REPORTABLE
CASE NO. SA 2/2008
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NAMIBIA
In the matter between:
MWEB NAMIBIA LIMITED
….......................................................................APPELLANT
And
TELECOM NAMIBIA
LIMITED …..................................................FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF WORKS,
TRANSPORT AND
COMMUNICATION
…...............................................................SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE NAMIBIAN
COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION ….............THIRD
RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF TRADE
AND INDUSTRY ….....................FOURTH
RESPONDENT
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE
REPUBLIC
OF NAMIBIA
…..............................................................................FIFTH
RESPONDENT
Coram Shivute CJ, Strydom
AJA et Chomba AJA
Heard on: 21/10/2008
Delivered on: 22/08/2011
APPEAL JUDGMENT
_________________________________________________________________
CHOMBA AJA
INTRODUCTION
This appeal judgment is
a sequel to an application commenced in the Court a quo by
way of notice of motion, and the consequential proceedings
terminated unfavourably to the appellant, as the applicant in that
Court, thereby triggering appeal proceedings in this Court. As is
usual in such litigation, all the evidence in the original
proceedings was adduced by way of affidavits which were deposed to,
in the case of the applicant, by Mr. Marc Christopher Gregan, its
General Manager, who was the sole witness and author of the founding
affidavit. There were two answering affidavits the first of which
was sworn by Mr. Theodorus Gerhardus Klein on behalf of the first
respondent and the second by Mr.Elia Akwaake on behalf of the
second, fourth and fifth responents. Mr. Klein was the first
respondent’s General Manager, Corporate Strategy, while Mr.
Akwaake was the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Works,
Transport and Communication. It suffices to state that two persons
swore affidavits confirmatory of Mr Klein’s deposition. Mr.
Gregan also deposed to the replying affidavit. The third respondent
never participated in the proceedings.
The scope of this appeal
has been defined in the appellant’s own heads of argument in
which the following has been stated at the very outset:
“This appeal
concerns two distinct issues; Firstly the unconstitutionality of
section 2(2) of the Posts and Telecommunications Act 1992 ‘the
Telecom Act’, which does not only prohibit the appellant ‘MWeb’
from providing telecommunication services without a licence, but
indeed enforces it by criminalizing such conduct; Secondly, it
concerns the unlawful and unconstitutional conduct (of) Telecom as an
organ of State.”
I shall deal, and only
concern myself, with the said issues and will do so consecutively as
laid out by the appellant. In doing so, I may give little or no
attention to other matters raised in the appeal papers which I may
consider to fall outside the scope of the two issues.
In instituting its
application, MWeb Namibia (Pty) (hereafter “MWeb”), made
the following substantive prayers, viz:
“1. That the
applicant’s non-compliance with the rules of court be condoned
and that this matter be heard as envisaged in Rule 6(12).
2. That section 2(2) of the Posts and
Telecommunications Act, of 1992 ‘the Act’ be declared
unconstitutional.
3. That first respondent be
interdicted from offering ADSL services to the public at large,
without fees being prescribed in terms of section 22 read with 52 of
the Act.
4. That the first respondent be
interdicted from charging rates in respect of its ADSL service, in
the manner as set out in annexure ‘D’ to the founding
affidavit (i.e. by not providing for wholesale and retail rates).”
The urgency prayer does
not form part of the contentious issues canvassed in this appeal, it
having been finally resolved in the Court below. In regard to the
remaining prayers, this Court has been urged, in the event that the
appeal should succeed, to make orders as follows:
“(1) Section
2(2) of the Post and Telecommunications Act, 1992, is declared
unconstitutional and null and void.
(2) Telecom is prohibited from
continuing to render ADSL services to applicant at the same rates as
it provides ADSL services to the public at large, and without
offering wholesale prices to MWeb.
(3) First to fourth respondents are
ordered to pay applicants costs, jointly and severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved on a party and party scale, including
the costs of two instructed counsel.
(4) Section 2(2) of the Post and
Telecommunications Act, 1992, is referred to Parliament to correct
the defects in the said section, being:
(4)(1) the defect in the Act in that
it does not comply with section 22(b) (sic) of the
Constitution.
(4)(2) the defect in the section in
that it does not comply with article 10, and 21(1)(e) (sic)
and 21(1)(j) of the Constitution.
(5) The referral in paragraph 4 is
subject to the following conditions:
(5)(1) the rectification shall be made
within 6 months from the date of this Court order;
(5)(2) nothing herein shall prevent
Parliament from enacting a new Communications Bill prior to the
rectification referred to in paragraph 4.”
I pause here to make
some observations on the proposed orders. Firstly, the orders
proposed in (1) and (4) are mutually exclusive, having regard to the
provisions of article 25(1)(a) of the Namibian Constitution. The
article provides as hereunder:
“25
Enforcement
of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms
(1) Save in so far as it may be
authorised to do so by this Constitution, Parliament or any
subordinate legislative authority shall not make any law, and the
Executive and any agencies of Government shall not take any action
which abolishes or abridges the fundamental rights and freedoms
conferred by this Chapter, and any law or action in contravention
thereof shall to the extent of the contravention be invalid: provided
that:
a competent Court, instead of
declaring such law or action to be invalid, shall have the power and
the discretion in an appropriate case to allow Parliament, any
subordinate legislative authority, or the Executive and the agencies
of Government, as the case may be, to correct any defect in the
impugned law or action within a specified period, subject to such
conditions as may be specified by it. In such event and until such
correction, or until the expiry of the time limit set by the Court,
whichever may be shorter, such impugned law or action shall be
deemed to be valid;”
In terms of the above
article, reference of an offending legislative provision to
Parliament in order to be cured of its defects can only be an
alternative, and not an adjunct to, nullification. The obvious reason
for that is that once a law is declared null and void, it ceases to
exist and therefore there would be nothing to refer to Parliament. I
shall, therefore assume that in this case the appellant’s
proposed prayers in (1) and (4) are alternatives in conformity with
article 25. Secondly, the reference to “section 22(b)” of
the Constitution would appear to be an obvious error as it was
certainly intended to be a reference to article 22(b). And thirdly,
the reference to article 21(1)(e) is another error and I shall take
it to be a reference to article 21(1)(j), since the debate in this
regard concerns the fundamental freedom to practise any profession,
or carry on any occupation, trade or business. The freedom
articulated by article 21(1)(e) pertains to freedom of association,
which is irrelevant to the current appeal.
