[2024] UKSC 21
On appeal from: [2022] EWCA Civ 1073
JUDGMENT
Mueen-Uddin (Appellant) vSecretary of State for the Home Department (Respondent)
before
Lord Reed, President
Lord Sales
Lord Hamblen
Lord Burrows
Lord Richards
20 June 2024
Heard on 1 and 2 November 2023
Appellant
Jacob Dean
Lily Walker-Parr
(Instructed by Carter-Ruck)
Respondent
Anthony Hudson KC
Ben Silverstone
Robbie Stern
(Instructed by Government Legal Department)
LORD REED (with whom Lord Sales, Lord Hamblen, Lord Burrows and Lord Richards agree):
Introduction
The claimant in these proceedings, Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, was born in East Bengal, which then formed part of the state of Pakistan. Since the conclusion of the war of independence in December 1971, it has been the state of Bangladesh. He has lived in the United Kingdom since 1973, and has been a British citizen since 1984. He has held a number of prominent public and charitable positions in British society. He served as Secretary General of the Council of Mosques in the United Kingdom and Eire from 1984 to 1988 and helped to set up the Muslim Council of Great Britain. He was Deputy Director of the Islamic Foundation from 1995 to 2005. He was Director of Muslim Spiritual Care Provision in the National Health Service from 2005 to 2012. He has served as vice-chairman of the East London Mosque and the London Muslim Centre, as chairman of Tottenham Mosque and Islamic Community Centre, and as chairman of Muslim Aid.
In October 2019 the Home Office published a report prepared by the Commission for Countering Extremism, a non-statutory committee of the Home Office, entitled “Challenging Hateful Extremism” (“the Report”). It was published in hard copy and online on the government’s website. Part One of the Report was entitled “What Extremism Looks Like in England and Wales”. Under the sub-heading “Ideological and Sectarian Violence”, it stated (p 54):
“We also heard about violence towards secular people from those of a similar faith background. Muslim bloggers described being physically attacked during a protest in East London [footnote 157]. The protest was to show support for the conviction of a senior Jamaat-e-Islami leader for war crimes committed during the 1971 War of Independence [footnote 158]. Some of those we spoke to are in hiding.”
Footnote 158 stated:
“Links between those responsible for the violence in 1971 and JI in the UK including community leadership in East London are well established. Chowdhury Mueen Uddin, former vice chair of the East London Mosque and who helped found the Muslim Council of Britain was found guilty of crimes against humanity following a trial in absentia. See: Channel 4. 2013. ‘British Muslim leader sentenced to death for war crimes’ 3 November 2013, (accessed: 4 September 2019) <>
It is agreed that around 80 hard copies of the Report were distributed and that the online version was downloaded about 5,000 times. It is not known how often it was read without being downloaded. It is agreed that it may have reached over 900,000 followers of the Home Office’s social media accounts. The claimant avers that he was contacted by numerous colleagues and associates who had read the Report and the allegations about him which it contained. He states that he was devastated that the government of the country of which he was a longstanding citizen and to which he had devoted the last 50 or so years of his life, through community work and public service, would treat him with such disregard, and that he was deeply concerned that a great many people would believe that the allegations made against him were true, because they were made by the Home Office.
A letter of claim against the Secretary of State was sent on behalf of the claimant in December 2019. In March 2020, five months after the Report had first been published, the online version was edited to remove the footnote which referred to the claimant. However, the allegations which had been made against the claimant were not (and have never been) retracted.
On 19 June 2020 the claimant issued proceedings against the Secretary of State for damages for libel, and for compensation for breach of statutory duty pursuant to Parliament and Council Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (the General Data Protection Regulation (“the GDPR”)), arising from the allegations made in the Report.
On 16 February 2021 Tipples J determined, as a preliminary issue in the proceedings, that the natural and ordinary meaning of the words used in the material part of the Report was that the claimant “(i) was one of those responsible for war crimes committed during a 1971 War of Independence in South Asia; and (ii) has committed crimes against humanity during a 1971 War of Independence in South Asia”, and that those meanings were allegations of fact which were defamatory at common law: [2021] EWHC 269 (QB), para 71. Tipples J accepted (para 70) that an accusation of crimes against humanity is plainly very grave. That is evidently correct: it is difficult to imagine a graver allegation than of guilt of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The allegation is especially grave when it is made by the government of this country against one of its own citizens.
