casebook

Mohamed Ali Baadi and Others v. Attorney General (Kenya)

Kenya

The High Court of Kenya rules that the environmental impacts of LAPSSET—a corridor spanning multiple countries in Africa—violated the constitutional and statutory rights of the Lamu County community.

Credit: Kageni Joe, stock photo ID 1206574361

Casebook Info

In 2012, members of the Lamu County community took legal action against the Kenyan Attorney General and ministry heads over the approval of the Lamu Port-South Sudan Ethiopia-Transport Corridor project (LAPSSET). While not outrightly opposing the project, the petitioners contended that the project’s extensive and potentially irreversible environmental, economic and cultural impacts were inadequately assessed during planning and implementation. This rendered the project procedurally flawed and in violation of fundamental rights, such as the right to a healthy environment (R2HE).

In a comprehensive ruling, the Court sided with the petitioners. Consequently, the Court mandated remedies to address the legal violations while permitting the project to proceed.

  • Year Filed 2012
  • Year of Most Recent Ruling 2018
  • Year of Final Ruling 2018
  • Jurisdiction Kenya
  • Court Name High Court
  • Plaintiff(s) Mohamed Ali Baadi and Others (Residents from Lamu County)
  • Ruling On Merits and Procedure
  • Respondent(s) Attorney General; Ministry of Environment, Water and Natural Resources; Ministry of Land, Housing and Urban Development; Ministry of Information, Communication and Technology; Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure; and Ministry of Energy and Petroleum. The National Environment Management Authority of Kenya (NEMA) and the Ports Authority were joined as interested parties.
  • Outcome Decided
  • Decision Link to the decision/ruling

Background

The Lamu Port-South Sudan Ethiopia-Transport Corridor project (LAPSSET) is a vast infrastructure initiative comprising multiple components such as a railway system, oil pipelines, refineries, tourism development and a 32-berth port at Manda Bay in Lamu, Kenya.

In 2012, members of the Lamu County community brought a case against Kenya’s Attorney General and several heads of governmental ministries including the Environment, Water and Natural Resources; Land, Housing and Urban Development; Information, Communication and Technology; Transport and Infrastructure; as well as Energy and Petroleum ministries. Additionally, government agencies responsible for approving, planning and executing the project— the National Environment Management Authority of Kenya (NEMA) and the Ports Authority—were included as interested parties.

While they did not completely oppose the project, the petitioners argued that its extensive and potentially irreversible impacts on the environment, economy and culture were inadequately assessed during planning and implementation phases, resulting in procedural flaws. They emphasized the significant projected harms to the marine ecosystem in the Lamu region, such as the destruction of mangrove forests, discharge of industrial effluents and adverse impacts on marine life.

The petitioners also contended that the project improperly excluded the Lamu county government and public participation. They argued that the respondents violated their constitutional rights to a clean and healthy environment (R2HE), livelihood, culture and information and breached statutory and constitutional principles such as sustainable development, transparency, public participation and accountability. The respondents countered that they adequately addressed environmental, cultural and heritage concerns related to the LAPSSET Project.“

The Court, recognizing the project’s economic importance, firmly stated, “petitioners have substantially succeeded.” It found the project’s environmental assessments and licenses were lacking or delayed, thereby jeopardizing the petitioners’ fundamental rights. The Court issued directives: re-evaluate and redo aspects of the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) and Environmental and Social Impact Assessment (ESIA); involve Lamu County Government and the community in implementation; enhance public participation in SEA; create a robust information dissemination plan for LAPSSET; compensate fishermen for livelihood losses; develop public participation and action plans for cultural protection.

Regarding R2HE—enshrined in the Kenyan Bill of Rights and Arts. 49, 69 and 70 of the Kenyan Constitution—the petitioners argued that the ESIA report’s scope was too narrow and its mitigation measures were insufficient. The Court concurred, stating that R2HE for the petitioners and Lamu residents was at risk. It instructed LAPSSET’s proponents to adhere to and improve mitigation measures by consulting the community and NEMA.

  • $8,000,000 The payment (in Kenya Shillings) made by LAPSSET to the Forest Service for tree planting. The Court deemed this payment insufficient and ordered further remedial and mitigation measures.
  • 18 The number of orders the Kenyan High Court gave to ameliorate and remediate LAPSSET’s violations of substantive and procedural rights.
  • 4,700 The number of Lamu fishermen whose livelihoods LAPSSET threatened.

