Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 684South Africa
Raliphaswa v Minister of Correctional Services and Others (073384/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 684 (27 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 June 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 684
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Raliphaswa v Minister of Correctional Services and Others (073384/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 684 (27 June 2025)
Raliphaswa v Minister of Correctional Services and Others (073384/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 684 (27 June 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_684.html
sino date 27 June 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 073384/2026
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
27 June 2025
In
the matter between:
ROTONDWA
JETHRO RALIPHASWA
APPLICANT
and
MINISTER
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
FIRST
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
SECOND
RESPONDENT
HEAD
OF C-MAX KGOSI MAMPURU
CORRECTIONAL
CENTRE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
REGIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF
GAUTENG
REGION
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
HEAD
OF ODI CORRECTIONAL CENTRE
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
CORAM
NTHAMBELENI, AJ
HEARD
:
17 June 2025
DELIVERED
:
27 June 2024
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an urgent review application, whereby the applicant seeks
various relief
[1]
as well as a
costs order against the respondents. The applicant is an inmate
serving a sentence for murder and was transferred
to the C-Max Kgosi
Mampuru from ODI Correctional Services Facility. The basis of this
urgent eview application was brought due
to the transfer of the
applicant from the ODI Correctional Services Facility in January 2025
to Kgosi Mampuru II Correctional Centre
C-Max Section (Kgosi
Mampuru).
[2]
The Applicant was found guilty and convicted of murder in 2021. The
court imposed
a sentenced of 15 years imprisonment on him with half
thereof suspended. He was detained at ODI Correctional Centre (ODI).
In December
2024, while conducting a routine search of the prisoners
and the prison cells, the Department's prison officials found a
cellular
device (cell-phone) in the applicant's possession. This
allegation is not denied by the applicant and it is also common cause
between
the parties that a prison inmate is prohibited from being in
possession of a cell-phone.
[3]
The contents of the cell-phone were searched by the prison officials
and therein they
discovered the pictures of some of the Department's
officials as well as some conversations between the Applicant and
some prison
officials.
[4]
The applicant was then moved to the C Section of the ODI Correctional
Centre, and
detained in a single cell to allow for further
investigation to be carried out. In scrutinising the applicant's
offence, which
negatively impacted the well-being of some prison
officials in the facility, it was deemed appropriate, for safety
reasons, to
transfer the Applicant from ODI to Kgosi Mampuru II
Correctional Centre C-Max Section (Kgosi Mampuru).
[5]
The applicant had been found in possession of a cell phone in the
cells before. In
this regard we refer to annexure A
[2]
to the answering affidavit. His continued acquisition of cell phones
and the capturing of the pictures of some of the prison officials
and
contact with some of the prison officials posed a serious security
threat to the correctional facility and its officials as
well as to
the safekeeping of his person.
[6]
The Department took a security conscious decision to transfer the
applicant to Kgosi
Mampuru. Kgosi Mampuru (C-Max) in a single cell
section. It was submitted that the facility is similar to the
C-Section at ODI.
THE
URGENT REVIEW APPLICATION
[7]
In an urgent review application such as this, the rules require the
absence of substantial
redress
[3]
.
Once such prejudice is established, other factors to be considered
include, but are not limited to: whether the respondents can
adequately present their cases in the time available between notice
of the application to them and the actual hearing, other prejudice
to
the respondents and the administration of justice, the strength of
the case made by the applicant and any delay by the applicant
in
asserting its rights
[4]
. Each
case should be determined based on its own merits.
[8]
The applicant submits that this application is urgent in terms of
Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules of Court
[5]
and warrants immediate judicial intervention. Rule 53 has to be read
in conjunction with Uniform Rule 6, the long form of which
can be
departed from in cases of urgency and it does not have to be coupled
with a prayer for interim relief.
[6]
[9]
The applicant has been detained in C-Max since
13
January 2025
,
enduring conditions of extreme isolation, and restricted human
contact for over four months. These conditions, described in detail
in the Founding Affidavit (paragraphs 5.2-5.9), amount to solitary
confinement, which is recognised as causing severe psychological
and
physical harm
[7]
.