On 15 November 2021 Sir Andrew Nicol, sitting as a judge of the High Court, struck out Mr Mueen-Uddin’s claim in limine as an abuse of process: [2021] EWHC 3026 (QB). On 28 July 2022 the Court of Appeal (Dame Victoria Sharp PQBD and Dingemans LJ, Phillips LJ dissenting) dismissed his appeal against that decision: [2022] EWCA Civ 1073; [2022] EMLR 23. The claimant now appeals against the decision of the Court of Appeal.
The factual background
In order to understand the reasoning of the courts below and the issues in the appeal, it is necessary to explain in outline the relevant factual background. Since the appeal concerns a strike out application, and the claim was struck out before a defence had been pleaded or the claimant had served a reply to the defence, this summary is based principally on the particulars of claim and the witness statements filed in support of it. No facts have yet been found.
In March 1971 a war of independence broke out in East Pakistan, during which large numbers of people died. Numerous atrocities were committed, including the abduction between 10 and 15 December 1971 of a number of prominent intellectuals, 18 of whom were murdered. On 16 December the Pakistan Army surrendered to India, which had invaded earlier that month, ensuring Bangladesh’s independence.
Until May 1971 the claimant belonged to Islami Chatra Sangha, an Islamic student organisation which was widely—but, according to the claimant, mistakenly—regarded as the student wing of the political party Jamaat-e-Islami, which was opposed to the creation of an independent Bangladesh. He denies having been involved in any violence.
Shortly after the killing of the intellectuals, the claimant became aware of allegations that he was a member of the militia which was said to be responsible for their deaths. A newspaper article was published in Bangladesh on 29 December 1971 which accused him of masterminding their murder. On 3 January 1972 the New York Times reported that he had been identified as the head of an organisation known as Al-Badar, which was said to have murdered several hundred prominent intellectuals.
The claimant left Bangladesh in late December 1971. He arrived in the United Kingdom in June 1973 and has lived here since then. He visited Bangladesh several times between 1982 and 2004.
In 1973 Bangladesh enacted the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act 1973 (“the 1973 Act”), which established the International Crimes Tribunal (“ICT”). It is not an international body but an institution of Bangladesh’s domestic legal system, with the power to try and punish individuals for a variety of crimes committed in Bangladesh. The 1973 Act (as amended) contains provisions which necessitated the amendment of the Constitution of Bangladesh, by the insertion of article 47A, so as to remove the rights of those accused under the 1973 Act from seeking constitutional remedies. It bars any challenge to the composition of a tribunal or the appointment of its members, disapplies the ordinary rules of evidence and procedure set out in the Criminal Procedure Code and the Evidence Act, provides that the tribunal is not bound by rules of evidence and can, in particular, rely on newspaper reports, and empowers the tribunal to impose the death penalty. Under its rules of procedure, the ICT’s decisions as to the admission of evidence are final and cannot be challenged. The ICT appears to have been dormant until about 2009, after which a new government was elected on a platform that the ICT would start to take cases.
In 1995 Channel 4 broadcast a programme which alleged that the claimant had been involved in the murder of the 18 intellectuals. He began libel proceedings against Channel 4, but did not have the financial resources to pursue the case to trial. The proceedings ended without either party paying the other’s costs.
In 2012 the claimant became aware from media reports that he was being investigated in Bangladesh. He was not contacted by the Bangladesh authorities during the investigation. He instructed his lawyer to make a public statement stressing his innocence and his concerns about how the investigation was being conducted.
On 28 April 2013 the chief prosecutor of Bangladesh submitted formal charges against the claimant. On 2 May 2013 the ICT issued an arrest warrant. Although the claimant’s location in the United Kingdom and the contact details of his lawyer were known to the Bangladesh authorities, he was not served with the arrest warrant or notified of the indictment. Nor was his extradition requested. On learning of the arrest warrant he issued a public statement on his website that he rejected the charges levelled against him and expressed his concerns that the ICT process was neither open nor fair.
