Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 475South Africa
Chukwumeka v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 475; A10/2023 (15 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Chukwumeka v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 475; A10/2023 (15 June 2023)
Chukwumeka v S [2023] ZAGPPHC 475; A10/2023 (15 June 2023)
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sino date 15 June 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case number: A10/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES/
NO
DATE:15/06/2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
EWULU
STANLEY
CHUKWUMEKA
Applicant
v
THE
STATE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOSOPA,
J
1.
Section 12 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
enshrines the right to freedom and security of the person, and
provides:
“
(1) Everyone
has the right to freedom and security of the person, which includes
the right –
(a)
not to be deprived of freedom arbitrarily or
without just cause;
(b)
not to be detained without trial…”
Simply put, a person may
not be deprived of his/her freedom for unacceptable reasons (see
S
v Coetzee
[1997] ZACC 2
;
1997 (3) SA 527
(CC)
).
2.
The principal questions that must be
answered in this matter are:
2.1.
Whether an illegal foreign national accused
of committing an offence is entitled to be admitted to bail;
2.2.
Where the address of the bail applicant is
not satisfactorily verified by the Investigating Officer, and;
2.3.
Where the State relies on the strength of
the State’s case against the bail applicant to deny him bail.
BACKGROUND
3.
The appellant, a Nigerian citizen, and Mr.
Peter Molobo, a South African citizen, were arrested separately on 10
March 2022, and
were charged with the following charges:
3.1.
Contravention of section 3(a)(i)(aa) of the
Prevention and Combatting of Corrupt Activities Act 12 of 2004;
3.2.
Extortion;
3.3.
Contravention of section 49(1)(a) of the
Immigration Act 13 of 2002 (only in respect of the appellant);
3.4.
Fraud;
3.5.
Forgery (only in respect of the appellant);
3.6.
Uttering (only in respect of the
appellant), and;
3.7.
Impersonating a police officer (only in
respect of Mr. Molobo).
4.
The State alleges that the appellant and
Mr. Molobo, in furtherance of a common purpose, wrongfully and with
corrupt intent, elicited
a gratification amount of R300 000.00
from Mr. Okeke (the complainant), in exchange for the withdrawal of
the complainant’s
drug-related charges. The complainant did not
have the full amount requested, and only gave the appellant and Mr.
Molobo R40 000.00.
5.
At the time of the appellant’s
arrest, he was found in possession of a fraudulent asylum seeker visa
(formerly known as an
asylum seeker temporary permit). On that basis,
it was established that the appellant had remained in the Republic of
South Africa
without being in possession of a valid asylum seeker
visa, after his application for the extension of his visa was
rejected by
the Department of Home Affairs (“DHA”).
6.
The appellant and Mr. Molobo were arrested
as a result of a trap, which was put in place in terms of the
authority provided for
in section 252A of the Criminal Procedure Act
51 of 1977 (“CPA”). The amount of R40 000.00 paid by
the complainant
was found in the appellant’s possession and he
later led the police to Mr. Molobo, who was then also arrested. No
details
were provided as to when the section 252A authority was
applied for. The appellant did not place the constitutionality or the
legality
of the section 252A authority before the court during either
of his two bail applications, and it is accepted that same will not
be an issue in the course of his trial matter.
7.
The appellant brought an application to be
admitted to bail in the Pretoria Specialised Commercial Crimes Court,
Regional Division
of Gauteng, before Magistrate Setshoge, which
application was dismissed on 16 May 2022. The applicant then brought
another application
to be admitted to bail on new facts, before the
same presiding Magistrate, which application was also refused on 12
December 2022.
8.
Aggrieved by these decisions not to admit
him to bail, the appellant appealed to this court against such
refusal, in terms of the
provisions of section 65(1)(a). I then heard
the matter on 24 April 2023 and reserved judgment to be delivered at
a later stage.
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
9.
The State and the defense are in agreement
that the offences the appellant is alleged to have committed resorts
under Schedule 5
of the CPA.
10.
Section 60(11)(b) of the CPA deserves
mention and provides:
“
(11)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Act, where an accused is
charged with an offence referred to –
(b)
in Schedule 5, but not Schedule 6,
the court shall order that the accused be detained in custody until
he or she is dealt with in
accordance with the law, unless the
accused, having been given reasonable opportunity to do so adduces
evidence which satisfies
the court that the interests of justice
permit his or her release.”
