Factors contributing to the changes in the Bulgarian Penal Code relating to libel and insult
Àuthor: Boyko Boev
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| Introduction Participants in the campaign for amendments to the Penal Code Key events: Blazing the trail that led to the amendment of the Penal Code |
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Introduction
In the spring
of 2000, the provisions contained in the Republic of Bulgaria's Penal Code for
libel and insult were amended. These amendments made criminal prosecution for
insult and libel possible only when the aggrieved party files a complaint with
the court. The prosecutor's office no longer has the power to initiate proceedings
when insult and libel are directed towards officials in exercise of, or in connection
with their public duties.
Following
the process of democratisation initiated in 1989, the number of cases for insult
and libel against journalists has increased. According to data available to
the Thirty-Eighth National Assembly, charges were pressed against approximately
90 journalists in 1995, approximately 80 in 1996 and over 100
in 19971.
Now that
one year has passed since the amendments were approved, it is possible to review
the process which contributed to the modifications of the Penal Code and greater
freedom of expression in Bulgaria.
On 17 March 2000, a study of the factors which contributed to the passing of the Act for Amendment to the Penal Code was published in State Gazette No.21. The study revealed the involvement of a range of individuals and groups involved in the anti-defamation campaign. The impact of freedom of expression activists on the democratisation process can be traced back to 1997.
Participants
in the campaign for amendments to the Penal Code
It is not
possible to individually name all the participants in the campaign for amending
the Penal Code. It is possible, however, to clearly categorise them into distinct
groups.
Non-governmental
sector
Several of
the most prominent organisations in the NGO section were active in protecting
the rights of journalists subject to criminal prosecution in Bulgaria. These
organisations included the "Reporter Foundation", "Free Speech"
Civic Forum, National Association for Protection of Journalists, "Podkrepa"
Journalists Union in Bulgaria, Union of Bulgarian Journalists, Centre of Independent
Journalism and the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee. International pressure placed
on the government by Interights and ARTICLE 19 through their submission of amicus
briefs to the Constitutional court also contributed to the legislative change.
Members
of Parliament
A number
of Members of Parliament were active advocates of the right to freedom of expression.
In the spring of 1998, twenty-seven Members of Parliament submitted a proposal
for the suspension of sentences imposed on journalists and publishers. However,
the Committee on Legal Matters and Legislation against Corruption and the National
Assembly refused to examine the proposal. The same year, fifty-five Members
of Parliament approached the Constitutional Court with a motion to question
the validity of the penal provisions for criminal insult and libel. At the root
of this action were members of the opposition in the National Assembly. In the
summer of 1998 and in the fall of 1999, Mr. Luben Kornezov, a member of the
Democratic Left Parliamentary Group, introduced two bills for the amendment
of the Penal Code's insult and libel provisions.
International
Participants
In addition
to the two international non-governmental organizations mentioned above, the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (hereinafter "PACE")
and its two rapporteurs for the development of democratic change in Bulgaria,
David Atkinson and Hennik Gjellerod, persuaded the state authorities
of the necessity for legislative change2.
The most significant contributory factors were the January PACE Resolution No
1211 and Recommendation No 1442 which led to the final adoption of the amendments
to the Penal Code.
The Bulgarian
President
The Bulgarian
President was integral in the process of amending the Penal Code. The President
exercised his right to veto the Act for the Amendment of the Penal Code and
returned it to Parliament, arguing that the fines introduced as substitutes
for custodial sentences were unjustifiably high. Due to his intervention, the
fines were revised and later decreased.
Key
events: Blazing the trail that led to the amendment of the Penal Code
Proposal
for Suspension of Sentences Imposed
On
April 2, 1998, twenty-seven members of Parliament submitted "A Proposal
for Suspension of the Sentences Imposed on Journalists, Publishers and Authors"3
to the National Assembly. The proposal comprised a draft resolution of the 38th
National Assembly, whereby "the execution of the punishments
imposed by court under Articles 146, 147 and 148 of the Penal Code to convicted
journalists, publishers and authors in printed editions and the electronic media
in their capacity as such are being suspended"4.
