Maliko V R (Criminal Appeal 13 of 2020) 2021 MWHC 9 (8 January 2021)

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IN THE HIGH COURT OF MALAWI

ZOMBA REGISTRY
CRIMINAL APPEAL CAUSE NO 13 OF 2020
BETWEEN:

FABIANO MALIKO

VS

REPUBLIC

CORAM : HON. JUSTICE KAPINDU


Mr. Twea, of Counsel for the Defendant
Mr. Msume, Mr. Chisanga, Mr. Masanjala, of Counsel for the Appellant
Mr. Mkhula, Official Interpreter
Mrs. L. Mboga, Court Reporter

JUDGMENT

KAPINDU, J

1. This is a very sad case of defilement. It is very heart breaking. A grown man
in his forties sexually abused and violated a young girl child of 10 years of
age, multiple times. These offences are grisly. They shock society to the core
and make us all cringe.

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2. In the present case, a grown man of 43 years of age, the Appellant herein,
Mr. Fabiano Maliko (or Marko) whom the 10 year old victim called “uncle”,
a friend to her father, for some warped and vile reasons, decided to sexually
violate the little girl child. The facts show that the complainant, who is the
father of the victim child, and the Appellant herein, were family friends.

3. The complainant would, every now and then, entrust the accused person
with the task of dropping the little girl at school or picking her up from school.
According to the evidence, on some such trips, the accused person, whose
wife passed away in 2014, would divert to his house with the victim and
sexually abuse her. The Court below suggested that he would “have sex
with her” on such occasions. This Court thinks this is inappropriate language
when it comes to carnal knowledge of a little child who has no capacity to
appreciate the nature of the act, let alone the capacity to grant even a
semblance of informed consent to such grisly act. Having sex “with”
another person in my view suggests informed consent between the parties.
The Appellant herein, by forcing his penis into the victim child’s small, tender
and immature vagina multiple times had what is termed in law carnal
knowledge of the little child, and he did so multiple times on multiple
occasions.

4. I must perhaps pause here and state that as the Court uses this language
to describe the sexual abuse and violation herein, the Court is mindful that
this is language of cultural and moral discomfort. Unfortunately, it is
language that must be used in order to properly describe the nature and
circumstances of the offence with sufficient clarity and in a manner that
properly describes the elements of the offence and ensures compliance
with the high standard of proof required in criminal matters. I may add that
perhaps such cultural and moral discomfort is also necessary for societal
reflection on this scourge and for society to ensure that it rids itself of these
offences of grave moral turpitude.

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5. The Court cannot imagine the excruciating, piercing pain experienced by
the little child. The experience must have been so sordid for her. It is a heart-
rending thought to consider her dreadful torment and ordeal. The Court
cannot imagine the state of confusion – both current and future on the little
child. The Court cannot imagine the degree of psychological trauma or
injury – both present and future on this little child. Offences such as this one
are likely to have lasting devastating effects on the victim child. The child,
in addition to the pain and confusion arising from the sexual abuse, may
have growing feelings of shame as she grows, and she may also become
deeply distrustful of others.

6. Further to this, the Court cannot imagine the trauma and psychological
pain, both present and future on the little girl’s parents and loved ones. They
are all victims of the Appellant’s grisly crime.

7. And then the Court cannot also sufficiently imagine the odiousness and
perverseness of such a grown man deriving sexual pleasure out of violating
a little child whose safety he was supposed to be safeguarding. His conduct
was so vile, so revolting, so ignominious, so debased and so degenerate.

8. What the Appellant did, as described above, is a classic illustration of the


commission of the offence called defilement that is contrary to section
138(1) of the Penal Code (cap 7:01 of the laws of Malawi). That section
provides that:

Any person who carnally knows any girl under the


age of sixteen years shall be guilty of a felony
and shall be liable to imprisonment for life.