The chequered history of
this matter shows that it was initially struck off the roll in the
Court below owing to the unusual prayer made by the appellant that
the matter be treated as partially urgent, since Rule 6(12) of the
Rules of the High Court does not appear to cater for partially
urgent procedures. However, it was subsequently re-enrolled, but
even then, after a full hearing, and by unanimous decision of
Mainga, J and Manyarara, AJ, sitting en banc, it was
dismissed. In the light of that outcome MWeb, as it was entitled to
do, sought the intervention of this Court by way of appeal. In the
ensuing hearing before us, MWeb was represented by Mr. Heathcote,
assisted by Ms Schimming-Chase, while the first respondent was
represented by Mr. Smuts, and Mr. Marcus, the Government Attorney,
stood in for the second, fourth and fifth respondents. The third
respondent never participated in these proceedings.
In this judgment I
shall, for the sake of convenience only, or unless a contrary
intention is evident, refer to the parties using the designations
they bore in the Court below, or by their corporate names.
Accordingly the appellant will be either the applicant or MWeb,
while the first, second, fourth and fifth respondents will be
referred to as such or sometimes respectively as Telecom, the
Minister of Works, the Minister of Trade and GRN.
The Arguments
I have had extreme
difficulty in discerning the essence and import of the oral
submissions of the parties’ counsel as captured in the court
transcripts. This was because I found the transcripts, by and large,
to be sometimes incoherent and disjointed, while at other times the
words recorded were evidently malapropisms of the words actually
used by counsel in their submissions, resulting in failure to make
sense. In the event, in the preparation of this judgment I chose to
rely, and actually relied, on the extremely coherent and
comprehensive printed submissions in the heads of argument filed by
the parties. That said, I now proceed to consider the respective
arguments of the parties.
Equality before the
law
One of the cornerstones
of this appeal case is predicated upon an alleged infringement of
the fundamental freedom of equality before the law as encapsulated
in article 10(1) of the Namibian Constitution. It is alleged that
that infringement was occasioned by the enactment of section 2(2) of
the Telecom Act. It is therefore opportune to start by reproducing
these two legal provisions.
“Article
10 Equality
and Freedom from Discrimination
All persons shall be equal before the
law
Section 2 Prohibition on
conduct of .... a telecommunication service
(1) …
(2) No person other than the
telecommunications company shall conduct a telecommunications
service, except under the authority of a licence granted by the
Commission.”
The arguments submitted
on behalf of MWeb are as set out hereunder and are quoted in their
fullness:
“4. Dealing
with the constitutionality of section 2(2) of the Telecom Act in
relation to the equality provisions of article 10(1) of the
Constitution, the court a
quo stated
that Mweb’s contention is that “it
and Telecom are not treated as equal persons when Telecom does not
have to apply for a licence to provide telecommunication services.
With
respect, this is an oversimplification of Mweb’s argument. This
question, as posed by the court a
quo,
disregards the entirely different regimes under which Telecom and
MWeb can provide telecommunication services. While Telecom is free to
roam around beating its monopolistic drum, MWeb does not only have to
apply (and pay) under a pain of criminal penalty, for a licence; but
once such a licence is granted, MWeb becomes subject to the
jurisdiction of Government’s specially created watchdog (The
Namibia Communication Commission). The unequal treatment is stark,
the reasons for such inequality wholly obscure.
5. The court a quo correctly
identified and quoted (with reference to Mwellie v Minister of
Works, Transport and Communication and Another 1995 (9) BCLR 1118
at 1134J – 1135A) the legal principle applicable as ‘the
constitutional right to equality before the law is not absolute but
that its meaning and content permit the Government to make statutes
in which reasonable classifications which are rationally connected to
a legitimate object are permissible’. Unfortunately the
Court a quo never applied the test so correctly quoted.
6. The court a quo also
correctly quoted the [time] honoured test which should be used when a
court determines whether any unequal treatment is based on a
‘reasonable classification’ which is ‘rationally
connected’ to a ‘legitimate object’. Again,
the test was correctly identified and quoted by the court a quo
as ‘A court, in ascertaining the object sought to be
achieved by the statute, engages in a process of interpretation of
the statute in issue. The question of interpretation is one
of law’ and ‘The position is, however,
different when a court considers matters such as the reasonable
intelligibility of the distinctions of the Act, and their rationality
of their relation to the object sought to be achieved by the Act.
These are largely matters of fact depending upon the circumstances to
which the Act applies.’ See Mwellie, supra,
at 1130J – 1131A.
7. Unfortunately, once again, while
all the authorities were quoted, the court, with reference to the
affidavit of a certain Mr. Klein and the preamble of the Telecom Act,
identified the object of the Act as to provide telecommunication
services in ‘the public interest.’
This finding transgressed the very disciplines which the court
quoted. Firstly, the court stated that, to determine the ‘object’
of the Act is a question of law, but then had regard to the
factual averments contained in Mr. Klein’s affidavit. Secondly,
determining the object of any Act as, to do something ‘in
the public interest’ nullifies the veracity of any further
legal inquiry. Each and every Act of Parliament should be made in the
public interest. Therefore, so the argument appears to be, all Acts
are constitutional as long as it can be said their objects are to do
something in the public interest.
8. While misdirecting itself in the
determination of the object of the Telecom Act, the court a quo
simply concluded:
‘Parliament
chose to exempt Telecom from the licence regime for the legitimate
objective of the universal services that are provided by Telecom
which differentia is reasonable in a democratic country. The means
chosen by Parliament are very closely connected to the ends sought be
achieved (provide universal affordable telecommunication service for
the public interest). The challenge based on article 10(1) should
fail.’
9. With due respect, the object of the
Telecom Act is, as stipulated in its long title, ‘To make
provision for the regulation of and exercise control over the conduct
of ... telecommunication services, to provide for certain powers,
duties and functions of .... Telecom Namibia Limited.’ The
question is, what rational connection is there between the identified
object of the Telecom Act i.e. to provide for regulation (with a
watchdog then created for that very purpose) and Telecom’s
exemption from such regulatory jurisdiction? There is no rationality
– only irrationality, which, as the facts of this case
demonstrates, permits Telecom to trample on competitor’s
rights.
10. It is respectfully submitted that
the MWeb’s challenge based on article 10 should have succeeded.
The logical way in which the court should have dealt with this aspect
should have been:
10.1 MWeb and Telecom are equally
situated for the purpose of doing business in the niche market of
providing internet services. Once that is determined, the enquiry
does not go further. Section 2(2) of the Telecom Act is
unconstitutional. To determine whether Telecom and MWeb are equally
situated for the purposes of article 10(1) of the Constitution, the
manner in which the question is posed, is of fundamental importance.
