramkalawan, a judicial review is only applicable to an adjudicating authority, such as a tribunal, a court or public authority where they would render a determination or judgment on a matter. The role of the Commission of Inquiry is simply a body established under the Act by the president to establish the finding of the facts, the law and the facts under the law, it is not to adjudicate between parties like in a court of law but to establish the fact and report back to the president; the findings of the Commission can include recommendations.

Anthony Derjacques
He also pointed out that you don’t normally refer to the Constitution when there’s a dispute with a special law, in this case, the MODA, 2016. Normally this is addressed by submitting a petition to the Constitutional Court challenging the constitutionality of MODA. As MODA is separate from article 20, it has to be applied as is.

“If you want to enlarge MODA in the light of article 20, you have to take into account when looking for reasonable suspicion that in law, consent from a child is not consent and consent under duress is not consent in law. If there is a finding of consent, it is one of the circumstances that must be taken into consideration by the police officer when he or she finds there was reasonable suspicion. For example, a person who approaches a police officer and says to search him, the police officer will tell him to go away I have no intention of searching you. But if, in the circumstances that someone approaches an officer and ask to be searched to get the attention of the officer whilst his friends walk by with a package containing drugs, the police officer can take into account whether to determine if the person that said to search me knew about the drug trafficking taking place and raises a reasonable suspicion in his mind, he can even arrest that person. You cannot look at consent or the lack of consent in isolation, it is one of the circumstances when you try to interpret section 25 (1) of MODA” clarified Derjacques.


Source: Today in Seychelles