9. In the present case, the accused person pleaded guilty to the offence. We
are therefore not here to re-open the issue of the propriety of the
conviction. Suffice it to mention that the Court has taken its time to look at
the manner in which the guilty plea was taken and the conviction entered

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and concluded that the conviction was correctly entered. For what a
confirmation may be worth, the conviction is hereby confirmed.

10. After considering all the relevant factors, the learned Magistrate sentenced
the Appellant herein to 14 years imprisonment with hard labour. It is against
this sentence that he has appealed to this Court. He finds it to be manifestly
excessive. His Counsel forms the view that a sentence in the region of 6
years imprisonment would be appropriate under the circumstances.

11. Counsel for the State seemed rather unsure on what exactly his position was
in respect of the appeal. On the papers filed before this Court, and indeed
when he presented his initial oral arguments, he took the view that the
sentence was indeed manifestly excessive and that it needed to be
reduced, although not as much as Counsel for the Appellant was asking
for. He thought a sentence in the region of 10 years imprisonment with hard
labour would be more appropriate.

12. In their initial agreement for the reduction of sentence, only differing on
degree of reduction, both sides considered the usual mitigating factor that
the accused person was a first offender. In addition, Counsel for the
Appellant argued that the Appellant, at 43 years of age, should be
considered an old man and that this should weigh heavily in his favour as a
mitigating factor. Both Counsel were also particularly moved that the
Appellant pleaded guilty to the offence.

13. It was only after the Court asked several questions relating to the seriousness
of the offence of defilement; and in particular whether Counsel on both
sides had considered some stream of case law on sentencing in these
matters, including the decisions of this Court in Brian Shaba vs Republic,
Criminal Appeal No. 19 of 2014 (HC, MZ) and Republic vs Mandala Chisale,
Criminal Review Cause No. 7 of 2014 (HC, Zomba), where sentences of 18
years imprisonment with hard labour and 20 years imprisonment with hard

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labour were respectively imposed by this Court, that State Counsel seemed
to change tack and argue that in the present case, the 14 years
imprisonment sentence should just be confirmed.

14. I should also mention that I was quickly dismissive of the argument by the
Appellant’s Counsel that at 43 years of age, the Appellant should be
considered an old man deserving of some mitigation on that account. That
argument sounds plainly ridiculous. The Court does not believe it is an
argument on which it should waste anymore energies for discourse other
than dismissing it with the contempt that it deserves. I strongly advise
Counsel to, in future, avoid raising such flimsy arguments before these
Courts, and more so when the matter under consideration is of such gravity
as the present one.

15. Other cases that the court considered in this recent sentencing trend in
defilement cases included Republic vs. Bright Jamali, Confirmation Case
No. 421 of 2013 (HC) (PR) where the Court propounded a starting
point of 14 years for sentencing in this class of offence and the case
of Republic vs Aaron Mkandawire, Confirmation case No. 2 of 2019
(Mzuzu Registry) (unreported) where an 82-year-old man was convicted
for defiling a little girl child of nine years of age and who, having been
sentenced to an eight years imprisonment term by the trial magistrate,
had his sentence enhanced to 14 years imprisonment by the High Court.
It was in evidence in that case that the girl was the accused person’s
step-daughter.

16. In the 2014 decision of Brian Shaba vs Republic (above), the Court
expressed worry that the nature of some of the sentences that some courts
had been imposing in sexual offences had not been consistent with the
grave, vile, and abhorrent nature of these offences, and indeed that they
were not consistent with the intention of the legislature as revealed by the
very high maximum penalties that it prescribed for these offences. The

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Court pointed out in that case that defilement is a very serious and heinous
offence. The court stated that defilement is both a carnally and
psychologically invasive offence. The Court noted that according to
Section 138(1) of the Penal Code, a person convicted of this offence is
liable to imprisonment for life, and that this maximum sentence was
imposed for very specific reasons: to show the seriousness of the offence as
well as the public revulsion and societal abhorrence for this kind of offence.
The Court maintains these views to date.