The question must be confined to the relevant legal enquiry. That
enquiry is, Why does section 2(2) of the Telecom Act treat Telecom
and MWeb different? (sic) But, as we submit below, the effect
of section 2(2) was to allow Telecom and MWeb to render
telecommunication services (other than telecommunication services
previously rendered by the Department). Thus, the competition here is
competition in the ISP-business. And for that purpose, MWeb and
Telecom are situated equally but treated differently. It is
accordingly legally impermissible and factually incorrect, to draw
Telecom’s landline business (for purposes of costs etc) into
the enquiry. Shortly put, MWeb does not do landline business. It
objects against the effect of section 2(2) in a field other than
landline business. Thus landline business should have been kept out
of the enquiry.
10.2 even if MWeb and Telecom are not
equally situated, the object of the Act must be determined. As
pointed out, the object is to regulate and to create a
statutory body to render telecommunication services. But section 2(2)
of the Telecom Act has nothing to do with achieving Telecom’s
objects to provide telecommunication services. Telecom has done so
since its inception. Indeed, it is clear from its profits that it has
achieved that goal. Accordingly, to use the purpose of Telecom’s
creation to determine that section 2(2) of the Telecom Act is
rationally connected to achieving the object (i.e. provide services)
is a clear misdirection. Section 2(2) merely prevents Telecom from
being regulated. Simply put; What is rational about not regulating
Telecom, if Telecom Act’s express object is to regulate
telecommunication services.”
Exposition of the
principle of freedom of equality before the law as distilled from
case law and law books.
It is settled law that
in an action hinging upon a challenge of unconstitutionality of any
enactment, the burden rests upon him or her who raises the challenge
to show that the enactment is unconstitutional. This is because, as
the celebrated author, Seervai, states in his work The
Constitutional Law of India (3rd ed.), “(T)here
is always a presumption in favour of the constitutionality of an
enactment and the burden lies upon him who attacks it to show that
there has been a clear transgression of the constitutional
principles.” (see at p.292 paragraph 9.32, ibid.).
Further, despite its being deep-rooted as a constitutional
principle, the fundamental right to equality before the law has been
held not to be absolute. (see for example Mwellie v Ministry of
Works, Transport and Communication and Another 1995 (9) BCLR
1118 (NmH); Chikane and Another v Cabinet for the Territory of
Southwest Africa 1989 (1) SA 349 (A)). And in the work,
International Bill of Rights: The Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ed. Louis Henkin), B.G. Ramcharan, in discussing the
equality and non-discrimination clauses in the Covenant on universal
human rights, says the following at p 252:
“In adding
non-discrimination clauses to supplement the affirmative mandate of
equality, the covenant was following the United Nations Charter and
the Universal Declaration. In all these instruments a
non-discrimination clause was added not merely for emphasis, but from
an abundance of caution. Non-discrimination may indeed be implied in
mandates of equality. But
mandates of equality do not imply absolute equality without any
distinction. Equality,
it has sometimes been said, means equal treatment for those equally
situated and, indeed, equal treatment for unequals is itself a form
of inequality. The law, moreover, rarely applies to all situations
and involves selections and classifications among objects based on
criteria deemed to be relevant. The general requirements of equality
or equal protection of the laws, then, does not mean that a State
cannot select among objects for regulation or draw distinctions among
them. The non-discrimination clauses are designed to make clear that
certain factors are unacceptable as grounds for distinction.”
(The underlining is mine.)
This lack of
absoluteness in the equality and non-discrimination clauses is
exemplified, in Namibia, by a provision which has created an escape
route and which, in effect, legitimizes limitations of fundamental
rights and/or freedoms contemplated in the Bill of Rights contained
in Chapter 3 of the Constitution. In this connection, I refer to
article 22 which provides as follows:
“22
Limitation
upon Fundamental Rights and Freedoms
Whenever or wherever in terms of this
Constitution the limitation of any fundamental rights or freedoms
contemplated by this Chapter is authorised, any law providing for
such limitation shall:
be of general application, shall not
negate the essential content thereof, and shall not be aimed at a
particular individual;
specify the ascertainable extent of
such limitation and identify the Article or Articles hereof on which
authority to enact such limitation is claimed to rest.”
Case law has also
settled the principle that legislation introducing limitations to
fundamental freedoms or rights will not be struck down as
unconstitutional if it makes reasonable classifications which are
rationally connected to its object. It has been said that such
classifications are sometimes necessary for the purpose of good
governance and protection of those who are unequal.
The benchmarks contained
in the preceding paragraphs were applied in the local case of
Mwellie, supra. In that case the
constitutionality of section 30(1) of the Public Service Act, No. 2
of 1980 was challenged on the basis that it infringed article 10(1)
of the Namibian Constitution. Strydom JP, as he then was, had this
to say after reciting the said equality provision and after carrying
out a wide ranging survey of decisions on equivalent constitutional
provisions in diverse jurisdictions in countries such as Canada,
USA, India, South Africa and others:
“On the
strength of the above quotations I think it can be said that the
courts, in all the countries referred to by me, accepted that
equality before the law is not absolute and that the legislature
must, for good and proper government and also for the protection of
those who are unequal, legislate. In this legislation reasonable
classifications may be made and as long as these classifications are
rationally connected to the object of the statute the courts will
accept the constitutionality of such legislation....” (see at
1131C-D)
The learned
Judge-President also cited with approval the dictum of Lord
President Salleh Abas, who in the Malaysian case of Malaysian Bar
and Another v Government of Malaysia (1988) LRC (Const) 428,
made the following statement at 431 – 2 regarding the
equality before the law clause obtaining in that country:
“The
requirement of equal protection of the law does not mean that all the
laws passed by a legislature must apply universally to all persons
and that the laws so passed cannot create differences as to the
persons to whom they apply and the territorial limits within which
they are in force. Individuals in any society differ in many respects
such as, inter
alia, age, ability,
education, height, size, colour, health, occupation, race and
religion. Any law made by a legislature must of necessity involve the
making of a choice and differences as regards its application in
terms of persons, time and territory. Since the legislature can
create differences, the question is whether these differences are
constitutional. The answer is this: if the basis of the difference
has a reasonable connection with the object of the impugned
legislation the difference and therefore the law which contains such
provision is constitutional and valid. If on the other hand there is
no such relationship the difference is stigmatised as discriminatory
and the impugned legislation is therefore unconstitutional and
invalid. This is the doctrine of classification which has been
judicially accepted as an integral part of the equal protection
clause.”