11.
In terms of the above subsection, the
appellant can only be admitted to bail if he adduces evidence which
satisfies the court that
the interests of justice permit his release.
The demand that evidence be adduced should not be interpreted as a
demand for the
presentation of oral evidence. Evidence can be
presented in terms of the normal “relaxed” rules of
evidence (see
S v Hartlief
2002
(1) SACR 7
(T)
), where affidavits
should be received (see
S v Pienaar
1992 (1) SACR 178
(W)
).
12.
The concept of the “interests of
justice” is not defined in the sub-section. In the matter of
S
v Dlamini; S v Dladla and Others; S v Joubert; S v Schietekat
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999
(2) SACR 51
(CC)
, the concept of
“interests of justice” was defined as follows:
“’
The
interest of society’ is the sense in which ‘the interests
of society’’ concept is used in sub-s(4).
That
subsection actually forms part of a functional unit with sub-ss (9)
and (10). Between them they provide the heart of the evaluation
process in a bail application, sub-s (9) being predominant.
It
is read first and ‘the interest of justice’ bears the
same narrow meaning akin to the ‘interest of society’
(or
the interest of justice minus the interest of the accused) the
interpretation of the whole section falls neatly into place.”
13.
Section 60(11)(b) of the CPA places the
onus (burden of proof) on the bail applicant to adduce evidence which
satisfies the court
that it is in the interest of justice that they
be admitted to bail. There is no onus on the State to disprove the
existence of
the “interest of justice”. The civil
standard is used for the bail applicant to discharge the onus placed
on them,
namely that they must do so on a balance of probabilities.
14.
The provisions of section 60(4)(a)-(e) are
also important and provide that:
“
(4)
the interest of justice do not permit the
release from detention of an accused where one or more of
the
following are established;
(a)
where there is the likelihood that the accused if he or she were
released on bail, will endanger
the safety of the public or any
particular person will commit a schedule 1 offence, or
(b)
where there is a likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will attempt
to evade his or her trial or
(c)
where there is the likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail,
will attempt to influence or intimidate witnesses
or to conceal or destroy evidence,
(d)
where there is a likelihood that the accused, if he or she were
released on bail, will undermine
or jeopardize the objectives or the
proper functioning of the criminal justice system, including the bail
system,
(e)
where in exceptional circumstances there is the likelihood that the
release of the accused
will disturb the public order or undermine the
public peace or security.”
15.
If one or more of the jurisdictional
factors mentioned in the above subsection are established, the bail
applicant is not entitled
to be admitted to bail.
FIRST BAIL APPLICATION
16.
In his first bail application, the
appellant deposed to an affidavit from which the following can be
gleaned:
16.1.
that he is a Nigerian national and arrived
in South Africa as an asylum seeker;
16.2.
after his village was attacked by the Niger
Delta terrorist group, he fled his native country;
16.3.
he arrived in South Africa in 2011 and his
asylum seeker visa was repeatedly extended, up until 1 September
2020;
16.4.
the asylum seeker visa which was found in
his possession at the time of his arrest was renewed at DHA’s
Marabastad office
and he was assisted by a gentleman known as Mr.
Khopotso, an employee of the Department, who told him to pay an
amount of R500.00;
16.5.
at the time of his arrest, he resided at
[...] E[...] Road, Sunninghill in Sandton, in terms of a 12-month
lease agreement concluded
on 17 December 2021, to commence in January
2022;
16.6.
he resided at the address with his
girlfriend, Ms. Phelokazi Ntsolongo;
16.7.
he is a father of two minor children aged 7
and 9 years respectively, who currently reside with their mother at a
different address
than that of the appellant;
16.8.
the children attend school and he is
responsible for the payment of their school fees;
16.9.
he is self-employed as a movie director,
producer and singer, He is also employed as a manager in his
girlfriend’s company
called Epex Cleaning Chemicals (Pty) Ltd,
and his salary ranges from R8500.00 to R10 000.00. The estimated
value of his businesses,
assets and investments amounts to a total of
R30 000.00, and he has no assets or economic ties outside of
South Africa;
16.10.
he does not have previous convictions nor
any pending criminal charges;
16.11.
the State’s case against him is weak
and if released on bail, he will not interfere with witnesses,
exhibits or evidence.