17. I must pause again here and recall that in argument, Counsel for the
Appellant argued, citing the case of Republic vs Keke, Confirmation Case
No. 404 of 2010, where Mwaungulu J (as he then was) stated that:

First, the sentencer should consider the maximum


sentence, which is meant for the most serious offence
which, notionally, has yet to occur, if ever it will. Next,
the sentencing Court should consider the maximum
sentence for the “simplest crime”.

18. Counsel made this submission with a view to shift the mind of the Court
away from the possibility of even considering imposing the maximum
penalty in the present case.

19. In response, the Court wishes to start by stating a principle of sentencing


that this Court articulated in two previous decisions: Republic vs Funsani
Payenda, Homicide (Sentence Rehearing) Cause No. 18 of 2015 (HC,
Zomba Registry); and Republic vs Oswald Lutepo, Criminal Case No. 2 of
2014 (HC, Zomba Registry). In Funsani Payenda, this Court stated, at
paragraph 38 of the judgment, that:

“I take the view that we must…be using the


“category of cases” for a test, and not the fictitious
individual test of the “worst offender” – who is,

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according to the common myth, “yet to be born”
– which individual test effectively makes it illogical
for the maximum penalty to ever be imposed.
Parliament did not prescribe the maximum
penalties in legislation for decorative purposes, or
as conceptual fictions, or as mere illusory
punishment signposts. Parliament means what it
says and it meant what it said in Section 210 of the
Penal Code. It meant for those penalties to be
applied in appropriate cases and not to be
theorised into non-existence.”

20. In Lutepo, the Court built on the reasoning in Funsani Payenda and stated,
among other things, that:

I find that when one examines the jurisprudence


from whence this principle has developed over
time in this country, reference has indeed been to
the “worst instances” or “worst examples” rather
than the individualized abstraction of “the worst
instance” of the offence in question. In the case of
Isaac v R 1923-60, ALR Mal. 724, Spencer Wilkinson,
CJ stated that “It has been laid down time and
again that the maximum sentence should be
reserved for the worst examples of the kind of
offence in question”. Similar reference to the
“worst instances” of the offence as the test for
deciding on deserving cases for the imposition of
the maximum sentence was made by the Court in
Jafuli v Republic 9 MLR 241, by Justice Dr. Jere, at
page 248. In Namate v Republic 8 MLR 132,
Skinner, CJ agreed with the principle stated in

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Isaac v R, citing several other decisions of similar
import… The CJ said: “The maximum sentences
permitted by the legislature should be reserved for
the worst instances of the offence and it is, indeed,
a very grievous example of the crime which calls
for the imposition of such sentence on a person of
previous good character. It is necessary for the
court to compare the seriousness of the
circumstances of the particular offence in relation
to the worst type of circumstances which could
attend a contravention of the penal section. The
question which we have to consider is whether the
circumstances of this case are so grievous as to fall
within the very worst examples. We think it was a
very bad case. The amount of money stolen was
great. There was a considerable breach of trust.
But we do not think that it was so grievous an
example as to justify the imposition of the
maximum sentence on a first offender. It is not
easy in cases of dishonesty as in cases of violence
to weigh the gravity of the particular offence
against the worst examples of offences of the
same nature.”

21. The reason I bring these utterances and authorities upfront in the present
judgment is because I am convinced that the present case, but for the
mitigating factors that will be considered later, would fall in the category of
the worst examples or worst instances of the offence of defilement.

22. Having stated these introductory guideline sentencing principles, I think I will
do well to restate what the Court said at paragraphs 2.6 – 2.9 in the Brian

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Shaba case. This Court stated that ‘it has been observed that “obdurate
sex offenders are, in modern society, on the increase and becoming a
menace to the female folk.” This is particularly so in the case of girl children.
Sexual offenders in cases of rape and defilement inflict a serious invasion of
the victim’s right to personal privacy as enshrined and guaranteed under
Section 21 of the Constitution of the Republic of Malawi. Indeed, they inflict
such a serious invasion of that most private of spaces of any human being’s
individuality. These offences also seriously violate the victim’s right to human
dignity, which dignity is inviolable in terms of Section 19 of the Constitution.’