[10]
The applicant is locked in a small cell approximately 2m x 2.3m for
at least 23 hours a day,
with no windows, no sunlight, and no concept
of time. He is not allowed to have a watch or a calendar. The only
human interaction
he has is when food is pushed through a small latch
in his door. He does not see people or are able to speak to anyone in
a meaningful
way.
[11]
The detention exceeds the 30-day limit for segregation prescribed by
section 30(3) of the Act,
rendering it unlawful and necessitating
urgent relief. The absence of periodic reviews or justifications, as
required by section
30(4), exacerbates the urgency.
[12]
It is noteworthy to point out that the practice at C-max Kgosi
Mampuru is that of solitary confinement
which was abolished under the
new legislation. The Judicial Inspectorate for Correctional Services
has raised these issues in every
annual report. Page 9 of the 2023
2024 Annual Report states as follows:
"Unlawful
solitary confinement - This practice persists at Ebongweni
Supermaximum Correctional Centre and Kgosi Mampuru II
C-Max. JICS
initiated a study and hosted a seminar that vividly showed solitary
confinement's adverse mental health effects. This
resulted in
reinvigorated engagements with DCS. Regrettably, JICS's reports on
solitary confinement to the previous Parliamentary
Portfolio
Committee have not produced interventions.to the previous
Parliamentary Portfolio Committee have not produced interventions."
[13]
The applicant's rights under sections 10 (dignity), 12 (freedom and
security of the person),
and 35(2)(e) (humane detention conditions)
of the Constitution are being violated daily. Each additional day in
these conditions
aggravates the harm and entrenches the
unlawfulness.
[8]
[14]
The applicant is eligible for parole consideration in July 2025.
[9]
However, his detention in C-Max precludes him from appearing before
the parole board, effectively extending his incarceration without
lawful justification This constitutes immediate prejudice requiring
urgent relief.
[15]
The respondent's contention that urgency is self-created is
misplaced. The urgency stems not
from the date of transfer but from
the ongoing and cumulative harm caused by prolonged solitary
confinement
[10]
. The applicant
acted promptly upon securing legal representation, as evidenced by
his attorneys' letter to the Department on 14
May 2025.
[11]
APPLICABLE
LEGISLATION
[16]
The
Correctional Services Act 111 of 1998
intends:
16.1 to
provide for a correctional system;
16.2
the establishment, functions and control of the Department of
Correctional Services;
16.3
the custody of all prisoners under conditions of human dignity; and
16.4
the rights and obligations of sentenced prisoners.
[17]
The Bill of Rights contained in Chapter 2 of the Constitution
protects the rights of all, including
those of prisoners. Section 35
protects detainees, including sentenced prisoners, against conditions
that are inconsistent with
human dignity.
[18]
The
Correctional Services Act, its
regulations and the Standard
Operating Procedures for C-Max ("SOP") provide for certain
standards that must be adhered
to in detention centers. Specific
standards and procedures have been laid down for the treatment of
prisoners in maximum security
facilities such as C-Max.
The
SOP provides that prisoners are subjected to a mandatory three-phase
treatment program for a minimum of 12 to 18 months. The
intention
with a prisoner's incarceration at C-Max is to prepare them for
integration into another maximum correctional facility
and not to
detain him at C-Max indefinitely.
[12]
[19]
"No offender may be kept at C-Max Correctional Facility for more
than 12 to 18 months unless
risks posed dictate otherwise and
pre-approval is granted ... (Clause 4.2.3.2). In exceptional
circumstances, where it is required
for an offender to be
incarcerated at C-Max Correctional Facility for a period longer than
12 to 18 months, written application
must be submitted by the center
of origin to be approved by the National Commissioner or his/her
delegate. Should this rule not
be applied the offender must be
collected by the center/region of origin" (Clause 4.2.3.3).