The group leading the campaign was drawn mainly from the opposition and was
headed by Mr. Luben Kornezov. The Draft Resolution was supported by references
to Article 39 of the Constitution which guarantees the right to freedom of expression.
Members of Parliament pointed out that "the freedom of
speech is sacred and it cannot be restricted. The road to objective journalism
is not passing through court rooms and conviction of journalists"5.
Case before
the Constitutional Court
On 30 April
1998, fifty-five members of Parliament filed a motion with the Constitutional
Court. They contested the constitutionality of custodial sentences attached
to crimes of insult and libel as established by Articles 146, 147 and 148 of
the Penal Code. It was also maintained that punishment relating to the crimes
of insult and libel did not conform to Article 10 of the European Convention
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (hereinafter referred to as "ECHR").
Those presenting the motion alleged that the custodial sentences for insult
and libel was "too severe" a punishment and "not proportionate
to the character" of those crimes.
It
was also maintained that Article 148 of the Penal Code contradicts Article 6,
paragraph 2 of the Constitution of the Republic of Bulgaria6,
as it provided for a "discriminatory procedure for the imposition of criminal
liability". These articles afford greater protection to public officials
and government representatives and attribute more severe punishments to any
individual who insults or libels them in connection with the performance of
their public duties. Finally, a motion was made to declare Article 148, paragraph
1, items 1 and 2 and paragraph 2 of the Penal Code unconstitutional. Article
148 provided for graver punishments for insult and libel inflicted publicly
or spread through printed matter or in some other way.
The National
Assembly, the Minister of Justice, Prosecutor General, "Civic Forum for
Free Speech" Association, Union of Bulgarian Journalists, Centre of Independent
Journalism, Bulgarian Helsinki Committee and Bulgarian Human Rights Centre were
all interested parties in the case. These organizations submitted written opinions.
A joint amicus brief was presented by two international human rights organizations,
"Interights" and "ARTICLE 19". This marked the first occasion
the Bulgarian Constitutional Court had considered an amicus brief submitted
by international organizations.
The
National Assembly, the Minister of Justice and Legal Euro-Integration, the Prosecutor
General and the Bulgarian Human Rights Centre expressed the opinion that the
motion was not justified. They argued that the criminalisation of insult and
libel served as a restriction on the right to freedom of expression, provided
for by Article 39, paragraph 2 of the Constitution and by Article 10, paragraph
2 of ECHR7. They maintained that the
constitutional provisions and the provisions of the Convention did not specify
requirements in connection with the nature and severity of the punishments provided
for by law, and thus it was left to the legislative body to ensure that the
punishments be in compliance with, and proportionate to, the respective offences.
According
to the aforementioned organizations, the motion was justified. The amicus brief
of the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee stated that "the restrictions set (on
the right to freedom of expression) should be precise and clear, should pursue
only the purpose, expressly specified as admissible by the Constitution and
the international documents and, finally, to be proportionate to the interest
sought to be protected."8 According
to the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, one of the guarantees to freedom of expression
is the requirement that any restrictions should be minimal. Since the "deprivation
of liberty" was the most severe punishment prescribed only for the most
serious offences, its imposition for insult and libel would have a negative
impact on the right to freedom of speech and a chilling effect on the practice
of journalism.
The Bulgarian
Helsinki Committee noted its concern over the special protection of public officials
provided for in the Penal Code and the power vested in the prosecutor's office
to initiate criminal proceedings on their behalf. They pointed out that "the
different regime of exercising penal proceedings for one and the same offence
depending on the quality of the person is an infringement upon the principle
of equality and the principle for higher protection of the freedom of speech
which criticises public persons".