23. The Court in Brian Shaba proceeded to point out that its sentiments
regarding the gravity and grossly abhorrent nature of this class of offences
are best expressed by Andrew Ashworth who states that sexual offences
(such as rape and defilement) inflict violence on the human cherished
values of “self-expression”, “intimacy” and “[consensually] shared
relationships”; and that they also engender the disvalues of “shame,
humiliation, exploitation and objectification – which are often crucial to
understanding the effects of sexual victimization”.

24. The Court in that case therefore took the view that the conduct of the
Appellant – the defiler- did violence on these cherished human values; as
well as engendering the disvalues of shame, humiliation, exploitation and
objectification of the victim girl child. The Court bemoaned the fact that
the Appellant committed the offence fully knowing that he was committing
a grave wrong and indeed a serious crime. The Court expressed shock in
that case that notwithstanding his knowledge of the tender age of the child
in that case, who was 13 years old, the Appellant still felt it within himself to
proceed and sexually violate the young girl. He then told the victim not to
tell anyone because his reputation would be ruined. The Court formed the
opinion that this was a clear signal of the Appellant’s deplorable egocentric
attitude, and his selfish disregard for the victim child and the damage he
had caused. The Court noted with grave concern that the indignity and

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humiliation suffered by the victim girl child was, in all probability, going to
remain permanently etched on her psyche and negatively affect her future
sexual and other relationships.

25. The Court had more observations to make in the Brian Shaba case,
that I find germane to restate:

I have…had occasion to look at some sentences


that the courts have meted out in cases of
defilement, some of which I regret for their
extreme leniency. Sentences that have gone as
low as three years imprisonment [do] not send
an appropriate message to society and to
would-be offenders. Such manifestly lenient
sentences might send the undesirable signal to
society that we are not taking children’s rights
seriously. Thankfully, this trend no longer
represents the settled position of the High Court.
The High Court has now set guidelines on the
appropriate starting point for sentencing when it
comes to this class of crime. In the case of
Republic vs Bright Jamali, Confirmation Case No.
421 of 2013 (HC) (PR), Mwaungulu J (as he then
was) laid down important sentencing guidelines
in cases of defilement as follows:

The starting point for defilement should,


therefore, based on the maximum
sentence of life imprisonment, be fourteen
years imprisonment. Sentencers at first

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instance must then scale up and down this
starting point to reflect mitigating and
aggravating circumstances and that the
sentence must fit the offender. (Emphasis
supplied)”

26. The Court notes that Mwaungulu, J (as he then was) repeated this
guideline in the case of Republic vs Wyson Alfred, Confirmation
Case No. 152 of 2013 (HC)(PR).

27. The Court has also had opportunity to look at the recent High Court
judgment on sentence in the case of Republic vs Thomas Chavula, Referral
Case No. 1 of 2020 (Mzuzu Registry), where my brother Judge Ligowe J
imposed a cumulative sentence (on the basis of the concurrency of
sentences) of 24 years imprisonment for the offence of defilement.

28. The Court has also considered the even more recent 2020 decision of
Republic vs Aubrey Kalulu, Criminal Case No. 1503 of 2017 (HC, LL), a matter
referred to the High Court of Malawi for purposes of sentencing by the
Principal Resident Magistrate Court at Lilongwe, in terms of section 14(6) of
the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Code (Cap. 8:01) (CP & EC), where
the High Court imposed a life sentence on the accused person offence of
defilement. The Court considered, among other things, that the convict was
the victim’s family’s landlord, that the accused person was HIV positive and
he was aware of this condition, that he was suffering from syphilis and tines
genetalis, and that as a result of the equal violation the victim’s private parts
were corroded and she had difficulties walking. The Court considered the
young age of the victim at 12 years of age and that she was a friend to the
convict’s child or sister.