[20]
In terms of the SOP, the applicant can be detained for (18) months in
C-Max. It is now approximately
(6) months since the applicant has
been transferred. If the interdictory relief sought is interim in
effect, form and substance
the applicant must establish the following
to succeed:
(a)
A prima facie right, even though open to some doubt;
(b)
A well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if interim relief is
not granted;
(c)
A balance of convenience in their favour; and
(d)
The lack of another remedy is adequate in the circumstance.
PRIMA
FACIE RIGHT
[21]
The manner in which a Court should evaluate whether a prima facie
right has been established
was set out in
Simon
NO v Air Operation of Europe ABE and Others
[13]
,
as follows:
"Insofar as the
appellant also sought an interim interdict pendente lite, if was
incumbent upon him to establish, as one of
the requirements for the
relief sought; a prima facie right, even though open to some doubt.
The accepted test for a prima facie
right in the context of an
interim interdict is to take the facts averred by the applicant
together with such facts set out by
the respondent that are not or
cannot be disputed and to consider whether, having regard to the
inherent probabilities, the applicant
should on those facts obtain
final relief at the trial. The facts set up in contradiction by the
respondent should then be considered
and, if serious doubt is thrown
upon the case of the applicant, he cannot succeed."
[22]
For the applicant it was contended that the applicant has the right
to dignity, the right to
be protected against inhumane treatment and
the right to fair and just detention which were all infringed upon
for a continuous
duration.
[23]
A reasonable prospect of success in the main action is a useful
indication when considering applications
for interim interdicts. In
my view the applicant must, in order to bring prima facie proof of a
right, establish a case founded
on the greatest probabilities.
[24]
The rights in terms of the Constitution are limited in terms of
section 36. The applicant is
a prisoner and does not have the right
to live freely as he wants or as he wishes. He cannot dictate to how
his incarceration should
be. The
Correctional Services Act, the
Regulations and the SOP is a tool used to limit the inmate's rights.
[25]
The applicant relies on the decision in
Mahlangu
v Area Commissioner of Kgosi Mampuru II Prison
[14]
.
The facts in Mahlangu are distinguishable from the present matter.
The
Mahlangu
matter dealt with the issues pertaining the diet of a prisoner and
right to adequate nutrition, which has nothing to do with the
matter
before this Court.
[26]
The respondents in this matter deny that the applicant has been in
solitary confinement as the
CSA provides for segregation and not
solitary confinement,
"The
Applicant is not kept in segregation or in solitary confinement C-Max
is a single cell facility where all inmates are
accommodated under
similar conditions and are all treated the same. They are all allowed
limited activities such as exercise, visitation
hours and taking a
shower. In a prison context, segregation means isolating an inmate
from the general prison population, typically
in a separate unit or
cell. Segregation, as contemplated in
section 30
of the Act, does not
apply to C-Max"
[15]
.
[27]
I conclude that the SOP provides that the applicant can be kept in
C-Max for a period of between
twelve to eighteen months. He is still
within the period prescribed and there are no exceptional
circumstances which warrant his
release at the C-Max. The Act read
with the regulations provide for measures to cater for the
applicant's wellbeing.
IRREPARABLE
HARM
[28]
A reasonable apprehension of injury is one which a reasonable man
might entertain when faced
with certain facts. The test is
objective.
[16]
[29]
It was argued by the applicant that he stands to suffer irreparable
harm should the respondents
continue to ignore their obligations and
continue to unlawfully detain the applicant in C-Max in segregation.
[30]
It was pointed out by the respondents that C-Max was specifically
designed as a single cell for
all high-security profile inmates and
its specification has been approved by the legislation. The treatment
that is given to the
applicant is given to all the inmates, which is
acceptable according to the standards stated in the Act.
[31]
In my view the applicant is not unlawfully detained in C-Max. The SOP
provides that the applicant
should stay at C-Max for a period of
between 12 to 18 months. I am not persuaded that under the
circumstances the applicant will
suffer any prejudice pending the
review application. The infringement of his rights is not proved
based on substantial grounds.
