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Home Perspective Special Feature The global war on the libel industry
The global war on the libel industry Print E-mail
Wednesday, 09 December 2009

The Guardian

The Brazilian journalist Luiz Flavio Pinto is intimately familiar with the vagaries of civil defamation law. In July this year, when a court ordered him to pay damages and legal costs totalling nearly $20,000 to the Maionara family, for allegedly defaming their deceased father, he was already embroiled in 14 other lawsuits filed by the same family. The damages award in just this one defamation case amounted to more than a year's gross income for his newspaper, Jornal Pessoal.

Pinto is an outspoken journalist who regularly reports on environmental destruction, drug trafficking and political and corporate corruption in the Amazon region. Over the four decades of his career, he has faced death threats, physical attacks and dozens of criminal and civil lawsuits. He is only one of hundreds of journalists and others around the world who suffers the damaging consequences of enormous legal fees, lengthy and exhausting court cases and restraints on their ability to critically report on matters of high public interest.

Article 19, the global campaign for free expression, is concerned about the extent to which civil defamation laws worldwide undermine the right to free expression and result in the persecution of individuals such as Pinto. In a series of online maps published this week, Article 19 tracks the number of civil defamation cases filed in 176 countries around the world, and the amount of damages awarded by courts.

Criminal defamation laws remain on the statutes in many countries and, in places like Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey, these laws are actively used to prosecute individuals for writing, broadcasting or publishing information and opinions that may be critical of powerful government or corporate interests.

However, civil defamation cases, which are brought privately in civil courts, may also be used to silence criticism or opposition in countries where criminal defamation laws no longer apply.

European courts, for example, process far more civil defamation cases than any other region, with an average of 700 cases in each country annually. Moldova has the highest number of court cases in Europe, relative to the size of its population, and the highest amount of damages awarded was 80 times the per capita GDP for the country. Sweden and Germany jointly show the highest overall number of cases each year, although the usual damages awarded are relatively modest. Greece is the only European country to impose a limit on possible damages at $438,000, although the damages usually awarded in defamation cases are comparatively small across Europe, averaging $81,000.

Generally, however, the amount of damages awarded by courts in civil defamation cases is disproportionately high. India and Pakistan show the highest average damages, relative to each country's per capita GDP.

In its daily work around the world, Article 19 sees evidence of the effects of costly civil court cases on journalists, editors, publishers and writers. Civil defamation cases that award excessive damages and allow extortionate legal fees provide a powerful incentive to litigious individuals and an equally powerful disincentive to media practitioners with finite resources.

In Spain, a former editor, Patxi Ibarrondo, was ordered in 2007 to pay 12% of his monthly disability pension to cover damages awarded to Carlos Sáiz, the secretary-general of a political party. Ibarrondo's newspaper, La Realidad, had been forced to close, with the loss of 30 jobs, when it could not afford to pay damages in the same case. Ibarrondo, financially ruined and suffering from Parkinson's disease, subsequently had his bank account frozen and his legal defence withdrew when he could no longer pay them.

Our research further reveals that there are often political motives for civil defamation claims. In Singapore, the opposition politician Chee Soon Juan was banned from running for political office and travelling abroad without a permit because he had been declared bankrupt in 2006 and was in contempt of court. His bankruptcy was caused by the enormous damages he had been forced to pay after he lost a defamation case brought by the country's ruling party.

Individuals do have a right to be protected from attacks on their personal reputation. International law is very clear on this matter – defamation law must balance the right to freedom of expression with the protection of reputation. There is no automatic hierarchy between these two rights but they can be balanced if there is a clear set of rules to do so.

A good defamation law should aim to protect people against false statements of fact that cause damage to their reputation. It should be defined as narrowly as possible, with clear stipulations about who may sue. It must also ensure that those sued are able to mount a proper defence and that any solutions set out by the courts should be proportionate. Remedies may include apologies, corrections or the right of reply for those whose reputation is compromised, and should rely less on disproportionate costs and damages.

Over the period of the research, there were 240 civil defamation or libel cases brought before courts in the UK. A process to reform Britain's libel laws and decriminalise defamation is currently under way, led by free speech organisations and now supported by the government. This reform will send a powerful message to other countries that defamation laws need to properly balance the right to freedom of expression against the right to reputation.

Unfortunately, there is evidence across the globe demonstrating how civil defamation laws are used to stifle debate, discourage critical reporting and silence opposition. This "industry of compensation" is exploited by individuals holding positions of power who may wish to continue their illegal, corrupt or devious activities safe behind walls erected by aggressive lawyers and judges who may sometimes effectively collude against journalists and the media.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/libertycentral/2009/dec/08/global-libel-industry-defamation-laws

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Comments (3)
  • nobody - Rumors halt/cease at wise-man!
    As long as you are not guilty conscious, why bother with others’ gossips? As the saying goes, rumors halt/cease at wise-man! Especially, for prominent public figures/politicians/celebrities, the more the person trying to defense himself by taking legal defamation suit against his opponents, the more suspicions will be created among the ordinary citizens! A persons’ dignity and integrity can only be destroyed by his own “wrong-doings” and not due to others’ baseless allegations, groundless accusations! The truth will reveal with time!
  • quantum
    http://www.newscientist.com/blogs/thesword/2009/12/campaign-to-reform-english-lib.html

    Campaign to reform English libel law launched
    Roger Highfield, editor, New Scientist magazine

    A coalition of pressure groups launched a campaign today at the Law Society in London to renew calls for the reform of England's libel law. Among those backing the initiative are Jonathan Ross, broadcaster, Jim Al-Khalili of the University of Surrey in Guildford, Roy Greenslade, journalist, Stephen Fry, broadcaster and Ben Goldacre, medical doctor and columnist. New Scientist has taken a keen interest in the case.