Plaintiff Strategies & Court Good Practices

Using an established domestic body of law

Using an established domestic body of law

The petitioners based their arguments on fundamental constitutional rights, including R2HE and domestic environmental laws and regulations. This strategic approach provided several strategic advantages.

Firstly, the petitioners’ tactics empowered the Court to confidently affirm its jurisdiction to hear their case. As most of the petitioners’ arguments involved interpreting and applying fundamental rights and freedoms, the Court determined that alternative domestic dispute mechanisms were not suitable. In this regard, the Court underscored the significance of R2HE, stating that “Kenyans secured this powerful right to the environment through the promulgation of the Constitution and Courts have a solemn duty to enforce this right in the context of environmental harms.” The Court emphasized that evaluating violations or threats to any rights in the Bill of Rights was unquestionably within its domain. Consequently, as a violation of R2HE would invariably violate other fundamental rights, the Court decided that “to decline jurisdiction as suggested would in our view amount to an act of this Court abdicating from its Constitutional and statutory mandate, which we cannot do.”

Secondly, the petitioners’ reliance on constitutional law established a clear legal obligation on government bodies in the absence of a defined regulatory framework. Specifically, they argued that a SEA was legally required before any phase of the LAPSSET Project could proceed. The respondents countered that although the SEA was listed in NEMA regulations, it was not conducted before the project began as it was not yet part of Kenya’s legislation while the project was devised. The Court disagreed, stating statutory backing was not essential since NEMA regulations applied to LAPSSET and mandated a SEA for impactful projects.

Expanding on R2HE to challenge the respondents’ stance, the Court held that irrespective of regulations, the Commission had a constitutional duty to uphold R2HE and its principles, including the precautionary principle. Upholding R2HE necessitated a “proactive approach to integrate environmental considerations into the higher levels of decision making.” Consequently, R2HE required an SEA—a more comprehensive environmental assessment than typical Environmental Impact Assessments—to be conducted early in the decision-making process when possible alternatives were still viable. As the SEA had not been carried out in a timely manner, the Court deemed the entire LAPSSET Project procedurally flawed.

The precautionary approach mandated by R2HE strengthened the Court’s jurisdiction. The ongoing SEA for LAPSSET did not render the case premature for analysis; instead, it provided more grounds for the Court to evaluate its adequacy and, if necessary, take corrective actions.

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

The petitioners and the Court referenced regional and international environmental and human rights instruments, such as the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to strengthen their arguments. They also relied on diverse domestic caselaw, and drew on precedents from the United States and South Africa, to support their conclusions. For the Court, these international instruments and caselaw were crucial for establishing that public participation in environmental law and governance had become customary international law.

Regarding R2HE, the Court looked to the Indian Constitution and caselaw to help interpret the 2010 Kenyan Constitution. It emphasized the interconnectedness of R2HE and the right to life, stating that they “weave together a pattern of human rights guarantees’ that are neither mutually exclusive nor distinct.” Thus, the Court concluded that given R2HE intertwined with other rights, the realization of other fundamental rights necessitated R2HE’s protection.

Focusing on youth

Focusing on youth

In defining R2HE, the Court emphasized that it includes the right to protect the environment for future generations through legislative and other means. Highlighting its intergenerational importance, the Court referenced the Constitution’s preamble, which declares: “We, the People of Kenya […] Respectful of the environment, which is our heritage, and determined to sustain it for the benefit of future generations […].” The Court concluded the preamble unequivocally expresses Kenya’s commitment to sustainable development, which balances economic progress with with intergenerational and intra-generational equity.

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

The petitioners argued that the County Government of Lamu was uninformed of and excluded from the planning and execution of LAPSSET, hindering it from fulfilling its constitutional obligations. These duties involved implementing national government environmental policies and engaging the local community. The petitioners asserted that this exclusion allowed the project’s shortcomings to persist unchecked. The respondents responded there was public participation and highlighted that LAPSSET was conceived before county governments were formed.

The Court dismissed the argument that LAPSSET was solely a national government initiative as inadequate justification for limited local involvement. It clarified that “even though the LAPSSET Project is an initiative of the National Government, the Constitution requires consultation, cooperation, and coordination between the two levels of government in the performance of their functions.” This constitutional mandate was not mere formality. Stressing the significance of genuine participation from those directly impacted by government actions, the Court ordered the LAPSSET project’s proponents and the approving government ministries to engage in consultation, cooperation and coordination with the Lamu County Government and other affected counties.