Evaluation of MWeb’s
case as regards equality before the law
The case of the
applicant as advocated before us and as I understand it, is
basically this in a nutshell:
In as much as both MWeb
and Telecom are engaged in the niche market of providing internet
services, they are equally situated. Therefore under the constitution
they are equals and ought to be treated as such. However, by virtue
of the enactment of section 2(2) of the Telecom Act, while MWeb is
encumbered by the requirement - which does not affect Telecom - to
obtain a licence in order to do that business and is under the threat
of penal sanctions if it trades without a licence, further while,
even when it secures a licence, the applicant is subject to the
jurisdiction of the Government’s specially created watchdog,
namely the Namibia Communications Commission, “Telecom is free
to roam around beating its monopolistic drum”. The object of
the Telecom Act as provided in the long title of that Act, is: “To
make provision for the regulation of and exercise control over the
conduct of … telecommunication services, to provide for
certain powers, duties and functions of ... Telecom Namibia”.
What rational connection is there between that object and Telecom’s
exemption from such regulatory jurisdiction. There is no rationality
– only irrationality which, as the facts of this case
demonstrate, permits Telecom to trample on the competitors’
rights.
On the basis of the
stance thus taken by MWeb, I consider that the following questions
arise and deserve to be resolved. These are –
whether or not MWeb and
Telecom ought to be treated as equals;
whether, if they ought
not to be treated as equals, the enactment of section 2(2) has
created a classification between them; and
if a classification has
been created, whether such classification can be said to be a
reasonable classification and if so, whether it is rationally
connected to the object of the Telecom Act.
In attempting to answer
these questions, I shall start by considering the first question
posed above by itself. Thereafter, and since the second and third
questions are intertwined, I shall deal with them jointly.
Regarding the first
question, it is apposite, as a starting point, to ascertain the
purpose for which Telecom was established. It is common cause that
Telecom was established by the Posts and Telecommunications
Companies Establishment Act, (No. 17 of 1992) (the Establishment
Act). I reproduce hereunder only those provisions of section 2 of
that Act which are pertinent to this aspect:
“2
Establishment
of successor companies
There are hereby
established three corporate bodies namely –
…
a telecommunications
company to conduct a tele-communications service, and which shall be
known as Telecom Namibia Limited; and
...”
According to that
section, therefore, its purpose was dual, namely first to establish
Telecom as a corporate body and then secondly to charge Telecom with
the responsibility of performing telecommunication services. In
parenthesis I must underscore the fact that undertaking that
responsibility was by no means a matter of choice on Telecom’s
part. The extent of Telecom’s responsibility in conducting
those services was spelt out in section 4(1)(b) of the Establishment
Act which provided that the telecommunications enterprise formerly
carried out by the Post Office was transferred to Telecom. I take
judicial notice of the fact that prior to the coming into force of
the Establishment Act, the Post Office was required by law to
perform telecommunication services nationwide within the mandated
territory of Southwest Africa. The take-over by Telecom of the
telecommunication services, therefore, meant doing so nationwide
within independent Namibia. The Establishment Act also contained
provisions to facilitate the performance of Telecom’s core
function. To that end it provided that the sole shareholder in
Telecom Namibia Limited was to be the Namibia Post and Telecom
Holdings Limited, which in turn was to have the State as its sole
shareholder. (Section 2(8)(a) and (b)). Further, the Establishment
Act enacted that Telecom was to be deemed to be a public limited
company incorporated under the Companies Act. However, despite its
deemed company nomenclature, upon its being registered as such
Telecom was not to be required to pay registration fees or any other
fees payable under the Companies Act. (vide section 2(2) and
(6), Establishment Act). The Act further exempted Telecom from
paying any land charges normally levied by the Registrar of Deeds
concerning any State land, any servitude, other real right or lease
which may be transferred to it; it was also exempted from paying
stamp duty, transfer duty or any other tax or levy otherwise payable
in respect of transfer to it of the telecommunications enterprise.
(see subsections (6) and (14) of section 4, ibid.)
It is important, in my
considered opinion, to bear in mind this background which preceded
the enactment of section 2(2) of the Telecom Act. It is important
because it is quite patent that what the Establishment Act did was
to create Telecom as a statutory corporate body, confer on it the
responsibility of conducting telecommunication services throughout
Namibia and absolved it from the obligation of paying government
taxes. To all intents and purposes, upon its incorporation Telecom
became an organ of State.
The reasons for
exempting Telecom from paying taxes are not far to seek. First, as a
company wholly owned by the Government, Telecom was going to
contribute to the general revenues of the State. (See section 5(6),
Establishment Act). Secondly, the very functions it was statutorily
required to perform nationwide were, as a successor to the Post
Office, State functions, which were otherwise (that is to say, in
the absence of Telecom) going to be performed by the Government
itself. So it would not have made sense for the Government to levy
tax on it by way of payment of licensing or other fees in order for
it to perform State functions. Payment of such fees would have been
tantamount to the Government taxing itself. Thirdly, the function
assigned to it was to be carried out countrywide, by virtue of it
being the successor to the Post Office. Namibia is by no means a
small country geographically and therefore that assignment was an
enormous and costly responsibility. Fourthly, Telecom had to perform
the telecommunication services countrywide per force of law, not by
preference, and irrespective of profitability prospects. All these
burdens off-loaded onto Telecom were onerous enough and, in my view,
being required to pay taxes in addition thereto would have been
preposterous.
By way of comparison,
MWeb, as a private company, had freedom to make a choice to enter
into the business of supplying internet services. In the event of so
choosing, as it evidently did, it also had the option to select its
operational areas, which it also did. The affidavit evidence given
by Mr. Gregan, MWeb’s Chief Executive Officer, is testimony to
that fact, to the extent that he mentioned the areas of Namibia
where MWeb was conducting its business, which include prime areas
such as Windhoek, Okahandja and Klein Windhoek. From an
entrepreneurial point of view, it would have been myopic to choose
to conduct business in areas where profit making was known to be
minimal. It is therefore not surprising that MWeb does not claim to
be present countrywide business-wise in competition with Telecom.
Lastly, as a private company it has no obligation to contribute to
State revenues, except by way of paying government taxes like every
other private individual person or entity.
In the light of the
foregoing differences which intervene between Telecom and MWeb, the
answer I have arrived at in regard to the first question is that by
virtue of their respective responsibilities, which are unequal, it
would be unreasonable to treat Telecom and MWeb equally. Their
interrelationship is a typical demonstration of the settled view
taken by courts that equality before the law is never absolute and
therefore that you cannot treat equally persons who are not equals.
Telecom has an enormous responsibility of providing services
countrywide to the well-to-do as well as to the financially
vulnerable and in doing so it has no choice. On the contrary, MWeb,
as a private company, is profit orientated and therefore can choose
its operational areas to suit that orientation. In any event, the
fact that MWeb has to obtain a licence while Telecom is exempted
from doing so is by no means unusual in a regimented state (in the
sense of a state governed by law). Since my answer to the first
question is that MWeb and Telecom are not equals, it is otiose at
this stage to consider the justification of classifications
introduced by section 2(2) of the Telecom Act. Whether or not those
classifications are justifiable will be considered in the ensuing
paragraphs pertaining to the remaining two questions posed in
paragraph [16].