BALANCE
OF CONVENIENCE
[32]
The essence of the balance of convenience is to assess which of the
parties will be least seriously
inconvenienced by being compelled to
endure what may prove to be a temporary injustice until the answer
can be found at the end
of the trial.
[33]
The balance of convenience is inextricably bound up with the
discretion of the Court. I am of
the view that there is a greater
possible prejudice to the respondents than that of the applicant if
an interim interdict
is granted.
An
interim interdict will open a floodgate for inmates who are kept in
prison to be transferred to different sections in C-Max.
The
applicant in his own version is eligible for parole in July 2025 and
thus if he is considered for release, his period of detention
will be
limited.
ALTERNATIVE
REMEDY
[17]
[34]
"It is also clear that the grant of an interdict is a
discretionary remedy. One of the main
factors which the Court is
enjoined to take into account in deciding whether to exercise its
jurisdiction is whether there is any
other remedy open to the
applicant which can adequately protect him in his rights."
[18]
[35]
The respondents have argued that even though the applicant does not
challenge the findings that
resulted in his transfer to C-Max, he has
alternative internal remedies to exhaust and failed to exhaust before
approaching this
Court for urgent relief.
[19]
[36]
In my view there is a remedy open to the applicant which can
adequately protect him and his rights.
If the applicant succeeds in
the exhaustion of internal remedies, he might be transferred back to
the center/region of origin.
ANALYSIS
OF THE MATTER BEFORE COURT
[37]
It is clear on the applicant's own version that the urgency of this
matter commences from a transfer
that started in December and the
applicant has been detained with the third respondent since
13
January 2025
. The respondents provided the reasons for the
transfer which are not disputed or denied by the applicant anywhere
in his papers.
The applicant has been living under the same
conditions since the 13
th
January 2025 and nothing has
changed according to the applicant's own version.
[38]
The period from the 13 January 2025 to the date of the hearing of
this application before me
being the 17 June 2025 is six (6) months
and the applicant has been living under the same conditions and on
his own papers it is
the same conditions and nothing change that may
have triggered the urgent application to have been brought in June
2025.
[39]
In
Roets
N.O and another v SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd and others
[20]
the court found that the applicant had sat "on its laurels"
and had unduly taken its time to approach the urgent court
claiming
irreparable harm. This led to the application being struck from the
roll on the basis of "self-created urgency".
[40]
There is no explanation whatsoever provided by the applicant as to
why his detention in C-Max
has suddenly become a matter to be looked
at on an urgent basis. The applicant does not allege any changes in
the C-Max prison
conditions between January 2025 when he was
transferred therein to the date of bringing this urgent application.
[41]
The high watermark of Counsel for the applicant's submissions is that
the applicant is an inmate
who is imprisoned and therefore a
different criterion should be applied as he had difficulties in
seeking legal representation
to bring the urgent review application.
Even on this argument the time-period of 6 months is unreasonable if
the case of the applicant
was urgent as alleged.
[42]
It is thus the finding of this Court that the applicant has thus sat
"on its laurels"
and had unduly taken its time to approach
the urgent court and claiming irreparable harm, as was found in the
Roets
N.O
[21]
case. Accordingly, this application stands to be struck from the roll
on account of "self-created urgency"..
[43]
On the applicant's own papers, there is nowhere where the applicant
alleges a new threat, either
actual or implied from the respondents
that will violate his rights that are already subject to limitation
due to the fact that
he is an inmate in prison. Once again when his
Counsel was pressed in court, he made the submission that the
applicant will become
eligible for parole and as such his conditions
should be improved for his re-integration within society.
[44]
It is trite law that parole is not a right, it is a rather a
privilege and not a right that offenders
can lay a claim to,
"A
parolee remains at all times a sentenced prisoner and has no right to
parole"
[22]
.