Utilizing a variety of legal arguments

Utilizing a variety of legal arguments

As discussed above, the petitioners raised procedural and substantive arguments related to R2HE and other fundamental rights.

Emphasizing the State’s duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

Emphasizing the State's duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

This case originates from the respondents’—various government ministries and authorities—failure to fulfill their constitutional and statutory obligations when approving LAPSSET. In response, the Court asserted that R2HE, along with the rights to life, human dignity, culture, sustainable development and livelihood, imposed “an inescapable obligation upon NEMA and other decision-makers” to demand that the project’s proponents assess and disclose the external costs of LAPSSET during the ESIA and SEA environmental assessment processes. This, the Court argued, would provide government bodies with adequate information to make decisions aligned with the constitutional rights of those affected. Since this was not done for the LAPSSET project, the Court again declared both the ESIA and SEA procedurally infirm. Consequently, the Court mandated the respondent government entities to uphold their statutory and constitutional duties and enhance the environmental assessment requirements.

The Court stressed further that the respondents’ regulatory role was vital; without upholding fundamental rights and principles tied to R2HE, such as public participation and access to information, Kenya would not achieve its goal of being an environmental democracy.

Invoking the political significance of the R2HE

Invoking the political significance of the R2HE

The Court underscored that the 2010 Kenyan Constitution’s enactment granted Kenyans the “powerful right to the environment” under R2HE. The procedural guarantees enshrined in R2HE, like public participation and access to information, played a crucial role in shaping Kenya’s democracy. This was because Kenya’s democracy not only required political representation by the government but also depended on assurances “that they empower individuals to have a meaningful voice in decisions that affect them and their development.”

Reducing barriers to prove causation

Reducing barriers to prove causation

The Court acknowledged that, given the nature of this dispute, it “departed from how most constitutional cases are heard because of its nature. In particular, the Court conducted a site visit” and heard oral evidence from expert witnesses. Despite the respondents’ claims that the petitioners had not shown “any damage to or possibility of damage to the environment,” the Court clarified that the site visit and collected evidence allowed it to confidently link LAPSSET to the detrimental environmental impacts experienced in the Lamu community. This led the Court to conclude that R2HE was at risk of being violated.

Methods for ensuring baseline protections

Methods for ensuring baseline protections

The Court articulated that access to information, participation in decision-making and access to justice are “minimum requirements for existence of environmental democracy.” Furthermore, the Court clarified that these fundamental participatory rights can only be excluded from a project if it passes a proportionality test. That test requires a public authority to provide evidence that the action or decision justifies limiting the right in question, is linked to the aim(s)  it seeks to achieve, and that the means used to limit the right are no more than those necessary to accomplish the aim(s).

Providing remedies

Providing remedies

The Court provided remedies for each of the petitioners’ claims. However, the Court stated that it “delicately fashioned the reliefs” by balancing the petitioners’ concerns about fundamental rights violations with the fact that the petitioners’ did not completely oppose LAPSSET, given its substantial economic investment and value. Consequently, the Court ordered remedies to address the legal violations while allowing the project to continue its implementation.

Expansive reading of the scope and content of R2HE

Expansive reading of the scope and content of R2HE

The Court provided a broad definition of the “environment” within R2HE. It clarified that, according to Kenya’s primary environmental regulatory law, the environment’s definition “transcends mere ecological interests. It explicitly includes dimensions of the environment beyond the bio-physical aspects such as the inter-relationship between people, the natural environment the socio-economic and cultural aspects undergirding that inter-relationship.” The comprehensive definition of the “environment,” the Court elaborated, meant that R2HE was “sufficiently comprehensive and all-encompassing to provide ‘everyone’ with the possibility of seeking judicial recourse in the event that any of several potential aspects related to the right or guarantee derived there from is infringed.” Those “potential aspects” and “guarantees” include rights such as culture and livelihood. Therefore, the Court concluded that all issues raised by the petitioners were appropriate for adjudication.

Flexible standing requirement

Flexible standing requirement

The Court clarified that Kenya’s inclusive definition of the “environment” within R2HE implied a broad interpretation of standing. It emphasized that, as per the Constitution, R2HE allowed “everyone” seeking redress and legal remedies to approach a court of law. Crucially, this entitlement did not necessitate demonstrating incurred loss or suffered injury. In essence, standing could be established as long as R2HE was under threat, as was the case here.

