I'm with Rolfe on the burden of proof question. I've never agreed with the focus on the supposed reverse burden. It's difficult to see how a defamation hearing could be run in any way except by the defamer being asked to defend their defamatory statement.
If someone was to say that <name withheld> made perverted sexual advances toward them in private, how would <name withheld> possibly be expected to prove he didn't? It would be akin to proving invisible fairies don't exist. The burden has to be on the one making the claim - the original accuser - to prove their defamation to be true.
Once defamation is established in court then (assuming no successful appeal of the finding) what matters, I think, is what defences are available. Even if the defamed person is as described, publicising that fact still defames them (lowers their image in the eyes of another) but publication of the fact might be defensible for a variety of reasons. Such reasons include things like truth, fair comment, public interest and stating a case in court.
I think that list of defences is where the focus should lie. If the list is comprehensive, libel cases will be reduced due to the lesser likelihood of success (on that note, cost is another important factor).
As I understand it, Singh's problems are:
- a seemingly bizarre interpretation of his words
- deeming his words a matter of fact, not comment
- no allowance for a 'public interest' defence
The fact that it might be difficult, or impossible, for him to prove the decided meaning of his words is largely irrelevant (except in a critique of that decision or in the ensuing appeal process). If he'd stated outright that the BCA, as a collective, are knowingly dishonest, he'd still be expected to prove that claim and it would still be just as difficult, or impossible as it is now with the judge putting that interpretation on his words.
I'm not a lawyer.