17.
Ms. Phelokazi Ntsolongo also
testified in support of the appellant’s bail application and
her evidence is summarised briefly
as follows:
17.1.
she is the appellant’s girlfriend and
they have lived together at the appellant’s address since
January 2022;
17.2.
she has been in a relationship with the
appellant since 2020;
17.3.
she owns the company which employed the
appellant as a manager;
17.4.
to her knowledge, the appellant does not
have any movable or immovable assets;
17.5.
she confirmed that the appellant has two
minor children, and;
17.6.
at the time of her testimony, she was
responsible for paying the rent on the appellant’s home.
18.
The State also adduced the evidence of the
Investigating Officer, Sergeant Mauwane, who is based at the DPCI
(the Hawks). He confirmed
that the appellant was arrested after the
section 252A authority was put in place, after he demanded the amount
of R300 000.00
from the complainant. When he verified the asylum
seeker visa found in the appellant’s possession upon his
arrest, DHA advised
that the visa was fraudulent. He visited the
address which Ms. Ntsolongo provided, despite not having been
provided with the unit
number, where he was informed by the caretaker
that Ms. Ntsolongo had her own unit in the same complex, and the
appellant was a
party to another lease agreement wherein he was
described as a second occupant. Efforts to reach the first occupant
on the lease
agreement did not yield fruit, because despite promising
to go to the appellant’s residential address, the first
occupant
failed to do so.
19.
Mr. Ndou, from DHA, testified that the
appellant’s application for refugee status was rejected as
being manifestly unfounded
on 5 April 2011. However, his asylum
seeker visa was extended several times thereafter, for the final
determination of his application
for refugee status, until he was
finally rejected in September 2020, at which time his visa was not
extended again. The appellant
failed to appear before the Refugee
Reception Officer and his visa was deemed to have lapsed, and as
such, the appellant was an
illegal foreigner in South Africa. In
cross-examination, it was put to Mr. Ndou that the decision to
finally reject the application
was not communicated to the appellant,
as is required.
20.
In refusing bail, the court
a
quo
stated that:
“…
firstly
to the address given by the applicant. I believe the court would be
failing in his duties to be saying that the evidence
as presented
before this court in terms of the stability of the applicant within
the Republic of South Africa has been shown on
a balance of
probabilities by the applicant who stayed for a period of five months
as an occupant only, who is not liable to pay
rental or in essence to
comply with the essential conditions of like a lease of the place in
terms of the payment of rental, other
things that are related to
conditions that can lead to cancellation, because in the
circumstances where he is being incarcerated
the other person is not
listed as an occupant of the place as well, the court cannot arrive
at the conclusion that automatically
just because the other
girlfriend stays in that unit it means that he has taken over the
lease when there are no documents to that
effect, so if that was the
case the court would say that there is stability of some sort because
now I can see the name of that
current being there.
As for the status of
the applicant it is of right to can approach the high court in terms
of review or appeal as he has indicated,
but evidence that has been
presented before this court as well in terms of the asylum document
that has been presented to this
court which the respondent labels as
fraudulent and having been rejected, also there is no sufficient
evidence satisfying the onus
that rests on the applicant to show this
court that the interest of justice permits his release and it is on
that basis that I
make the following order; the application for the
release of the applicant on bail is dismissed.”(sic)
SECOND BAIL
APPLICATION
21.
In the second bail application, the
appellant also deposed to an affidavit wherein he mostly repeated the
averments made in the
first bail application, save to add that the
business which he was managing before his arrest was struggling
financially, and that
his children’s school fees have not been
paid since his arrest. Further, that he has moveable assets to the
estimated value
of R30 000.00.
22.
Ms. Ntsolongo also deposed to another
affidavit in support of the appellant’s bail application,
stating that she had moved
to a new address, namely 4[...] K[...]
Avenue, Gallo Manor, Sandton and that she was willing to accommodate
the appellant if he
is released on bail. Further, that her new
address was within walking distance of the police station and she
committed herself
to ensuring that the appellant attends his court
appearances.
23.