Take Aways

This case highlights the effectiveness of using the constitutional R2HE to establish a valid legal duty on government bodies in the absence of clear regulatory frameworks. It also underscores the importance of the procedural aspects inherent in R2HE.

Furthermore, the case illustrates a Court navigating the delicate balance between the violation of fundamental rights and economic interests.

Terms

Element

Public Participation

R2HE includes public participation among its procedural elements. Public participation is a legal principle that grants individuals and communities the opportunity to be involved in decision-making processes that affect them directly or indirectly. It encompasses the right to engage in public consultation, provide input, and participate in the formulation, implementation, and review of policies, plans, projects, and laws.
Strategy

Emphasizing the obligation to cooperate internationally or nationally

Underscoring the need for governments, sub-governments and other actors to coordinate, cooperate and commonly work toward effective protection of R2HE. This strategy may emphasize the need for cooperation at the domestic level, international level or both, and can entail varying levels of specificity.
Strategy

Emphasizing the State's duty to regulate or its failure to observe its due diligence obligations

Invoking a government’s affirmative obligations under national and/or international law to regulate and implement policy to advance and monitor the protection of R2HE. One common instance of this strategy appears in the climate change context, where a plaintiff might argue that the government has taken insufficient action to mitigate climate change or reduce emissions. Another common context is that of corporate pollution, which might prompt a plaintiff to argue the government did not do enough to ensure a polluter’s compliance with environmental standards.
Strategy

Focusing on youth

Emphasizing the disproportionate and inequitable vulnerability of young people, children and/or future generations to climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental degradation. This emphasis is often articulated through the principles of Intergenerational Equity and Sustainable Development, which generally provide that governments and other entities must ensure the basic needs and rights of future generations when making decisions that bear on the environment. Additionally, the principles suggest that all individuals have a responsibility to care for future generations by limiting environmental degradation and consumption in the present.
Strategy

Using an established domestic body of law

Invoking well-established national laws, norms and/or legal principles in support of arguments related to R2HE. Where R2HE is present in a country’s constitution, the constitution will serve as the primary authoritative source for the right. Other, secondary sources of established domestic law commonly include statutory law and requirements governing public participation and/or the assessment of environmental risks. Environmental principles enshrined in domestic sources of law – for example, the precautionary principle – may also be emphasized to further the protection of R2HE.
Strategy

Using an established international body of law to support R2HE

Relying on well-established international treaties, norms and principles in making arguments advancing and protecting R2HE. Commonly cited international bodies of law include UN Reports, jurisprudence from international and/or regional courts, General Comments by UN bodies, Declarations and more.
Good Practices

Expansive reading of the scope and content of R2HE

An expansive definition of R2HE refers to the broad and inclusive nature or interpretation of a particular concept, document, principle or legal provision related to R2HE. Legal definitions of the complex R2HE and associated concepts often lack specificity as applied to real-world circumstances, leading many courts to ‘fill in the gaps’ by situating the right within wider contextual frameworks of law, policy and science. As the triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution intensifies, courts are increasingly reading the scope and content of R2HE broadly to address a growing variety and number of environmental harms. By providing inclusive and robust definitions of guarantees associated with the right – for example, by confirming R2HE ensures a safe climate, protects biodiversity and/or entails a duty to regulate – courts can help to ensure and further the right’s protections and utility.
Good Practices

Flexible standing requirement

Standing refers to the capacity of a given party to have their claims heard in court. Imposing a flexible standing requirement can make it easier for an individual to bring a lawsuit by relaxing the criteria determining who has the legal right to sue. In many jurisdictions, standing – which often requires a showing of remediable and “individualized harm” linked to defendants’ actions – has posed a barrier to the adjudication of R2HE and environmental damage claims. This difficulty can be attributed in part to the complex and diffuse nature of many environmental phenomena, which makes establishing individualized injury and a causal link difficult. Some international and regional treaties incorporating R2HE emphasize that courts should adopt accommodating standing requirements in environmental defense cases. Many courts across the world have done just that, promoting access to justice by applying flexible standing requirements where parties seek to defend R2HE or environment.
Good Practices