29. The court, in the Brian Shaba case, also explored case law regimes in
various Southern African and East African jurisdictions and concluded that

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the Malawian regime conspicuously stood out for its general leniency for
sex offenders. Just to provide one example, in the Republic of Kenya, under
section 8(2) of the Sexual Offences Act, 2006, “A person who commits an
offence of defilement with a child aged eleven years or less shall upon
conviction be sentenced to imprisonment for life.” This entails a mandatory
life term for defilement of any child of or below eleven years old. In other
jurisdictions they have fixed minimum terms.

30. Coming back to the facts of the present case, as already stated, there is no
dispute about the conviction. There is significant dispute on some of the
facts and the sentence imposed.

31. As regards the dispute on facts, although the accused person admits that
he defiled the victim child herein, he disputes that he did so on multiple
occasions. He alleges that he only did it once, on a sabbath. He alleged
that on the material day, the complainant had left all his kids, including the
victim child, at his place. After considering the manner in which the
evidence against the accused person herein unfolded; how the child told
her teacher, in tears, during a life-skills class on HIV/AIDS, about what the
Appellant had been doing to her and how eventually the child’s defilement
was confirmed at Hope Centre Hospital; the Court is convinced beyond
reasonable doubt that the child victim herein was actually defiled multiple
times.

32. This conclusion, that is that the little girl child herein was defiled multiple
times, alongside the very tender age of the child at ten years old; and the
fact that the accused person was being entrusted with the child by her
father and he was a man in a position of trust to her, a man she would refer
to as “uncle”, and that he is a thoroughly grown and mature man at 43
years of age – which is more consistent with the Appellant at his mature
prime age rather than advanced age as was baselessly argued during oral

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argument, are all factors that triggered the Court’s conclusion that the
instant case would fall in the category of the worst instances of the offence.

33. I must also mention that I have considered that in recent days, these courts
are being presented with a litany of defilement cases, indicating that the
offence is most probably becoming more prevalent in society than before.

34. In his favour, by way of mitigation, the Appellant is a first offender. He also
pleaded guilty therefore not wasting the court’s resources and time.

35. It is this Court’s view that any case where a mature man of more than thirty
years of age defiles a child, of ten years or less, more than once, must fit in
the category of the worst instances of the offence and must, unless the
Court is significantly moved by mitigating factors, attract the maximum
sentence of life imprisonment. The mischief behind the offence was to
protect the child from all forms of sexual violation and doing so by bearing
in mind the peculiar vulnerability of the child owing to her immature age.
The peculiar vulnerability enhances as the age decreases to such an extent
as in the present case where the child did not even appreciate that she
was being sexually violated until she learnt about this from her teacher.

36. I repeat, in this regard, the sentiments that the Court expressed in Republic
vs Funsani Payenda, that Parliament did not prescribe maximum penalties
in legislation for decorative purposes, or as conceptual fictions, or as mere
illusory punishment signposts. Parliament means what it says and it meant
what it said in Section 138(1) of the Penal Code. It meant for such a penalty,
life imprisonment, to be applied in appropriate cases and not to have such
maxima theorised into non-existence.

37. This Court mentioned in Republic vs Lutepo, at paragraph 91 of the


judgment on sentence, that “our courts have equally emphasized the
importance of court’s being mindful to pass sentences that are
meaningful, reflecting the gravity of the offence. Chombo J

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observed in the case of Republic vs Masula & others, Criminal
Case No. 65 of 2008, that if courts do not do that, members of the
public could start asking themselves whether “something has
gone wrong with the administration of justice.””