At the cost of
repetition, I will summarise the cause of complaint by the
applicant. It is that the two combatants in this judicial wrangle
are equals in the niche of providing internet services. That being
so, it is further postulated on MWeb’s behalf, why should MWeb
be required to obtain a licence in order to do business in that
field while Telecom is exempted from that requirement, and further,
why should MWeb have to be rigorously regulated by the Namibian
Communications Commission even after obtaining such licence while
“Telecom is free to roam around beating its monopolistic
drum”? It is also argued that, having regard to the long title
of the Telecom Act, there is no rational connection between that
Act’s object and the exemption from obtaining a licence.
Arising from the
foregoing paragraphs dealing with the purpose for the establishment
of Telecom and the facilities it was endowed with in order to
effectively perform its functions, the irresistible conclusion I
have arrived at is that the object of the Telecom Act goes far
deeper than the superficial one carried by its long title. In other
words, the object of the Telecom Act is not merely that expressed by
its long title, as espoused on MWeb’s behalf. In my considered
opinion and in reality, the object of the Telecom Act is to be
derived from the purpose of the Establishment Act. As I have shown
earlier, that purpose was to firstly establish Telecom as a public
corporate body and consequentially to impose on it the nationwide
responsibility of conducting telecommunication services. As I
conceptualise it, therefore, the Telecom Act was in real terms
enacted to implement the plan of setting up a national
telecommunication service. Looked at from that perspective, section
2(2) can be said to have created the classification which saw
Telecom being exempted from being required to obtain a licence, in
order to facilitate the achievement of the objective of the Telecom
Act. The dual question to be consequentially asked and answered is
whether that classification was reasonable and secondly whether it
was rationally connected to the object of the Telecom Act.
To my mind the
reasonableness of creating the classification is inferable from the
explanation I have given in the process of answering the question
whether MWeb and Telecom were equals. I have there explicitly stated
why it would have been preposterous to require Telecom to pay taxes
in the light of the fact that Telecom was an organ of State
established to perform State functions. This explanation also lends
support to the trite view propounded in settled cases that it would
be unreasonable and discriminatory for the law to treat equally
persons who or entities which are unequal. As to the second aspect
of the last question posed in the last sentence of the preceding
paragraph, it stands to reason to conclude, and I so conclude, that
the classification or differentiation created by section 2(2) of the
Telecom Act (i.e. by exempting Telecom from obtaining a licence) is
rationally connected to the object of the Telecom Act (i.e. the
object of implementing the objectives of the Establishment Act).
I have come to this
conclusion because it is clear, in my view, that the Telecom Act is
inextricably linked with the Establishment Act. The Establishment
Act was, no doubt, the precursor of the Telecom Act. The former was
assented to on 30 July 1992 and came into force on 31 July 1992,
while the latter was assented to on 15 August 1992, and became
operational on 5 October 1992. I also stress the fact that the
Establishment Act defrocked the Post Office of its responsibility to
conduct telecommunication services and vested that responsibility in
Telecom. The Establishment Act further made Telecom a State
institution. In other words the Telecom Act was consequential, not
only in terms of timing but also in essence, to the Establishment
Act. Without the pre-existence of the Establishment Act, the Telecom
Act would have had no leg to stand on.
Before I wrap up on this
issue of equality before the law, let me specifically deal with the
applicant’s complaint that when it obtains a licence, as it is
required to do, it consequentially becomes subject to the regulatory
regime of the Government’s watchdog, namely the Namibian
Communications Commission. Courts have recognised that in matters
involving a country’s economy, it is normal and usual that a
government will legislate to regulate the actors, who are usually in
the private sector, as to how such actors will carry on a given
economic activity. In such a situation, the attitude of the courts
is that it is not in their province to interfere – provided
that certain conditions are present – on the basis that the
courts would have handled the situation differently. That was the
view of the High Court in Namibia Insurance Association v
Government of Namibia 2001 NR 1 (HC). In expressing that view,
Teek, JP, sitting in full court with Silungwe, J, had this to say at
12J – 13A:
“Economic
regulation inevitably involves policy choices by the government and
the Legislature. Once it is determined that those choices were
rationally made, there is no further basis for judicial intervention.
The courts cannot sit in judgment on economic issues. They are
ill-equipped to do this and in a democratic society it is not their
role to do so.”
The learned Judge
President then went on and quoted with approval this same principle
as it is expounded in Hogg (1976) 26 University of Toronto Law
Journal 386 at 396 – 7 (Cf Ex parte Hammersmith and Fulham
London Borough Council [1991] 1 AC 521 (HC) and Gillich v West
Norfolk Health Authority [1986] AC 112 (HL) at 194 and 206) where
it was stated as follows:
“It is not
for the court to disturb political judgments, much less to substitute
the opinions of experts. In a democratic society, it would be a
serious distortion of the political process if appointed officials
(the judges) could veto the policies of elected officials.”
Teek, JP, further quoted
approvingly the following dictum from Prinsloo v Van der Linde and
Another 1997 (3) SA 1012 (CC), a South African Constitutional
Court case, to wit:
“It must be
accepted that, in order to govern a modern country efficiently and to
harmonise the interests of all its people for the common good, it is
essential to regulate the affairs of its inhabitants extensively. It
is impossible to do so without differentiation and without
classifications which treat people differently and which impact on
people differently. It is unnecessary to give examples which abound
in everyday life in all democracies based on equality and freedom.
Differentiation which falls into this category very rarely
constitutes unfair discrimination in respect of persons subject to
such regulation, without the addition of a further element....
....(t)he constitutional State in a
democratic society is expected to act in a rational manner. It should
not regulate in an arbitrary manner or manifest ‘naked
preferences’ that serve no legitimate Government purpose, for
that would be inconsistent with the rule of law and the fundamental
premises of the constitutional State. The purpose of this aspect of
equality is, therefore, to ensure that the State is bound to function
in a rational manner. This has been said to promote the need for
government action to relate to a defensible vision of the public
good, as well as to enhance the coherence and integrity of
legislation....”
I fully endorse the view
taken by the judges who presided in the Namibian Insurance
Association case, supra, as supported by the quotations
from cases they cited. In the circumstances, I also hold that it is
improper for this Court to impose its own judicial decision in
supersession of the Government’s political judgment of
legislating for the introduction of the regulatory regime against
which MWeb is complaining in this matter.
