在对《乌干达宪法》第 21(3)条禁止的歧视理由清单进行 "灵活 "和 "严格 "解释之间:乌干达法律协会及其他 12 人诉总检察长[2024] UGCC 2(2024 年 2 月 13 日)

J. Mujuzi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

乌干达宪法》(1995 年)第 21 条规定了不受歧视的权利。第 21 条第(3)款规定,就第 21 条而言,歧视'系指仅仅或主要由于各自的性别、种族、肤色、民族血统、部落、出生、信仰或宗教、或社会或经济地位、政治观点或残疾而给予不同的人不同的待遇'。宪法》第 45 条规定,"与本章具体提及的基本权利和其他人权及自由有关的权利、义务、声明和保障不得被视为排除了其他未具体提及的权利、义务、声明和保障。在乌干达法律协会和其他 12 人诉总检察长案(2024 年 2 月 13 日)中,宪法法院援引第 45 条,认为第 21(3)条所列的禁止理由并非详尽无遗。在本文中,提交人依据第 21(3)条的起草历史、最高法院关于第 21(3)条的判例以及对第 21(3)条的字面解释,认为第 21(3)条所列的禁止理由是详尽无遗的,宪法法院的相反裁定是错误的。提交人还认为,不应依据第 45 条将权利纳入《宪法》。它应适用于成文法或普通法权利。
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Between a ‘flexible’ and ‘rigid’ interpretation of the list of prohibited grounds of discrimination under article 21(3) of the constitution of Uganda: Uganda Law Society and 12 others v Attorney General [2024] UGCC 2 (13 February 2024)
Article 21 of the Constitution of Uganda (1995) provides for the right to freedom from discrimination. Article 21(3) provides that for the purposes of Article 21, discrimination ‘means to give different treatment to different persons attributable only or mainly to their respective descriptions by sex, race, colour, ethnic origin, tribe, birth, creed or religion, or social or economic standing, political opinion or disability.’ Article 45 of the Constitution provides that ‘[t]he rights, duties, declarations and guarantees relating to the fundamental and other human rights and freedoms specifically mentioned in this Chapter shall not be regarded as excluding others not specifically mentioned.’ In Uganda Law Society and 12 others v Attorney General (13 February 2024), the Constitutional Court invoked Article 45 and held that the list of prohibited grounds under Article 21(3) is not exhaustive. In this article, the author relies on the drafting history of Article 21(3), the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court on Article 21(3) and the literal interpretation of Article 21(3) to argue that the list of prohibited grounds in Article 21(3) is exhaustive and that the Constitutional Court erred when it held to the contrary. The author argues further that Article 45 should not be relied on to read rights into the Constitution. It should be applicable to statutory or common law rights.
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