The Bulgarian
Helsinki Committee stressed that Article 148, paragraph 1, item 1 and item 2
and paragraph 2, which provided for different levels of protection in view of
the place of the act and the manner of perpetrating the insult and libel, pertained
to the press and electronic media rather than to individuals. The recognition
of a higher degree of social threat of insult and libel inflicted publicly or
through printed matter contradicts the Constitution and the ECHR in light of
the special role the latter gives to the press in order to ensure effective
enjoyment of the right of freedom of expression and information and its function
as a watchdog for public interests.
In
their joint amicus brief, Interights and ARTICLE 19 considered the implementation
of penal provisions for libel in twelve countries in Europe, the Commonwealth
and the common law system9 and studied
the degree to which criminal responsibility for libel was compatible with the
protection of freedom of expression. They concluded that in the countries analysed,
criminal prosecution for libel was atypical and custodial sentences were rarely
meted out as punishment. The amicus brief demonstrated that the civil liability
for libel was more appropriate than the penal. The two international organizations
also came to the conclusion that penal sanctions for libel were at best unnecessary
and at worst, a gross encroachment on the right to freedom of expression. The
amicus brief maintained that from the point of view of the ECHR, criminal liability
for libel was often in contradiction with the requirement for "pursuance
of a legitimate aim". Custodial sentences were also unwarranted. Neither
of these practices could be considered "necessary in a democratic society".
On
14 July 1998, the Constitutional Court pronounced its Decision No 20 on constitutional
case No 16/98. The constitutional judges rejected the motion of the members
of Parliament10. The judges confirmed
their position11 that, "the restrictive
measure (of freedom of expression) should be proportionate to the character
of the interest protected"12. They
considered however that the weight of criminal liability corresponded to the
interests protected and did not go beyond the permissible restriction. The judges
found that "[t]he criminal liability for insult and libel [provides] for
alternative punishments of imprisonment or fine, which in type are sanctions
set out in the Penal Code and in size - the lowest of all those for offences
against one's personality". Further, the judges considered that "the
importance of aim pursued makes the protection against infringement … a basis
for the larger interference with the right to freedom of expression". "Criminal
responsibility for insult and libel is one of the legal guarantees, which ensure
the protection of personal dignity". The Constitutional Court also offered
a comparative analysis and pointed out that criminal responsibility, similar
in severity, existed in the legislation of a number of European countries -
Germany, France, Holland, Austria, and Denmark, where imprisonment was provided
for as a punishment for libel.
The Constitutional
justices justified the special protection afforded by the Penal Code to public
officials and other government representatives with the explanation that "the
criminal provision protects not only the individual but also the prestige of
the relevant institution". That protection was found not to go beyond the
constitutionally permissible restriction of the right to freedom of expression
and therefore its exercise was "a matter of expediency to be determined
by the legislator rather than of constitutionality".
The
Constitutional Court considered that the principle of equality was not infringed
upon by the provision for special protection to officials because "neither
the office held nor the acts of the victim or the perpetrator of the offence,
the peculiarities of the situation and the motives of the act of insult and
libel … constitute any of the social characteristics under Article 6, paragraph
2 of the Constitution, which are exhaustively set out and in view of which neither
restrictions to the rights, nor privileges are permitted"13.
National
Assembly Bills and the Role of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe
On
July 20, 1998 Mr. Luben Kornezov deposited his own bill for a Penal Code, in
which he proposed the punishment of "deprivation of liberty" to be
replaced with fines and the character of offence to be changed from indictable
by the prosecutor's office to indictable by a private complaint. The highest
fine provided for was BGL 1,000 (less than 480 USD). Mr Kornezov argued the
need for change founded upon the tendencies in contemporary law, which "restricts
the imposition of the punishment of "deprivation of liberty" for minor
offences, while stressing the penalty of payments (mainly fines)"14.