38. I have considered the fact that the accused person is a first
offender. This Court observed in the Lutepo case that:

“Whilst…the general principle [is] that a first


offender should, as a general rule, not be
given the maximum sentence; that principle is
not cast in stone and Courts are entitled to
depart from it in appropriate and deserving
compelling cases. The decision of the Malawi
Supreme Court of Appeal in Kamil & Yaghi vs
Republic, [1973-74] 7 MLR 169 (MSCA)
illustrates the point.” Chatsika, JA, having
considered that the Appellants were first
offenders, still had the following words to say
at page 180:

“It has been stated already that the offences which


were committed in this case by the two appellants
were of a most serious nature and justified the
imposition of the maximum sentences... It is observed
that if the sentences are made concurrent, the
appellants would serve an aggregate term of only
five years. It was the view of the High Court that an
effective term of five years imprisonment only for
offences of this magnitude and seriousness would err
seriously on the side of inadequacy and would fail to
protect the public. The purpose of sentence is not

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only to punish the offender but to deter others who
may be influenced to commit similar offences and to
protect the public. An aggregate sentence of only
five years for offences of this seriousness would fail to
reach that objective. In the circumstances, we are in
agreement with the reasoning advanced by the
learned Chief Justice for holding that this was an
exception to the general rule…”

39. In the present case, it is my view that in the category of offences that I have
classified as falling among the worst instances of defilement above; I am of
the opinion that Courts should not attach much weight to the fact that a
person is a first offender. Greater weight should be attached on the need
to protect the public and, in particular, children of very tender age from
persons of such character. Again I would tend to agree with the remarks of
Chief Justice Skinner in Republic vs Kamil & Yaghi [1971-72] 6 ALR
(Mal) 358, where, the Chief Justice, mindful of principles laid down
for sentence mitigation in criminal cases as exemplified by a
chain of succeeding decisions, still opined that the case was so
serious, that the seriousness eclipsed all mitigating factors
advanced, and he handed down maximum and consecutive
sentences. The Chief Justice said: " I bear in mind that they are
men of previous good character, but people who do desperate
things like this are likely to do it again, and the public must also be
protected from others who may be tempted to emulate their
example."

40. I am mindful that the Appellant entered a guilty plea. This


factor weighed on my mind. As stated earlier, he did not waste
the Court’s time and resources. Ordinarily, he would deserve a
significant consideration. The general principle is that a reduction

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of up to one third of what could otherwise have been a merited
sentence could be granted. I have already stated however that
I am of the opinion that Courts should not attach much weight to
the fact that a person is a first offender in the category of sexual
offences in which the present one falls. In addition, concomitant
with a guilty plea is supposed to be a conscientious expression of
remorse by the accused person. In the present case, in the face
of evidence that he defiled the child multiple times, he suggests
he only did it once. This is an indication of lack of remorse which
further waters down the plea of guilt. However, there is still a strong
sentencing policy consideration that guilty pleas must count for
something, otherwise people might be completely dissuaded
from pleading guilty in very serious crimes. Ultimately, whether or
not to completely ignore mitigating factors depending on the
circumstances of the case lies in the sentencing discretion of the
Court. In the present case, I find that there is still some need to
give the Appellant some consideration in mitigation in respect of
his guilty plea. Otherwise, he was deserving of a life sentence.

41. The difficulty lies with coming up with an age benchmark from
which to discount the punishment by reason of this mitigating
factor.

42. Earlier in this decision I pointed out that this Court was not
amenable to considering that at the age of 43, the Appellant was
an old man deserving of a reduction of sentence. Courts have
these days repeatedly rejected this assertion and for some
reason, some Counsel, in various cases, keep bringing up the
argument. The basic structure of the argument is that whilst it is
acknowledged that a person in his or her forties is not physically
old – in the sense of being frail and physically vulnerable by

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reason of age; such a person should still be regarded as old on
account of the general life expectancy in the country.

43. I find this kind of argument rather unpersuasive. The average


life expectancy does not mean that a significant number of
people are not outliving that average age. There are so many
who die younger and so many who die much older.