On 14 and 15 May 2013 the ICT published a notice in two Bangladesh newspapers requiring the claimant to appear before it within ten days. He decided not to appear because of his inability to contribute to his defence without appearing in person, public criticisms of the fairness of the ICT and its procedures, and his fear of being executed if he was convicted, as another person had been earlier that year. There had been widespread international criticism of the ICT for failing to respect minimum fair trial guarantees and for lacking judicial independence. There had also been criticism of misconduct by prosecutors and judges of the ICT. By way of example:
On 11 July 2011 Human Rights Watch recorded that amendments to the ICT rules of procedure failed to bring the law and rules into compliance with international standards. Further amendments were said to be needed, including allowing the accused to question the impartiality of the tribunal, defining war crimes in accordance with international standards, ensuring that the defence had more than the current three weeks to prepare, allowing for interlocutory appeals and appointing an independent panel for appellate review.
On 28 November 2011 Stephen J Rapp, US Department of State Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues, identified four issues with the ICT: (i) the lack of definition of crimes against humanity; (ii) the need for restoration of constitutional rights, including rights to consult with counsel, to prepare and to challenge the process; (iii) the need for protection of witnesses from threats and intimidation; and (iv) the need for transparency of the proceedings.
On 16 November 2012 the Bar Human Rights Committee of England and Wales expressed its concern that the ICT was failing to meet international fair trial standards. It expressed particular concern about interference in the defence; harassment, intimidation and surveillance of the defence team; denial of constitutional rights and perceived bias; and the lack of independence of tribunal members and of the chief prosecutor from both tribunal members and the government.
On 7 February 2013 two UN Special Rapporteurs appointed by the UN Human Rights Council referred to concerns as to the impartiality of the ICT judges and prosecution services, as well as their independence from the executive. They also referred to complaints by witnesses and lawyers for the defence of hostility, intimidation and harassment.
The ICT determined on 27 May 2013 that the claimant had “absconded or […] concealed” himself (para 22 of its judgment), although he had emigrated from Bangladesh 41 years earlier and had been living openly in this country during the intervening period at an address which was known to the Bangladesh authorities, with a high profile in British society. It proceeded to try the claimant in his absence. Court-appointed defence counsel was appointed on 4 June 2013 to represent him, but the claimant says that counsel never contacted him. The claimant understands that counsel were not permitted to take instructions from defendants who were being tried in absentia. The trial began on 15 July 2013. Judgment was given on 3 November 2013. The claimant was convicted of 11 charges of abetting, and complicity in, the commission of the offence of “extermination” as a crime against humanity, and sentenced to death by hanging.
It appears from its judgment that the tribunal heard oral evidence from around 20 witnesses, most of whom were young children at the time of the events in question. Most of the witnesses gave hearsay evidence, but some of them identified the claimant as being involved in the abduction of university professors who were subsequently murdered. The tribunal also received evidence of statements made by witnesses who had died before the trial. These included a filmed interview which formed part of the Channel 4 programme, in which a witness identified the claimant as being involved in the abduction of a professor. However, the tribunal relied primarily on newspaper reports. It stated that “the role and position of [the claimant] in 1971 needs to be categorized, chiefly on the basis of investigative reports mostly published immediately after the incidents in the news media” (judgment, para 108). It found that the Bangladesh newspaper report mentioned in para 11 above “proved that the ‘Al-Badar’ was a fascist organisation of JEI [Jamaat-e-Islami] and [the claimant] had acted as ‘operation-in-charge’ of Al-Badar in accomplishing the designed and calculated killing of intellectuals” (judgment, para 110). Further support was found in the New York Times report mentioned in para 11 above, and in a report published by the Observer. The claimant’s having left Bangladesh in 1971 was also treated as “a fair indicative of [his] guilty mind” (para 187).