Methods for ensuring baseline protections

Courts have employed various strategies, mechanisms and approaches to establish fundamental environmental safeguards, minimum standards and/or quality levels which are necessary to guarantee R2HE. These approaches aim to ensure a basic level of protection for individuals, communities and/or the environment. Further, courts have developed various methods to assess the appropriateness of government and corporate action relative to the baseline environmental standards. These methods can vary widely in form and across jurisdictions, but may take the form of a presumption in favor of the environment, the examination of long-term consequences or the application of environmental principles like that of non-regression.
Good Practices

Providing remedies

Provision of remedies is the process by which courts, after finding that a legal right has been violated or harmed, offer or provide a resolution or solution to address the harm or injustice suffered by the aggrieved party. Appropriate and effective judicial remedies play a key role in ensuring that R2HE materially protects individuals and all aspects of the environment. Remedies can vary widely in number, specificity, urgency and stringency, and those variations bear closely on whether a given remedy adequately redresses the original harm. Frequent remedies include protection and restoration measures, compensation and the creation of compliance or implementation mechanisms.
Good Practices

Reducing barriers to prove causation

Legal causation describes the requirement for plaintiffs to demonstrate that an entity’s action or inaction at least in part led to the existence of a threat, harm or consequence the plaintiff suffered or is likely to suffer (sometimes called a “causal link”). This requirement has often hampered the adjudication and judicial protection of environmental rights. To mitigate this obstacle, some courts have found ways to make proving causation easier – for instance, by interpreting requirements to provide flexibility. This has proven particularly important where a problem’s very nature, like climate change’s role as a threat multiplier, makes demonstrating a precise “causal link” difficult or impossible.
Good Practices

Shifting the presumption proving adequacy of actions

Shifting the presumption implies altering the standard or default position typically held by one party to demonstrate that their actions or measures are adequate, satisfactory or sufficient. Commonly, the party bringing the lawsuit bears the initial responsibility of pointing out inadequacies or defects in the defendant’s actions. This can impede litigation because environmental petitioners are often at a resource and evidentiary disadvantage relative to defendants. Some courts have shifted this responsibility and placed it upon alleged environmental wrongdoers to disprove or challenge the allegations at hand. By doing so, courts can level the playing field and implicitly reinforce that protection of the environment is a duty, not an option.

Customary International Law

A body of legal principles and norms that derive from consistent practices and beliefs of states over time. It is one of the primary sources of international law, alongside treaties and general principles of law. Unlike treaties, which are formal agreements between states, customary international law develops from the consistent behavior of states based on a sense of legal obligation (opinio juris) and a general understanding that a particular practice is legally required (state practice).

Environmental Impact Assessments

A process used in environmental management to evaluate the potential environmental consequences or impacts of proposed projects, policies, plans, or developments before they are carried out. The primary goal of an EIA is to identify, predict, and mitigate any adverse effects that these activities might have on the environment. It often involves modeling potential harms and exploring alternatives, if any, to avoid them.

Intergenerational Equity

This international and environmental law principle provides that states and other entities must regard the impact of their public policies on the environment on present and future generations equally. In other words, actions that allow present generations to meet their needs and wants but sacrifice the ability of future generations to meet their basic needs and live lives of dignity contravene Intergenerational Equity.

Precautionary Principle

This environmental law principle provides that, where there exists a risk of serious and/or irreversible harm, scientific uncertainty about the extent of the harm or about the exact consequences of a particular action or process does not justify failing to implement measures to combat associated risks of environmental degradation or destruction. In other words, in the face of scientific uncertainty, authorities should still take measures to address environmental threats.

Prevention Principle

This environmental law principle provides that states and other actors must take meaningful steps to avoid environmental harms before they occur. In other words, if there is a tangible risk of environmental harm that is imminent and demands an emergency response, authorities are obliged to implement the necessary measures before damage is caused to the environment.

Standing

Standing, sometimes referred to as ‘legal personality,’ denotes the capacity of a given party to bring their claims in a court of law. Often, to achieve standing, a plaintiff must demonstrate three elements – injury-in-fact (a direct, concrete harm); causation (that the harm was caused by defendant); and redressability (that the court can provide a remedy). If a party does not have standing, a court will not review its claims. Assuming no other barriers, a court will review the claim of a party that does have standing.

Sustainable Development

This concept provides that states should pursue measures that allow present generations to meet their essential needs without compromising the ability of future generations to do the same. Moreover, it recognizes the need for states to work towards their economic development while also ensuring the realization and protection of fundamental human rights. In some jurisdictions, sustainable development is regarded as a guiding principle, while in others, it is treated as a right with binding consequences.