Whether Article
21(1)(a) and (j) of the Namibian Constitution have been violated
The next leg of the
argument as to why it is prayed that section 2(2) of the Telecom Act
should be struck down for being ultra vires the Constitution
is that the said section has violated MWeb’s fundamental right
and freedom of speech and expression as well as the freedom and
right to practise any profession, or carry on any occupation, trade
or business. My first comment in this connection is that there have
been repeated references to Article 21(1)(e) occurring in the heads
of argument appertaining to this issue. However, having regard to
the content of the originating notice of motion, the supporting
heads of arguments and oral submissions, it is clear that those
references were erroneously made as article 21(1)(e) has no
relevance to the freedoms asserted since it concerns the freedom of
association. The following are the relevant provisions of article
21(1):
“Article
21 Fundamental Freedoms
All persons shall have
the right to:
freedom of speech and
expression, which shall include freedom of the press and other
media;
…
....
....
....
....
....
....
....
practise any profession,
or carry on any occupation, trade or business.”
The arguments submitted
on behalf of the applicant as regards the subject heading of this
part, are contained in paragraphs 11 to 15 of the applicant’s
heads of argument. At the very outset of the heads it is stated that
–
“(i)n MWeb’s
application, the environment within which MWeb endeavours to provide
its telecommunication services has been described in detail (record p
11 – 19) (thereby explaining how practical effect could be
given to its rights of freedom of expression and trade).”
In those pages, embracing
paragraphs 11.2 to 11.6.7 of the depositions of Mr. Gregan, the
explanation given included: means of accessing the internet; the
dial-up system; leased lines; the Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber
Line (ADSL) technology; the Digital Subscriber Line Multiplexer
technology; and how the connection to the internet is made. In
crowning up the explanations paragraph 11.6.5 was included as a
summation of the submissions, viz:
“Any
second-tier ISP (i.e. Internet Service Provider) (including Mweb)
that wants to enforce its constitutional right as envisaged in
Article21(j) of the Namibian Constitution, by offering dial-up and
ADSL internet access to individual consumers, is compelled to
contract with Telecom as a first- tier ISP that ‘hosts’
the business of the relevant second-tier ISP’s for a fee.”
There has been a greater
volume of argument and debate regarding the alleged violation of
Mweb’s fundamental right and freedom enshrined in article
21(1)(j) as compared to the amount of controversy in relation to the
right and freedom entrenched by article 21(1)(a). I, therefore,
propose to consider and dispose of the more contentious issue first,
and deal with the latter consequentially.
Much was submitted by
way of affidavit evidence, as well as through argument before this
Court, about how Telecom, as a first-tier ISP, had dominated the
telecommunication service delivery. To this end it was shown how the
dispensation of internet through the ADSL and DSLAM technologies was
under Telecom’s control, thereby making second-tier ISPs,
including MWeb, to contract with and pay fees to Telecom in order to
gain access to those technological devices. The volume of argument
notwithstanding, the thrust of MWeb’s grievance, as I
understand it, was really that Telecom was charging the second-tier
ISPs, including MWeb, at retail rate, which is also applicable to
non-ISP customers. For that reason, MWeb opines, the latter category
of customers did not see the need to obtain internet services from
second-tier ISPs such as MWeb, but rather went, and continue to go,
directly to Telecom, for the obvious fear that the second-tier ISPs
would charge them a higher rate than the retail rate they pay when
service is provided directly by Telecom. It is as a result of that
situation that MWeb complains that it is losing customers to
Telecom. MWeb feels that as a second-tier ISP serving members of the
public who or which are not ISPs, Telecom should charge it at
wholesale rates, which would then mean that the non-ISP internet
customers would feel attracted to do business with it. It is not my
understanding that through the alleged violation by Telecom of
MWeb’s fundamental right to carry on trade, occupation,
profession or business MWeb was totally incapacitated from trading
in the telecommunications sector. Indeed, section 2(2) itself, which
is impugned, does not bar anyone from engaging in the provision of
telecommunication service, but only requires all others, except
Telecom, to obtain licences in order to do so. As a matter of fact
MWeb concedes, and does not dispute, that it is thus trading via
WiMax connectivity and that it even employs ADSL technology.
In essence this issue is
replicated in the arguments dealing with the alleged
unconstitutional conduct of Telecom as an organ of State. It is
therefore convenient to deal with it concurrently with the issue as
to how Telecom was allegedly engaging in unconstitutional conduct.
The Issue as to
alleged unlawful and unconstitutional conduct of Telecom as an organ
of State
The complaint posed
under this head together with that relating to article 21(1)(j) of
the Constitution is two-pronged. The two sides are firstly that by
denying MWeb wholesale rates, Telecom is infringing its fundamental
right to trade, carry on an occupation or practise a profession –
a right which is entrenched by article 21(1)(j) - and secondly that
Telecom as an organ of State is violating MWeb’s fundamental
right to fair and reasonable action by imposing retail rates thereby
breaching the provisions of article 18 of the Constitution.
What emerges after
perusing the rest of the paragraphs of this subheading dealing with
the alleged unconstitutional conduct of Telecom seems to be
crystallised in the dictum which has been quoted on the
applicant’s behalf from the judgment of the Indian Supreme
Court in Yasin v The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad and Another,
(1952) S.C.R. 572 (52) A.SC 115 at p 577, viz:
“Learned
counsel, however, contends – and we think with considerable
force and cogency – that although, in form, there is no
prohibition against carrying on any wholesale business by anybody, in
effect and in substance the
bye-laws have brought a total stoppage of the wholesale dealers’
business in a commercial sense.
The wholesale dealers, who will have to pay the prescribed fee to the
contractor appointed by auction, will necessarily have to charge the
growers of vegetables and fruits something over and above the
prescribed fee so as to keep a margin of profit for themselves but in
such circumstances no grower of vegetables and fruits will have his
produce sold to or auctioned by the wholesale dealers at a higher
rate of commission but all
of them will flock to the contractor who will only charge them the
prescribed commission.
On the other hand, if the wholesale dealers charge the growers of
vegetables and fruits only the commission prescribed by the bye-laws
they will have to make over the whole of it to the contractor without
keeping any profit for themselves. In
other words, the wholesale dealers will be converted into mere tax
collectors for the contractor or the respondent committee without any
remuneration from either of them.
In effect, therefore, the bye-laws, it is said, have brought about a
total prohibition of the business of the wholesale dealers in a
commercial sense and from a practical point of view. We are not op
(sic) opinion that this contention is unsound or untenable.”
It is additionally
asserted that in perpetrating this unfairness Telecom is also
breaching the law on monopolies.