United Kingdom media reported the conviction, and also reported that the claimant denied the charges and maintained that the trial was unfair and politically motivated. They also reported that the fairness of the ICT proceedings had been criticised by human rights organisations and other commentators. The claimant issued a statement on his website denouncing the conviction. He did not appeal against it within the 30-day time limit for doing so.
In December 2017 Interpol issued a “red notice” in respect of the claimant at the request of Bangladesh. The purpose of such a notice is to locate the person in question and to request their provisional arrest with a view to extradition. The red notice was withdrawn in 2018 after representations were made on behalf of the claimant. In its decision to withdraw the red notice, the Commission for the Control of Interpol’s Files stated (para 39):
“… the Commission paid particular attention to the numerous reports issued by reliable sources such as the United Nations (the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur for the Independence of Judges and Lawyers, the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary and arbitrary executions, the Special Rapporteur on Torture, the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention), diverse foreign governments and national entities (United States Special Ambassador for Global Criminal Justice, United States Congressional Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, European Union Parliament, United Kingdom as well as various human rights organizations (Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, International Commission of Jurists, International Centre for Transitional Justice), which all express serious concerns over the procedural safeguards before the ICT and document instances of witness abduction, intimidation of defence counsel, media censorship, pressure to convict from the government, lack of independence of judicial officers, amounting to gross violations of international fair trial standards.”
The Commission said (para 41) that it appeared from the judgment of the ICT that the counsel appointed to represent the claimant was “either unwilling or unable to contact [him] and prepare a robust defence”, resulting in the absence of any defence evidence at the trial. The Commission also said (para 42), in relation to the impartiality of the ICT judges, that the judgment contained “emotionally-charged wording, historical considerations or political innuendos unrelated to the legal reasoning”. The Commission concluded (para 49), on the basis of the information provided by the Bangladesh authorities themselves, that the ICT proceedings against the claimant were not compliant with Interpol’s constitution or with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The proceedings below
Before Sir Andrew Nicol ([2021] EWHC 3026 (QB)), counsel for the Secretary of State submitted that both the claim in libel and the GDPR claim were an abuse of the process of the court. It was an abuse to seek to relitigate in subsequent civil proceedings whether a person had been rightly convicted by a criminal court. It made no difference that the criminal court in question was outside the jurisdiction. Such a claim brought the administration of justice into disrepute and was unfair to the defendant compelled to meet such a claim. The Secretary of State’s position was that that was so even if all the claimant’s complaints about the fairness of the ICT proceedings were justified and he was convicted after a gross miscarriage of justice. The claimant’s criticisms of the fairness of the trial were irrelevant. An alternative way of putting the Secretary of State’s case on abuse was that “the game was not worth the candle” and should be struck out on the ground recognised by the Court of Appeal in Jameel (Yousef) v Dow Jones & Co Inc [2005] EWCA Civ 75; [2005] QB 946 (“Jameel”).
The judge accepted those submissions (para 83). The proceedings were in his view an abuse of process, applying the approach laid down by Lord Diplock in Hunter v Chief Constable of the West Midlands Police [1982] AC 529 (“Hunter”). The courts were vigilant to guard against a collateral attack on a criminal conviction. The same considerations applied to a conviction by an overseas court. That was so even if the proceedings in Bangladesh were grossly unfair. The proper course was for the claimant to have appealed within the Bangladesh criminal process. It made no difference that that opportunity had passed. The claimant was trying to have the best of both worlds by remaining outside Bangladesh but challenging his conviction. Furthermore, it would be unfair to the Secretary of State for the claim to continue. In order to establish a defence of truth under section 2 of the Defamation Act 2013 (“the 2013 Act”), the Secretary of State would have the burden of proving the claimant’s guilt over 50 years after the events in question. Inevitably, witnesses must have died and documents been lost. The claim should therefore be struck out.
This conclusion rendered the Jameel point moot, but the judge considered it briefly. The proceedings would be lengthy and costly. While it was a serious matter to deprive a litigant of the opportunity to vindicate his reputation, the Jameel jurisdiction existed, and this would, if necessary, have been an appropriate case in which to exercise it.