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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Mahfouz & Anor v Brisard & Anor [2006] EWHC 1191 (QB) (25 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/1191.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1191 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) SHEIKH KHALID BIN MAHFOUZ (2) ABDULRAHMAN BIN MAHFOUZ |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) JEAN-CHARLES BRISARD (2) GUILLAUME DASQUIE |
Defendants |
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(instructed by Kendall Freeman) for the Claimants
Adam Speker (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the First Defendant
The Second Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 19 May 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Gray:
i) acting as banker to the terrorist Osama bin Laden, the first Claimant's brother in law, and to Osama bin Laden's terrorist network Al Qaeda, and acting as the "banker of terror", thus knowingly and willingly participating in the lucrative business of terrorism;
ii) being one of the principal supporters of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda in their terrorist activities:
a) by contributing millions of dollars in order to support and further the campaign of terrorism and atrocities waged by Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda;
b) by playing a prominent role in organising the financing of those terrorist activities and
c) by knowingly and willingly acting as a main protagonist in their terrorist network;
iii) conniving at and colluding in the terrorist activities of Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda and actively facilitating those terrorist activities.
i) that he, as manager of the Sudanese branch of Muwafaq, was reasonably suspected of having helped the terrorist Osama bin Laden and his terrorist network Al Qaeda to organise an assassination attempt against Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak in Ethiopia in 1995;
ii) that he, through his connection with Muwafaq, was or is reasonably suspected of having been a screen for Al Qaeda and a source of millions of dollars for Osama bin Laden.
"Summary disposal of claim
8.(1) In defamation proceedings the court may dispose summarily of the plaintiff's claim in accordance with the following provisions.
(2) The court may dismiss the plaintiff's claim if it appears to the court that it has no realistic prospect of success and there is no reason why it should be tried.
(3) The court may give judgment for the plaintiff and grant him summary relief (see section 9) if it appears to the court that there is no defence to the claim which has a realistic prospect of success, and that there is no other reason why the claim should be tried.
Unless the plaintiff asks for summary relief, the court shall not act under this subsection unless it is satisfied that summary relief will adequately compensate him for the wrong he has suffered.
(4) In considering whether a claim should be tried the court shall have regard to—
(a) whether all the persons who are or might be defendants in respect of the publication complained of are before the court;
(b) whether summary disposal of the claim against another defendant would be inappropriate;
(c) the extent to which there is a conflict of evidence;
(d) the seriousness of the alleged wrong (as regards the content of the statement and the extent of publication); and
(e) whether it is justifiable in the circumstances to proceed to a full trial.
(5) Proceedings under this section shall be heard and determined without a jury.
Meaning of summary relief
9.(1) For the purposes of section 8 (summary disposal of claim) "summary relief" means such of the following as may be appropriate—
(a) a declaration that the statement was false and defamatory of the plaintiff;
(b) an order that the defendant publish or cause to be published a suitable correction and apology;
(c) damages not exceeding £10,000 or such other amount as may be prescribed by order of the Lord Chancellor;
(d) an order restraining the defendant from publishing or further publishing the matter complained of.
(2) The content of any correction and apology, and the time, manner, form and place of publication, shall be for the parties to agree.
If they cannot agree on the content, the court may direct the defendant to publish or cause to be published a summary of the court's judgment agreed by the parties or settled by the court in accordance with rules of court.
If they cannot agree on the time, manner, form or place of publication, the court may direct the defendant to take such reasonable and practicable steps as the court considers appropriate.
(3) Any order under subsection (1)(c) shall be made by statutory instrument which shall be subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament.
Summary disposal: rules of court
10.(1)Provision may be made by rules of court as to the summary disposal of the plaintiff's claim in defamation proceedings.
(2) without prejudice to the generality of that power, provision may be made—
(a) authorising a party to apply for summary disposal at any stage of the proceedings;
(b) authorising the court at any stage of the proceedings—
(i) to treat any application, pleading or other step in the proceedings as an application for summary disposal, or
(ii) to make an order for summary disposal without any such application;
(c) as to the time for serving pleadings or taking any other step in the proceedings in a case where there are proceedings for summary disposal;
(d) requiring the parties to identify any question of law or construction which the court is to be asked to determine in the proceedings;
(e) as to the nature of any hearing on the question of summary disposal, and in particular—
(i) authorising the court to order affidavits or witness statements to be prepared for use as evidence at the hearing, and
(ii) requiring the leave of the court for the calling of oral evidence, or the introduction of new evidence, at the hearing;
(f) authorising the court to require a defendant to elect, at or before the hearing, whether or not to make an offer to make amends under section 2".
"To what extent will this action, if successful, vindicate the Claimant's reputation? English law and procedure does not permit the court to make a declaration of falsity at the end of a libel action. … The presumption of falsity does not however leave the judge in a position to make a declaration to all the world that the allegation was false. In the present case, where the matter will not even be explored at the trial, the judge could not possibly be expected to declare, with confidence, that the Claimant never provided funds to Osama bin Laden. There may well in due course be a finding in relation to this in the Burnett action, where the question will be directly in issue".
"My Lords, I would not deny that in some respects an English court would be admirably suited for [the purpose of vindicating plaintiffs' international reputations]. But that does not mean that we should always put ourselves forward as the most appropriate forum in which any foreign publisher who has distributed copies in this country, or whose publications have been downloaded here from the Internet, can be required to answer the complaint of any public figure with an international reputation, however little the dispute has to do with England. In Airbus Industrie GIE v. Patel [1999] 1 AC 119 your Lordships' house declined the role of 'international policemen' in adjudicating upon jurisdictional disputes between foreign countries. Likewise in this case, the judge was in my view entitled to decide that the English court should not be an international libel tribunal for a dispute between foreigners which had no connection with this country".
"The common sense of the matter is that [Mr Berezovsky] wants the verdict of an English court that he has been acquitted of the allegations in the article, for use wherever in the world his business may take him".