Ms. Cynthia Tshuma, the mother of the
appellant’s minor children, also deposed to an affidavit in
support of the appellant’s
bail application. She indicated that
she and her children are financially dependent on the appellant and
she further consented
to the appellant residing with Ms. Ntsolongo.
24.
The investigating officer could not confirm
the address which Ms. Ntsolongo provided. The presiding Magistrate
was not satisfied
with the developments and made an order in terms of
section 60(3) for certain evidence to be placed before her and made
the following
order:
24.1.
that the investigating officer is to obtain
an affidavit from Mr. Kansasa (lessor of the premises leased by Ms.
Ntsolongo), in respect
of the verification of the address. The
investigating officer must also physically go and verify the address;
24.2.
that he must approach the school of the
appellant’s children in respect of the address of Ms. Cynthia
Tshuma and also find
out who pays the school fees for the children
and the outstanding balance; and,
24.3.
to obtain the outcome of the section 205
request on the Capitec account of Ms. Ntsolongo.
25.
The investigating officer could not verify
the address as directed by the court
a
quo
, as the appellant’s legal
representative informed him that the lessor was not willing to have
people of Nigerian origin nor
people with pending criminal charges in
his premises.
26.
Ms. Tshuma and Ms. Ntsolongo deposed to a
further confirmatory affidavit and a supplementary affidavit,
respectively. In those affidavits,
they both agreed that if the
appellant is released on bail, he may reside with Ms. Tshuma and her
children. Ms. Tshuma’s
address could not be verified by the
investigating officer, as he did not find anyone at the premises when
he visited the address,
and further, that he could not communicate
with Ms. Tshuma as he was not provided with her contact details.
Moreover, according
to the records kept by the children’s
school, Ms. Tshuma’s address is different than the address
provided to him by
Ms. Tshuma and Ms. Ntsolongo, although both
addresses are in Sunnyside. He also established that the school
principal deposed to
an affidavit stating that the children will not
be academically excluded as a result of non-payment of their school
fees.
27.
In deciding the second bail application on
new facts, the presiding Magistrate stated as follows:
“
The
applicant has been assisting the children in whatever way cannot be
regarded as a new fact, as it has been dealt with in the
previous
application by this court and it has been adjudicated upon.
Moving to the second
crucial aspect being the address of the applicant. I will
re-emphasise to say that any determination that this
court has to
make in respect of the decision of or the principles as laid out in
the Peterson matter, cannot be determined without
reference being
made to the previous reasoning of the court. And this came very
clearly, it will be shown very clearly through
the reasoning of the
court in this instance. The address or addresses of the accused, the
addresses that were brought in this very
application as for the court
to determine them as new facts or not. The previous address of the
applicant [...] E[...] Road Sunninghill,
Sandton placed before this
court at the time the court, as opposed to what has been placed on
record even today to say that the
address was confirmed. It is
correct that confirmation of an address is one leg to see – to
verify if that address indeed
exists, that is number one… the
investigating officer testified that he could not fully confirm the
address as there were
no contact details given or furnished to him in
the documentation that was presented before court.” (sic)
CAN THE FACT THAT A
BAIL APPLICANT IS AN ILLEGAL FOREIGNER BE USED TO DENY HIM BAIL
28.
The appellant in this matter is also
charged with the offence of being in the country without proper
documentation, as his application
was rejected by DHA.
29.
It appears, on his own version, that he was
given fraudulent documentation by Mr. Khopotso, who is allegedly in
the employ of DHA.
Mr. Ndou testified that the extension of an asylum
seeker visa is done for free and the fact that the appellant was made
to pay
the amount of R500.00 by Mr. Khopotso is an indication that
the appellant did not visit the relevant office of DHA to extend his
asylum seeker visa. After his application was rejected, the appellant
never physically appeared before the Refugee Reception Officer
again.
30.
Subsequent to his arrest, the appellant’s
legal representatives were instructed to bring an application for
judicial review
against the Minister’s decision to reject his
application for refugee status, in terms of the Promotion of
Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”). The
appellant only annexed a letter from his attorneys indicating that a
copy of the
notice of motion was served on the Chairperson of the
Standing Committee for Refugee Affairs, who is the second respondent
in the
review application. The letter is dated 5 April 2022, and
while there is a case number provided as 19955/22, there is no copy
of
the notice of motion attached to the letter. However, it appears
that both parties accepted that there a PAJA review has been brought
by the appellant against the rejection and refusal to extend his
asylum seeker visa.