    Imagine a world where you cannot successfully defend yourself for telling the truth because the cost of doing is so prohibitive. You can write something for an overseas newspaper and wake up to find that you are being sued at home. In this topsy-turvy world, you are assumed to have got it wrong until you can prove otherwise. Even if you win the court case, you can still end up with a bill for several hundred thousand pounds.

    Welcome to Britain's counter-intuitive libel laws. Their aim is true enough, to balance the right to free speech against protection for the individual from unjustified attack. A person is defamed if statements in a publication expose him to ridicule, cause him to be shunned, lower him in the estimation in the minds of "right-thinking" members of society or disparage him in his work.

    But our draconian libel laws mean that even when people strive to be even-handed, for instance in discussing the scientific evidence backing a medical therapy, there's a chilling atmosphere of fear and uncertainty because of the extraordinary expense of having to defend an action. The biggest losers are the public interest and, most importantly, the public's health.
    In the cartoon South Park, when Tom Cruise shouts at the American press, he doesn't just holler, "I'm gonna sue you," but "I'm gonna sue you... in England." The UN's Committee on Human Rights has attacked "libel tourism", where foreign businessmen and millionaires use the High Court in London to sue foreign publishers under defamation laws. No wonder that Americans are discussing specific legislation to prevent British rulings from being enforceable outside this country, recognising that our law on defamation is an international menace.

    We now have a cause célèbre that is supporting this momentum for change. The author Simon Singh has spent more than £100,000 on an action that followed a 2008 article he wrote for The Guardian which included critical observations of the effectiveness of chiropractic treatments and the evidence of their effectiveness.

    This government has discussed legal reform for some time but Robert Dougans of the London-based solicitors Bryan Cave, who is representing Singh, tells me that his case has helped to provide the impetus for change. "Libel reform has been on the agenda for years, but this case has been the catalyst to bring it up the agenda. The groundswell of support for Simon is gratifying."

    We must defend the freedom of scientists, researchers and journalists to engage in robust criticism of scientific and pseudo-scientific work. It is high time that politicians reformed the law.

    Watch more: The science spokesmen for the main UK political parties were asked to comment on the Simon Singh case and libel law reform at a recent debate in Cambridge.
  • quantum
    http://www.libelreform.org/

    After a year-long Inquiry, English PEN and Index on Censorship have concluded that English libel law has a negative impact on freedom of expression, both in the UK and around the world. Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right, and should only be limited in special circumstances. Yet English libel law imposes unnecessary and disproportionate restrictions on free speech, sending a chilling effect through the publishing and journalism sectors in the UK. This effect now reaches around the world, because of so-called 'libel tourism', where foreign cases are heard in London, widely known as a 'town named sue'. The law was designed to serve the rich and powerful, and does not reflect the interests of a modern democratic society.

    In this report, we cut through the intimidating complexity of English libel law to show how the legal framework has become increasingly unbalanced. We believe that the law needs to facilitate the free exchange of ideas and information, whilst offering redress to anyone whose reputation is falsely or unfairly damaged. Yet our inquiry has shown that the law as it stands is hindering the free exchange of ideas and information. We repeatedly encountered the same concerns, expressed by lawyers, publishers, journalists, bloggers and NGOs, who have no wish to abolish libel law, but know from experience of its chilling effect on legitimate publication. In response to their concerns, which are set out below, we offer the following recommendations to restore the balance between free speech and reputation:

    1. In libel, the defendant is guilty until proven innocent
    We recommend: Require the claimant to demonstrate damage and falsity

    2. English libel law is more about making money than saving a reputation
    We recommend: Cap damages at £10,000

    3. The definition of 'publication' defies common sense
    We recommend: Abolish the Duke of Brunswick rule and introduce a single publication rule


    4. London has become an international libel tribunal
    We recommend: No case should be heard in this jurisdiction unless at least 10 per cent of copies of the relevant publication have been circulated here

    5. There are few viable alternatives to a full trial
    We recommend: Establish a libel tribunal as a low-cost forum for hearings

    6. There is no robust public interest defence in libel law
    We recommend: Strengthen the public interest defence

    7. Comment is not free
    We recommend: Expand the definition of fair comment

    8. The potential cost of defending a libel action is prohibitive
    We recommend: Cap base costs and make success fees and 'After the Event' (ATE) insurance premiums non-recoverable


    9. The law does not reflect the arrival of the internet
    We recommend: Exempt interactive online services and interactive chat from liability


    10. Not everything deserves a reputation
    We recommend: Exempt large and medium-sized corporate bodies and associations from libel law unless they can prove malicious falsehood
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