Therefore, the statement that the applicant is eligible for parole
doesn't render the matter urgent at all. It confirms that his
case is
that of self-created urgency that this Court should not entertain.
[45]
Therefore, based on the applicant's own papers the urgent application
before me must fail as
the urgency is clearly self-made as the
transfer was made in January 2025 and the applicant brings this
application in June 2025.
It is important to also state that the
statutory required period in this matter has not been exceed at all
as that may have justified
the case of the applicant, however it is
common cause between the parties that the transfer only happened in
January 2025 and the
application before me was brought in June.
CONCLUSION
[46]
This urgent application was brought in terms of the provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act No. 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[23]
PAJA emphasises the importance of exhausting internal remedies before
a person can seek judicial review of an administrative action.
[24]
Therefore, the law requires that where a law provides for review or
appeal mechanism within the administration, these must be utilised
before a person can approach the court. The objective is to allow for
internal correction of decisions before they are subjected
to a
court's scrutiny.
[47]
The Correctional Services Act No. 111 of 1998 ("the Act")
provides that an inmate should
be subjected to a disciplinary hearing
if he commits a disciplinary infringement. It is a disciplinary
infringement for an inmate
to be in a possession of an unauthorised
article such as a cell phone.
[25]
It is also a disciplinary infringement for an inmate to communicate
with any person at a time when or place where it is prohibited
[26]
.
This offence would include the inmate's communication with the
officials of the Department on a cell phone.
[48]
Where the inmate undergoes a disciplinary process and he is found
guilty as the applicant in
this matter, he has a right to appeal the
decision to the National Commissioner.
[27]
The National Commissioner may confirm the decision or set it aside or
make any appropriate order he deems fit.
[49]
The applicant in this matter has undergone a disciplinary process for
his infringement and was
found guilty as charged. This court was
referred to annexures' "A" and "A" to the
answering affidavit in this
regard and the contents of the annexures
are undisputed.
[50]
The applicant, having been found guilty, and if aggrieved by such a
decision, was left with an
internal remedy in the form of an appeal
to the National Commissioner. The applicant failed to appeal the
decision for review to
the National Commissioner as contemplated by
the Act. In doing so the applicant has failed to exhaust the internal
remedies available
within the Department.
[51]
The applicant does not advance any reason before this Court or
prevailing circumstances which
would result in him suffering an
irreparable harm if the matter is not heard on an urgent basis. The
applicant alleges that his
dignity is violated, he is tormented and
psychologically stressed by the conditions in CMax. However, he
provides no evidence
whatsoever to substantiate his allegations.
THE
PAPERS AND COMPLIANCE WITH THE RULES AND PRACTICE DIRECTIVES
[52]
In this matter there was non-compliance with the practice directive
of this division by both
the applicant and the respondents. The
respondents failed to comply with time frames to file their answering
papers before this
Court. They sought condonation that is set out at
paragraph 7 of their heads of arguments. Due to the nature of this
matter and
the strict time frames in terms of the Practice Manual and
my practice directives. The condonation is granted.
[53]
The applicant on the other hand filed a certificate of urgency that
does not comply with the
Practice Manual of this Division that set
out in clear terms what should be contained in a certificate of
urgency. As if that was
not enough, the replying affidavit was filed
by the attorney instead of the applicant. This Court despite the
patch up explanation
by Counsel of the applicant cannot countenance
such a non-compliance with the rules of this Court.
[54]
This Court is not a fire extinguisher of poorly conceived timelines,
courts are constitutional
platforms of justice and fairness and that
is applicable on both sides of the parties before it. Therefore, this
matter is not
urgent and fails to fall within the ambit of Rule 6(12)
(b) read with the Practice Manual, and directives of this Court.
.
[55]
It is common cause between the parties that the applicant did not
dispose the replying affidavit,
but that his attorneys has done so on
his behalf, for reasons which I do not intend to repeat herein. It is
trite law that a replying
affidavit must be deposed by the applicant
himself/herself. I have raised my concerns in this respect with the
applicant's Counsel.