According to Mr Kornezov, insult and libel belonged to the category of minor
offences and since they were popular crimes it was not "expedient"
to levy "imprisonment" for them. Further, he referred to jurisprudence,
which had shown that "the express sanctions provided in Articles 146-148
of the Penal Code do not achieve the goals of penal repression …". Attention
was turned to jurisprudence, which showed that "criminal prosecution against
people, who eventually had insulted or libelled, has very often been misused
and approached selectively". According to Mr Kornezov, "[t]hese cases
turned into a very ineffective and painful procedure both for the accused and
the injured". He considered that the change in the character of the offence
would allow the injured to protect their interests more efficiently and effectively
without having "to start from the first stage" of penal proceedings,
because it would be possible for them to approach the court directly. He also
argued that the new system would also reduce government expenses. The MP concluded
that "freedom of speech cannot be imprisoned in a cell".
On
September 10 1998, the Committee on Legal Matters and Legislation against Corruption,
where the ruling coalition of the Union of Democratic Forces had a majority,
rejected Mr Kornezov's bill15. This
decision was justified on the grounds that many European legal systems prescribed
imprisonment for the offences of "insult" and "libel". The
Penal Codes of Germany, Austria, Switzerland and France were cited as examples.
Moreover, according to the Committee, "sanctioning the perpetrators of
"insult" and "libel" with fines in fact is likely to permit
"insult" and "libel" against certain payment"16.
On
September 2 1998, the two Council of Europe rapporteurs, David Atkinson and
Hennik Gjellerod, prepared a report on the development of democratic change
in Bulgaria. They stated that "even with the new Government, freedom of
expression is being restricted both through political control of the state electronic
media and through penal prosecution of journalists for libel of officials".
They also reminded that Prosecutor General, Mr. Tatarchev, stated in 1997 that
journalists should be subject to penal prosecution "not only for their
opinions, but also for the questions they may ask in an interview"17.
In October
1998 the "Reporter Foundation" presented the findings of its study
of court proceedings against journalists in Bulgaria in the period 1990 - 1998.
The Study was part of the existing "Program for the Legal Protection of
Journalists Prosecuted in Court", financed by the European Union. The Foundation
announced that it had collected information in relation to approximately seventy-three
criminal cases for insult and libel against journalists and specified that their
research did not pretend to be thorough. Fifty-three cases were studied in detail.
From those, twenty-six were initiated at the claim of the injured and twenty-seven
were initiated by the prosecutor's office. Of all the cases, seven were discontinued,
twenty were pending as of October 1998, thirteen journalists were acquitted
and the sentences of nine were already in force . The researchers were not able
to trace four of the cases.
At the beginning
of 1999, the Council of Ministers submitted their own Bill for Amendment to
the Penal Code. The Government announced the Bill several days before David
Atkinson and Hennih Gjellerod's visit in Bulgaria in February that year. The
Bill proposed the replacement of the punishment of "deprivation of liberty"
with a "fine". The highest fine suggested amounted to thirty thousand
Bulgarian Leva (around 14 000 USD).
The
Council of Europe rapporteurs, Mr Atkinson and Mr Gjellerod, had meetings with
journalists on 8 February and 6 December 1999. They were informed of the cases
initiated against journalists for insult and libel. During their meetings with
Government representatives and also before the media, the two rapporteurs expressed
their concern regarding the practice of penal prosecution of journalists for
insult and libel18.
On
13 January 2000 the National Assembly passed the Act for Amendment to the Penal
Code. In fact, the National Assembly approved the Bill, submitted by the Council
of Ministers, at the beginning of 1999. The punishment of "deprivation
of liberty" was replaced with a maximum "fine" of thirty thousand
Bulgarian Leva19.
On
17 January 2000, Mr Atkinson and Mr Gjellerod prepared a report which summarised
their monitoring of democratic change in Bulgaria. They also prepared a Draft
Resolution for the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe in which
they made two central appeals. First, they called for the abolition of the penal
prosecution of journalists and second, for fines and compensation for damages
to be limited to reasonable amounts. These appeals were made within the context
of their belief that journalists should comply with Article 8 of the ECHR and
observe the principles of respect for privacy20.
On 26 January 2000 the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe passed
Resolution 1211 on the basis of the Draft Resolution prepared by the two monitors.
