Jjuuko says that both sections fall short of defining the prohibited conduct and therefore violate constitutional provisions, which demand that criminal offenses must be defined.
Human Rights lawyer Francis Tumwesigye Ateenyi wants the Constitutional Court to nullify sections 168(1) (c) and 168(1) d) of the Penal Code Act. The sections provide for rogue and vagabond offenses. Tumwesigye said this in submission before a Panel of five Constitutional
Court Justices led by Fredrick Egonda-Ntende on Monday in his application against the Attorney General he filed in 2018.
The other Justices are Elizabeth Musoke, Christopher Madrama, and Monica Mugenyi. Christopher Gashirabake. Sections 168(1) (c) and 168(1) d) of the Penal Code Act jointly state that every suspected person or reputed thief
who has no visible means of subsistence and cannot give a good account of
himself or herself and is found wandering on any road or highway or in any
public place for an illegal or disorderly purpose shall
be deemed to be a rogue and vagabond.
The section adds that such a person commits a misdemeanor and is liable for
the first offense to imprisonment for six months, and for every subsequent
offense to imprisonment for one year. However, Tumwesigye, who was represented by Dr. Adrian Jjuuko the Executive Director of Human Rights Awareness and Promotion
Forum- Uganda (HRAPF), said the two sections are unconstitutional.
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Jjuuko says that both sections fall short of defining the prohibited
conduct and therefore violate constitutional provisions, which demand
that criminal offenses must be defined.
"The subsection is so vague that it empowers the police
to arbitrary arrest and detain any person that they find objectionable in the
absence of a reasonable suspicion and on the assumption of an illegal and
disorderly thereby derogating from the constitutional provisions that
guarantee equality and equal protection of the law and the right to be
presumed innocent," said Jjuuko.
However, the Attorney General wants the application dismissed on grounds that the police are only obliged to arrest a person who is
suspected of committing or about to commit a crime because of its constitutional duty to prevent and detect crime.
He also argues that the said sections do
not target the poor and even if it was the case, those arrested can seek redress
from a court with competent jurisdiction and not the constitutional court because there is nothing for interpretation. The judges have promised to deliver their judgment on
notice.