The argument on MWeb’s
behalf is that Telecom, being an organ of State, must act fairly and
reasonably in accordance with the dictates of Article 18 of the
Namibian Constitution. In buttressing this argument, a number of
decided cases have been cited, including Vaatz v Law Society of
Namibia and Others 1996 NR 272 in which at p 278 E and H the
following dictum occurs:
“....The
power to make regulations laying down the tariff, is in essence an
administrative function or decision. It is in conflict with the
fundamental right to action which is fair and reasonable, entrenched
in art.18 of the Namibian Constitution. On this ground alone the said
tariffs appear to be unconstitutional and null and void. See also
Wiechers, Administrative Law 244-5; Sinovich
v Hercules Municipal Council
1946 AD 783
at 802N3; Ohlthaver
& List Finance and Trading Corporation Ltd and Others v Minister
of Regional and Local Government and Housing and Others
1996 NR 213
(SC).
Article 18, being a fundamental right
and not merely a fundamental right to a freedom provided for in art.
21(1), is not hit by possible restrictions provided for in art.
21(2). See Kauesa v Minister of Home Affairs 1994 (3) BCLR 1
(Nm) at 16G – 21G. In my view, when a statutory body such as
the Regulations Board appointed in terms of the Deeds Registry Act,
functions ‘to decide on and apply tariffs to attorneys,
notaries and conveyancers’, not only should art. 18 be complied
with but also art. 12 of the Constitution of Namibia. Furthermore, to
lay down tariffs vested in a Board, presupposes the existence and
proper functioning of such body.”
It should be pointed out
at the outset that the views expressed in Vaatz v Law Society of
Namibia above, are obiter and that the Court does not
approve the dicta relied on by counsel in that case since the
issues discussed therein were not fully argued.
That notwithstanding, for
a better appreciation of this argument, it is necessary to reproduce
article 18, which I now do hereunder:
“Article
18 Administrative Justice
Administrative bodies and
administrative officials shall act fairly and reasonably and comply
with the requirements imposed upon such bodies and officials by
common law and any relevant legislation, and persons aggrieved by the
exercise of such acts and decisions shall have the right to seek
redress before a competent Court or Tribunal.”
The first respondent has
in response put a spirited fight. It has been contended on Telecom’s
behalf that MWeb is wrong in its assumption that the concept of
State monopoly is necessarily in conflict with the constitution. In
this regard, Telecom’s counsel has prayed in aid dicta
from both local and South African decided cases. Further, it is
submitted that the principles of state policy as set out in Chapter
11 of the Constitution do not preclude the establishment of state
monopolies. It is additionally argued that the laissez faire
approach, which, according to the argument on Telecom’s
behalf, is at the very root of MWeb’s challenge in instituting
this action, did not take into account the constitution construed as
a whole, and the economic order expressly contemplated by it as well
as the context of economic regulation which the Telecom Act
involves.
In support of the
sentiments expressed in the foregoing paragraph, a number of
authorities have been cited, but I think it will suffice to refer to
two only. The first is the South African case of Van Rensburg v
South African Post Office Ltd. 1998(10) BCLR 1307 (E). That
concerned a statute which established public companies and vested in
them exclusive postal and telecommunication services. An action was
instituted challenging its constitutionality by alleging that it
conflicted with the equality, expression and economic provisions of
the South African Constitution. The case was heard by a single judge
who dismissed the action. A full bench of three judges who heard the
appeal against the decision of the Court a quo, unanimously
and emphatically dismissed it as reflected in the dictum
reproduced hereunder:
“I believe
that the aim and intention of section 9 of the Constitution (the
equivalent of article 10 of the Namibian Constitution) is not the
creation of equality between an individual and a public or quasi
public organization designed to provide a specialized service to the
public at large. I also believe, for this reason, that section 9 has
no bearing on an issue such as the present. The
purpose of section 9 is to protect individuals against unequal
treatment which is illegitimate or unfair.
If that is so, one must look for something illegitimate or unfair in
the legislation to be impugned. I can find nothing illegitimate or
unfair about the proper implementation of the Post Office Act. Its
purpose is to provide for a postal service for the benefit of the
public as a whole. In order to promote this aim it gives the postal
company an exclusive right. This is monopolistic and, possibly
therefore, it may appear contrary to the public good. But only on a
simplistic view of the matter. It is in fact designed to promote the
public good. Protection
from competition enables the postal company to charge uniform
affordable rates for the dispatch and delivery of post throughout the
country.” (See
at 1318D – 1318G)(emphasis supplied).
Complementary to the
above, the following was quoted from Namibia Insurance Association
v Government of Republic of Namibia, supra, at pp 11G –
12D:
“The danger
for the courts and constitutionalism of the approach to regulatory
legislation emerges clearly from the experience of the courts in
India, Japan, Germany, Canada and the United States of America. When
dealing with the question of the freedom of economic activity courts
in these countries proceed from the premise that it is not for the
courts to dictate economic policy. This approach is encapsulated in
the US case of Furgeson
v Skrupa 372
US 483 as follows: ‘We emphatically refuse to go back to a time
where the courts used the Due Process Clause to strike down state
laws, regulatory of business and industrial conditions because they
might be unwise, improvident or out of harmony with the particular
school of thought whether the Legislature takes for its text book
Adam Smith, Herbert Spencer, Lord Keynes or some other is no concern
of ours’.
In other words, it is not for the
courts to say that they would do it differently because they do not
like the economic structure of a particular provision passed by
Parliament because there are economic reasons or reasons of policy
which dictate the fact that there may e.g. be a state controlled
airline, transport agencies, electrical and water utilities and the
like.
It is nowadays the attitude of the
courts in a number of countries to allow the elected Legislatures a
large degree of discretion in relation to the form and degree of
economic regulation selected by a democratic Legislature. Therefore
the determination of the merits or wisdom of an Act is the task of
the elected representatives of the people wherever applicable. Cf
Reynolds v Sims 377 US 533 (1964). In Ferreira v Levin NO
and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others 1996 (1) SA
984 (CC) at para. [180] the majority of the South African
Constitutional Court stated that in a modern state the question
whether or not there should be regulation and redistribution (in the
public interest) is essentially a political question which falls
within the domain of the Legislature and not the courts. It is not
for the courts to approve or disapprove of such policies.”
I must compliment
counsel for the applicant for the very strong and persuasive
submissions and arguments they have put up, particularly on the fair
and reasonable action expected of administrative bodies and
administrative officials as entrenched in article 18 of the
constitution. One could be attracted by the grievance that since
MWeb, a second-tier internet service provider, is being charged at
retail rate for the landline-based ADSL service, just as ordinary
members of the public (i.e. non-ISPs) are being charged, the chances
might well have been that its potential customers were shunning away
from doing business with it. That was the situation portrayed in
Yasin, supra. Therefore, MWeb’s prayer that it
be charged at wholesale rate may well be justified.