On
28 January 2000, the President imposed a veto on the Act for Amendment to the
Penal Code and returned it for further consideration. He reasoned that the fines
established in the Penal Code were very high. According to him "the amount
of the punishment or "fine" provided for in this case does not correspond
to the public danger of the insult and libel offences. This conclusion can also
be drawn from a comparison of the size of "fine" imposed for other
types of offences against the individual21.
The President expressed concern that the disproportionate size of the punishment
for insult and libel, provided for in the Penal Code, would undermine the right
to freedom of expression.
On 16 February and 8 March 2000 discussions over the Act for Amendment to the Penal Code, returned by the President for consideration, took place. New fines were approved. Unfortunately, the majority voted the maximum fine to amount to BGL 15,000 (around 7 000 USD).
1
See Motives to Draft Resolution for Suspension of the
Execution of Sentences Imposed on Journalists and Publishers of 02.04.1998.
In their study entitled "Programme for the Legal Protection of Journalists
Prosecuted in Court", financed by the European Union, the "Reporter"
Foundation collected information on 73 criminal cases for insult and libel against
journalists initiated between 1990 and the summer of 1998. See "Prosecution
of Journalists in Court in Bulgaria 1990 - 1998" in "Programme for
the Legal Protection of Journalists Prosecuted in Court", p. 2. back
2 By Resolution 1115 of 1997 the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe established a Committee for
Monitoring the Discharge of Obligations and Commitments of Council of Europe
Member-States. back
3 See Letter ref. No. 854.02.10
addressed to Mr. Yordan Sokolov, signed by 27 members of Parliament. back
4 See "Draft Resolution for
Respite of Sentences of Journalists, Publishers and Authors" of 02.04.1998.
back
5 See Motives to Draft Resolution
for Suspension of the Sentences Imposed on Journalists, Publishers and Authors
of 02.04.1998. back
6 Article 6 paragraph 2 of the Constitution
reads:
"All individuals are equal before the law. No restrictions of rights or
privileges are permitted based on race, nationality, ethnicity, sex, origin,
religion, education, convictions, political affiliation, personal and social
status or property status." back
7 Article 39, paragraph 2 of the
Constitution stipulates that the right to expression cannot be used to infringe
upon the rights and the good reputation of another person and to invoke coercive
change of the constitutional order, perpetration, unleashing feud or personal
violence. back
8 See Opinion of the Bulgarian Helsinki
Committee on Constitutional Case No. 16/98. back
9 The states considered in that
stand were: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland,
Norway, Sweden, Great Britain and the USA. A short review was made also regarding
the relevant provisions in laws of several other countries. back
10 Only Judge Alexander Arabadjiev
signed the Judgement with dissenting opinion regarding the higher degree of
bearing criminal liability, when insult and libel were made in public or propagated
through printed edition or otherwise. back
11 See Judgement No. 7 of June
4, 1996 on constitutional case No. 1 of 1996 of the Constitutional Court of
the Republic of Bulgaria. back
12 See Judgement No. 20 of July
14, 1998 on constitutional case No. 16/1998 of the Constitutional Court of the
Republic of Bulgaria. back
13
The Constitutional Court referred here to its Judgement No 14 of November 10,
1992 on constitutional case No 14 of 1992, wherein it stated that social characteristics
on the basis of which distinction between individuals was impermissible were
those comprehensively stipulated. back
14 See Bill for Amendment to the
Penal Code of 19.07.1998, signed by Luben Kornezov. back
15 For the passing of the bill
voted two, against - four and four abstained. back
16 See Thirty-Eighth National Assembly,
Committee on Legal Matters and Legislation against Corruption, Opinion of 10.09.1998.
back
17 See Atkinson and Gjellerod's
Report of September 2, 1998. Doc. 8180 of PACE. back
18 See Atkinson and Gjellerod Report
of January 17, 2000. Doc. 8616 of PACE. back
19 Average journalist salaries
are approximately of BGL 200 - 250. back
20 Ibid. back
21 See Motives for Returning the
Act for Amendment to the Penal Code for Further Consideration in the National
Assembly, attached to Decree No. 15. back