Mauritius
National Assembly (Privileges, Immunities and Powers) Act
Act 22 of 1953
- Commenced on 15 July 1953
- [This is the version of this document at 30 June 2017.]
1. Short title
This Act may be cited as the National Assembly (Privileges, Immunities and Powers) Act.2. Interpretation
In this Act—"Chamber" means the place in which the Assembly sits in session for the transaction of business;"Clerk" means the Clerk of the Assembly;"committee" means any committee of the Assembly;"Deputy Speaker" means the Deputy Speaker of the Assembly;"journals" means the minutes of the Assembly or the official record of the votes or proceedings thereof;"member" means any member of the Assembly;"officer" means the Clerk or any other officer of the Assembly appointed to its staff and includes any member of the Police Force on duty within the precincts of the Assembly;"precincts of the Assembly" means the offices of the Assembly and the places provided for the use or accommodation of strangers and representatives of the Press and includes, while the Assembly is sitting, the entire building in which the Chamber is situated;"Speaker" means the Speaker of the Assembly;"stranger" means any person other than the Speaker, a member or an officer of the Assembly.3. Immunity from legal proceedings
No civil or criminal proceedings may be instituted against the Speaker or any member for words spoken before, or written in a report to, the Assembly or any committee, or by reason of any matter or thing brought by him in the Assembly by petition, Bill, resolution, motion or otherwise.3A. Immunity from broadcasting proceedings of Assembly
No civil or criminal proceedings may be instituted against any person authorised by the Assembly for broadcasting its proceedings unless such broadcast is made against such rules as the Speaker may prescribe.[S. 3A inserted by s. 14 (2) of Act 21 of 2016 w.e.f. 15 December 2016.]4. Exemption from certain services
5. Immunity for acts done under authority
No civil or criminal proceedings may be instituted against any person for any act done by him under the lawful authority of the Assembly.6. Contempt of Assembly
7. Prosecution subject to Standing Orders
No prosecution for an offence under this Act shall be instituted except by the Director of Public Prosecutions and in accordance with the procedure laid down in that behalf in the Standing Orders of the Assembly.8. Strangers
9. Powers of officer of Assembly
Every officer of the Assembly shall, for the purposes of this Act, have all the powers and enjoy all the privileges of a police officer.10. Summoning of witnesses
11. Witnesses may be examined on oath
Any committee, holding any inquiry within the scope of its authority, may hear and examine witnesses on oath, and the Chairperson of such committee, or any person deputed by him, may administer an oath for the purpose.12. Objections by witness
Where any person duly summoned to attend before any committee refuses to reply to any question or to produce any document on the ground that the question or document relates to a private matter and is irrelevant to the subject matter of the inquiry, the Chairperson of the committee may report the refusal and the reasons for it to the Assembly, and the Assembly may excuse or order the answering of the question or the production of the document.13. Penalty for giving false evidence
Any witness who, after having been duly sworn, knowingly gives false evidence on any matter relevant to any inquiry held by a committee, shall commit an offence and shall, on conviction, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years.14. Evidence
15. Certificate to witness a bar to proceedings
16. Journals to be evidence
Upon any inquiry or proceedings concerning the privileges, immunities and powers of the Assembly or of any member, any copy of the journals printed or purporting to be printed by the Government Printer shall be admitted as evidence of such journals in all Courts and places without any proof that the copy was so printed.17. Publications authorised by Assembly
18. Penalty for printing false copies
Any person who prints or causes to be printed a copy of any enactment, or a copy of any report, paper, minutes or votes and proceedings of the Assembly as purporting to have been printed by the Government Printer or by or under the authority of the Assembly or by an appropriate authority, and the same is not so printed, or tenders in evidence any such copy as purporting to be so printed, knowing that it was not so printed, shall commit an offence and shall, on conviction, be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years.19. Continuance of powers of Speaker
For the purposes of this Act, the Speaker shall exercise the powers conferred upon him by this Act even after the dissolution of the Assembly by effluxion of time or otherwise.History of this document
30 June 2017 this version
Consolidation
15 July 1953
Commenced