44. To my mind, if the notion of life expectancy were to be used at


all for purposes of sentencing, of which I am presently
unpersuaded, it would, in my view require much deeper scientific
analysis of statistical age models which would take into account
demographic distribution patterns that inform the fixed life
expectancy figure. Demographic models might also show that
the life expectancy figure adopted by a particular study may not
represent a universal fixed scientific constant and that it might in
fact vary depending on the statistical model adopted for analysis.
I am not sure that many of us at the Bar and the Bench have the
requisite statistical literacy skills in this regard. This is an area that
would, in my view, require expert evidence if that avenue of
litigating in the area of sentencing were to be followed. All in all, I
believe that statistical inferences should not be factored into
litigation in ways that would be statistically, mathematically and
even legally misleading. This Court therefore remains
unpersuaded on the usefulness of using the concept of life
expectancy in the sentencing enterprise in criminal cases.

45. In any event, for purposes of the present case, the Court’s
research reveals that the average life expectancy in Malawi
according to the 2019 UNDP Human Development Index, is about
64 years – segregated as 67 years for women and 60 years for
men. Thus even if the life expectancy argument were to hold,

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which should not be for purposes of the present case, the
argument that the Appellant is advanced in age could still not
hold as it would be negated by an internationally credible and
authoritative source.

46. However, on the specific question as to how to numericise a


possible life term and then discount the same in view of mitigating
factors, I believe that in the absence of any clear precedent, this
is a matter where the Court should exercise discretion, using a test
of reasonableness, to glean a figure.

47. This Court opines that it is reasonable to consider that


notwithstanding the so-called life expectancy figures, people
generally have a real possibility of living much longer, and that it
is not considered unusual that people can live up to the age of
90 years. I consider the age of 90 to be e reasonable age from
which to do the discounting exercise. To be clear, the age of 90
is not being used in any way as a scientific figure derived from any
form of statistical analysis. It is what the Court considers
reasonable.

48. Considering the age of 90 as a benchmark, and that the


accused person is 43 years old, he could have 47 years ahead of
him. From the 47, I discount 7 years for his guilty plea. This Court is
therefore of the opinion that the sentence of 40 years
Imprisonment with hard labour is appropriate under the
circumstances.

49. In the premises, the Court holds that the Appellant’s appeal
against the sentence of 14 years IHL for the offence of defilement,
contrary to section 138(1) of the Penal Code must fail and it is
hereby dismissed. The court finds that the sentence of 14 years IHL

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imposed by the Court below was manifestly inadequate in view
of the gravity and circumstances of the offence. The sentence of
14 years IHL is hereby set aside and it is replaced with a sentence
of forty years (480 months) imprisonment with hard labour.

50. Before I conclude, when this appeal was heard, the Court had
sought to find out from both Counsel whether the victim child had
received any professional counselling services. The Court was
informed at the time that this had not been done. The Court
sought to find out the nature of the involvement of the
Government Department responsible for the welfare of children
in the matter. Again it sadly appeared that sad as the
circumstances of the present case were, the said Department
was not involved at all.

51. Evidently, it was the duty of the State to ensure that the child is
referred to the Government Department so responsible, and this
had not been done. I must add though, that the parents
themselves are also duty bearers who should have ensured that
the matter is appropriately reported to the said Department and
they should vigorously follow up with the Department to ensure
that the abused child receives optimal support services from the
State under the circumstances.

52. Thus as I conclude, I hereby direct that the Government


Department responsible for the welfare of children should follow
up with the child herein and ensure that every necessary service
and support is rendered to her to ensure her physical and
psychological wellbeing and development.

53. The said Department should furnish a Report in this regard,


within three months from the date hereof, to the Child Case
Review Board established under section 150 of the Child Care,

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Protection and Justice Act, on the progress made in giving effect
to this direction, and the Child Case Review Board may provide
any further directions to the Department as it may deem
appropriate.

54. It is so ordered.

Made at Zomba this 8th day of January, 2021

R.E. Kapindu,
JUDGE

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