Therefore, the finding of this court is that the
replying affidavit carries no probative value under the rules of
evidence. Therefore,
there is no reply before this Court, it is thus
my considered view seeing that the replying affidavit has not been
disposed to
by the applicant himself, that there is was no replying
affidavit before me, For this reason I am in agreement that
"In the absence
of a replying affidavit in the present application it was the
applicant's submission that the applicant's version,
as it stands in
the answering affidavit, stands to be accepted as uncontested on
those allegations that have challenged the content
of the founding
affidavit this much is trite."
[28]
ORDER
[57]
1. The application is struck from the roll for lack of urgency;
2. Applicants are ordered
to pay costs on party to party scale B.
RR
NTHAMBELENI
ACTING
JUDGE GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
REPRESENTATION
AND COUNSEL FOR THE PARTIES
FOR
THE APPLICANTS:
Adv Ruan Britz
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Brandon-Swanepoel Attorneys
REF:
NJ009
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS: Adv
M Tjiana
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STATE ATTORNEYS, PRETORIA
ENQ:
MS MMB MASIA
[1]
See prayers contained in the applicant's Notice of Motion at 02;
02-2 to 02-5.
[2]
See annexure A to the Answering Affidavit at page 06-24.
[3]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011) at par 6-7.
[4]
Mogalakwena
Local Municipality v Provincial Executive Council, Limpopo
2016
(4) SA 99
(GP) at par 64.
[5]
See Applicant's Heads of Arguments at page paragraph 2 (unnumbered
pages).
[6]
Safcor
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v NTC
1982 (3) SA 654
(A) at 675B-H.
[7]
See
Minister
of Justice v Hofmeyr
[1993] ZASCA 40
;
1993 (3) SA 131
(A);
Mahlangu
v Area Commissioner
at
para [52]).
[8]
See
Stanfield
v Minister of Correctional Services
2004
(4) SA 43
(C); Mahlangu v Area Commissioner at para [39]).
[9]
(Founding Affidavit, para 5.15)
[10]
(Mahlangu v Area Commissioner at para [56]) supra.
[11]
(Founding Affidavit, para 10.1)
[12]
Caselines: AA p02-127 para 2.5
[13]
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA) at 228 F-1
[14]
Mahlangu
v Area Commissioner of Kgosi Mampuru II Prison
14
(Case No. 093770/2024, Gauteng Division, Pretoria, 4 October 2024).
[15]
See paragraph 10 of the Respondents’ Heads of Arguments under
Headings Merits at pages 10-11
[16]
See National Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals v Openshaw 2008 (5) SA 339 (SCA).
[18]
See
Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co Ltd v Mitchmor Investments (Pty) Ltd and
Another
1971
(2) SA (WLD) 404 E-F.
[19]
See paragraphs 5.9 to 5.16 of the Respondent's Heads of Arguments.
[20]
[2022] JOL 55628
(GJ) at [26]
[21]
Supra footnote 12.
[22]
See
Du
Preez v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
2015 (1) SACR 478
(GP) para 12.
[23]
See: paragraph 4 of the founding affidavit, at Caselines pagination
02-10
[24]
Section 7(2) of PAJA
[25]
Section 23(1)(m) of the Act
[26]
Section 23(1)(i) of the Act
[27]
Section 24(7) of the Act
[28]
See
Nedbank
Limited v Ramparsad and Another
(58806/2018) [2021] ZAGPPHC 746 (4 November 2021).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mphahlele v Minister of Police and Others (33154/21) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1774 (11 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1774High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Thwala v Rautenbach (A52/2025) [2025] ZAGPPHC 1347 (10 December 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 1347High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Marule v Minister of Police (86694/2014) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1213 (14 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1213High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Rapoloti v S (A24/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1233 (28 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1233High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
Mtakati v Minister of Police, Republic of South Africa and Another (Leave to Appeal) (2024/105172) [2025] ZAGPPHC 486 (12 May 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 486High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar