DEFAMATION ORDINANCE 2002
F. No.
2(1) 2002- Pub. --- The following Ordinance promulgated by the President
is hereby published for general information: --
ORDINANCE NO.
LVI OF 2OO2
AN
ORDINANCE
To make provisions in respect of defamation
WHEREAS it
is expedient to make provisions in respect of defamation and for matters
connected therewith or incidental thereto;
AND WHEREAS,
the President is satisfied that circumstances exist which render it necessary
to take immediate action;
NOW, THEREFORE,
in pursuance of the Proclamation of Emergency of the fourteenth day of
October, 1999, and the Provisional Constitution Order No. 1 of 1999, read
with the Provisional Constitutional (Amendment) Order No. 9 of 1999, and
in exercise of all powers enabling him in that behalf, the President of
the Islamic Republic of Pakistan is pleased to make and promulgate the
following Ordinance; -
1.
Short title, extent and commencement. –
(1) This ordinance may be called the Defamation Ordinance, 2002.
(2) It extends to the whole of Pakistan.
(3) It shall come into force at once
2.
Definitions. – In this Ordinance, unless there is anything repugnant
in the subject or context, -
(a) “author” means the originator of the statement;
(b) “broadcasting” means the
dissemination of writing, signs, signals, pictures and sounds of all kind,
including any electronic device, intended to be received by the pubic
either directly or through the medium of relay stations, by means of,
(i)
a form of wireless radio-electric communication utilizing Hertzian waves,
including radiotelegraph and radiotelephone, or
(ii)
cables, computer, wires, fiber-optic linkages or laser beams, and “broadcast”
has a corresponding meaning;
(c) “Editor” means a person or operator having editorial or equivalent
responsibility for the content of the statement or the decision to publish
or circulate it;
(d)
“newspaper” means a paper containing public news, intelligence or occurrences
or remarks or observations or containing only, or
principally, advertisements, printed for distribution to the public
and published periodically, or in parts or members, and includes such
other periodical works as the Federal Government may, by notification
in the official Gazette, declare to be newspaper;
(e)
“publication” means the communication of the words to at least one person
after than the person defamed and includes a newspaper or broadcast through
the internet or other media; and
(f)
“publisher” means a commercial publisher, that is, a person whose business
is issuing material to the public, or a section of the public, who issues
material containing the statement in the course of that business.
3. Defamation. –
(1) any wrongful act or publication or circulation of a false statement
or representation made orally or in written or visual form which injures
the reputation of a person, tends to lower him in the estimation of
others or tends to reduce him to ridicule, unjust criticism, dislike,
contempt or hatred shall be actionable as defamation.
(2) Defamation is of two forms, namely: -
(i)
slander; and
(ii)
libel.
(3) Any false oral statement or representation that amounts to defamation
shall be actionable as slander.
(4) Any false written, documentary or visual statement or representation
made either by ordinary form or expression or by electronic or other
modern means or devices that amounts to defamation shall be actionable
as libel.
4. Defamation actionable. - The publication of defamatory matter is an actionable
wrong without proof of special damage to the person defamed and where
defamation is proved, damage shall be presumed.
5. Defences. – In defamation proceedings a person has a
defence if he shows that -
(a) he was not the author, editor, publisher
or printer of the statement complained of;
(b) the matter commented on is fair and in
the public interest and is an expression of opinion and not an assertion
of fact and was published in good faith
(c)
it is based on truth and was made for public good.
(d)
assent was given for the publication by the plaintiff;
(e)
offer to tender a proper apology and publish the same was made by the
defendant but was refused by the plaintiff;
(f)
an offer to print or publish a contradiction or denial in the same manner
and with the same prominence was made but was refused by the plaintiff.
(g)
the matter complained of was privileged communication such as between
lawyer and client or between persons having fiduciary relations;
(h)
the mater is covered by absolute or qualified privilege.
6. Absolute
privilege. – Any publication of statement made in the Federal or
Provincial legislatures, reports, papers, notes and proceedings ordered
to be published by either house of the Parliament or by the Provincial
Assemblies, or relating to judical proceedings ordered to be published
by the court or any report, note or matter written or published by or
under the authority of a Government, shall have the protection of absolute
privilege.
Explanation.
– In this section legislature includes a local legislature and court
includes any tribunal or body exercising the judicial powers.
7. Qualified privilege. – Any fair
and accurate publication of parliamentary proceedings, or judicial proceedings
which the public may attend and statements made to the proper authorities
in order to procure the redress of public grievances shall have the protection
of qualified privilege.
8. Notice of action. – No Action lies
unless the plaintiff has, within two months after the publication of the
defamatory matter has come to his notice or knowledge, given to the defendant,
fourteen days notice in writing of his intention to bring an action, specifying
the defamatory matter complained of.
9. Remedies. – Where defamation shall be proved to have
occurred, the court may pass order directing the defendant to tender an
apology, if acceptable to the plaintiff, and publish the same in similar
manner and with the same prominence as the defamatory statement made and
pay reasonable compensatory damages as general damages with a minimum
of Rs. 50,000 (Rupees fifty thousand) or shall undergo three months imprisonment
and in addition thereto, any special damage incurred that is proved by
the plaintiff to the satisfaction of the Court.
10. Code of Civil Procedure and Qanun-e-Shahadat
Order to apply. – The Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act. No. V of
1908) and the Qanun-e-Shahadat, 1984 (P.O. No. 10 of 1984) shall mutatis
mutandis, apply to the proceedings under this Ordinance.
11. Ordinance not to prejudice action for
criminal defamation. – Nothing in this Ordinance shall prejudice any
action for criminal libel or slander under any law for the time being
in force.
12. Limitation of actions. – An action
against ---
(a)
an author, editor, proprietor or publisher of a newspaper;
(b)
the owner of a broadcasting station;
(c)
an officer, servant or employee of the newspaper or broadcasting station;
or
(d)
any other purpose,
for defamation contained in
the newspaper or broadcast from the station or in publication otherwise
shall be taken within six months after the publication of the defamatory
matter came to the notice or knowledge of the person defamed.
13. Trial of Cases. – No court inferior
to that of the District Judge shall have jurisdiction to try cases under
this Ordinance.
14. Court to decide the cases expeditiously.
– The court shall decide a case under this Ordinance with in a period
of six months.
15. Appeal. – An appeal against the final
order of the District Judge shall lie to the High Court within thirty
days of the passing of such order;
Provided
that no appeal shall lie against an interlocutory order of the court.
16.
Power to make rules. – The Federal Government may, by notification
in the official Gazette, make rules to carry out the purposes of this
Ordinance.
GENERAL
PERVEZ MUSHARAF
President
---------------------------
Mr. Justice
(MANSOOR AHMAD)
SECRETARY
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