My sympathies
notwithstanding, however, I think the scale of justice has to be
tipped in favour of Telecom for the reasons submitted on its behalf
and for the following additional reasons. The statutes wherewith we
are concerned herein were enacted in 1992, two years after Namibia’s
Independence. Prior to that, the majority of Namibians had suffered
from the effects of the policy of apartheid which was imposed on
them. It was, therefore, incumbent on the Government of the day to,
at that stage, take affirmative action and redress the imbalances
which were occasioned by the order of the pre-independence era.
There was then need to, among other things, empower those who had
been disadvantaged. Hence the inclusion in the Constitution of
article 23(2) which states the following:
“Nothing
contained in Article 10 hereof shall prevent Parliament from enacting
legislation providing directly or indirectly for the advancement of
persons within Namibia who have been socially, economically or
educationally disadvantaged by past discriminatory laws or practices,
or for the implementation of policies and programmes aimed at
redressing social, economic or educational imbalances in the Namibian
society arising out of past discriminatory laws or practices, or for
achieving a balanced structuring of public service, the police force,
the defence force and prison service.”
I see the cumulative
effect of the statutes at the centre of the current dispute as being
part of the scheme of redressing imbalances and although those
statutes may appear to have a monopolistic effect in economic terms
and therefore to apparently be contrary to the public good when
viewed simplistically, they were in fact designed to promote the
public good, to borrow the words of the dictum quoted earlier
on from the Van Rensburg v South African Post Office case,
supra. Furthermore, the representatives of the people,
sitting in Parliament, saw the wisdom of not exposing Telecom to the
full blast of competition with the economically more powerful
private enterprises. So, Telecom was exempted from paying government
taxes and was then empowered to raise revenue from those private
entities engaged in the same field as it was so that it could be
financially enabled to fulfil the task of extending its services to
all areas, including the economically depressed zones, of the
country. At the end of the day, therefore, telecommunication
services, in particular internet services, are brought closer to the
people in the economically depressed areas. That was a political
judgment on the part of the people’s representatives. It would
be imprudent for this Court to reverse that judgment on the basis
that the matter should have been done better in a different way.
Regarding the alleged
violation of article 21(1)(j), I stress the fact that it was not
part of MWeb’s case that owing to the conduct of Telecom it
has been put out of business. The essence of the article is that all
persons shall have the right to practise a profession, carry on
any occupation, trade or business. The indisputable factual
situation in casu is that MWeb is actively practising the
profession and/or occupation and/or trade and/or business in the
field of telecommunications. That is the bottom line. Moreover, the
argument that MWeb was losing customers to Telecom might have been
strengthened had evidence been adduced from some of those who
presumably defected. Unfortunately no such witnesses were brought
forward. There is only the lone voice of the complainant. This
lacuna lends support to the conclusion I have arrived at that MWeb
has not, after all, been prevented from conducting
telecommunications business.
I now come to the issue
touching on the alleged subversion of Mweb’s freedom of speech
and expression. The crisp question I pose here is whether Mweb has
indeed been denied the enjoyment of this freedom. In this connection
I want to stress the fact that article 21(1)(a) provides that “(A)ll
persons shall have the right to freedom of speech and expression,
which shall include freedom of the press and other media.”
In casu Mweb is
engaged in the field of conveying messages on behalf of its
customers to their intended recipients. In doing so Mweb utilises
the internet technology. It is, therefore, an entity which is
operating a media within the telecommunications field. Suffice it to
state that it emerged from the combined evidence and submissions of
both sides in this case, both in the court a quo and in this
court, that Mweb is actually able to convey the messages by, among
others, WiMax, which is mobile and wireless, and ADSL under licence
by using land lines. The only complaints which Mweb can
understandably raise are those I have already considered when
dealing with the issue relating to the right to practise a
profession, or carry on any occupation, trade or business, namely
being required to obtain a licence, to pay fees to Telecom in order
to utilise the ADSL technology and having to use landlines which are
controlled by Telecom. However, my view in regard to such complaints
are the same as already expressed. Therefore, notwithstanding the
restraints it may be unhappy about, and despite the enactment of the
impugned section 2(2), it can be asserted emphatically, and
justifiably so, that Mweb is still, economically engaged in the
business of telecommunications. In other words, it is still able to
enjoy and exercise its freedom of speech and expression.
The Issue regarding
Article 22(b) of the Namibian Constitution
I have, in discussing
the issue of equality before the law, determined that there was
justification for treating Telecom differently from the treatment
meted out to MWeb. And in the preceding paragraphs I have concluded
that MWeb’s fundamental rights entrenched in article 21(1)(a)
and (j) have not been violated to the extent of MWeb being rendered
totally incapable of enjoying them. Equally, I have found that
whatever might have been done by Telecom in apparent violation of
article 18 has in fact been done for the promotion of the public
good. In short, no irreparable injury has been done to MWeb. In the
circumstances, even if I were to resolve this issue in its favour,
the applicant cannot advance its case any further. It is, therefore,
unnecessary to give this issue detailed consideration.
The Issue regarding
the application to strike out
This issue relates to
the first respondent’s application under rule 6(15) of the
High Court Rules to strike out certain portions of the applicant’s
founding and replying affidavits, which was determined unfavourably
to the applicant. The evident purpose of raising this issue in this
appeal is to have the decision of the Court a quo reversed in
the applicant’s favour so that it could advance its case
inclusive of those portions which were struck out. However, in the
light of earlier decisions I have arrived at on the bedrock issues
of this appeal, I do not think that the applicant’s
presumptive hopes and expectations can be realised. I do not
therefore consider it necessary to decide this issue either.
Conclusion
The inevitable
determination I have to arrive at in the final analysis, which I
hereby do, is that this appeal has no merit. I unreservedly dismiss
it with costs.
Order:
The appeal is dismissed.
The appellant is ordered
to pay the respondents’ (excluding the third respondent) costs
of the appeal, such costs to include the costs of two instructed
counsel and one instructing counsel.
________________________
CHOMBA, AJA
I agree.
________________________
SHIVUTE, CJ
I agree.
________________________
STRYDOM, AJA
COUNSEL ON BEHALF OF THE
APPELLANT:
Assisted by:
Instructed by:
|
Mr. R. Heathcote
Ms. E.M. Schimming-Chase
Ellis
& Partners
|
COUNSEL ON BEHALF OF THE 1st
RESPONDENT:
Assisted by:
Instructed by:
COUNSEL ON BEHALF OF THE 2nd,
4th
and 5th
RESPONDENTS:
Instructed by:
|
Mr. D.F. Smuts, SC
Ms. S. Vivier
LorentzAngula Inc
Mr. N. Marcus
The
Government Attorney
|