31.
The appellant’s status in the country
was used as one of the reasons to deny him bail in the first bail
application. It is
trite that the bail applicant’s status in
the country cannot be used as a bar to his release on bail (see
Ulde
v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (Lawyers for Human Rights
Amicus Curiae
(2009) 3 All SA
323
(SCA)
). The main purpose of
granting bail is to secure the attendance of the bail applicant at
court pending finalisation of their trial
matter.
32.
The appellant has been in the country since
2011 on an asylum seeker visa, for purposes of studying or working.
He has children
in the Republic and he was also employed. It is not
quite clear as to whether the appellant has assets in the country. In
his own
version, he alleges that he has moveable assets to the value
of R30 000.00, whereas his girlfriend, Ms. Ntsolongo avers that
he has no moveable assets and they live together as girlfriend and
boyfriend.
33.
The PAJA review is not before me and I
cannot delve into the merits thereof, but the fact that the appellant
brought the application
so late is concerning. On the State’s
version, the appellant was finally rejected in 2017, but on the
appellant’s version,
he was only finally rejected in 2020. It
is not clear whether condonation for the late filing of the
application was sought, given
that the PAJA review must be brought
within 180 days of the impugned decision. The PAJA review is intended
to alter the outcome
reached administratively in terms of the
Refugees Act.
34.
In the matter of
Saidi
and Others v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[2018]
ZACC 9
, the Constitutional Court held
that a Refugee Reception Officer does have power to extend the permit
provided for in section 22(1)
of the Refugees Act 130 of 1998
(permit) pending finalisation of proceedings for the judicial review,
in terms of PAJA, of the
decision to refuse an application in terms
of
section 21(1)
of the
Refugees Act. The
Court reasoned as follows:
“
To
illustrate a little more on the absurdity, an asylum seeker would be
immune from prosecution while pursuing an internal appeal
or review.
This immunity would end soon as this internal process is finalised.
She or he would not have immunity pending a PAJA
review. However,
upon completion of the PAJA review, with the court deciding that the
applicant ought to have been granted asylum,
the immunity would kick
in again…”
35.
The Court further ordered:
“
The
permit must be issued or extended in accordance with the provisions
of the
Refugees Act and
Regulations made in terms of
section 38
of
that Act.”
36.
It is trite that for the visa to be
extended after the rejection of the application, the asylum seeker
must appear physically before
the Refugee Reception Officer.
Saidi
(supra)
does not deal with compliance in terms of the
Refugees Act, but
only
extends the powers of the Refugee Reception Officers to extend the
visa, pending the finalisation of the PAJA review.
37.
Despite the pronouncement in
Saidi
,
the appellant remains illegally in the country until he appears
before the Refugee Reception Officer for the extension of his
visa.
The appellant is legally represented and it is unclear whether he
gave his attorney a power of attorney to appear on his
behalf before
the Refugee Reception Officer, given that he is currently in custody,
as this was not indicated in the papers before
me.
VERIFICATION OF THE
BAIL APPLICANT’S ADDRESS
38.
Section 60(6)(i)
of the CPA provides:
“
(6)
in considering whether the ground in subsection 4(b) has been
established, the court may, where applicable, take into account
the
following factors, namely –
(i)
the binding effect and
enforceability of bail conditions which may be imposed and the ease
with which such conditions could be breached…”
39.
The appellant provided many addresses which
were found to exist, but some were not verified. At the time of the
hearing of this
appeal matter, the appellant’s address of [...]
E[...] Road, Sunninghill 2[...], Sandton was no longer in
consideration as
the 12-month lease agreement had lapsed and the
lease was not renewed. Ms. Ntsolongo’s address of 4[...] K[...]
Avenue, Gallo
Manor, Sandton, where she indicated that she would
reside with the appellant if he is released on bail, was abandoned in
the course
of a bail application for the reasons already stated
elsewhere in this judgment.
40.
What is left is the address of Ms. Tshuma
in Sunnyside. The school’s records show that the appellant’s
children’s
address is different from the address provided by
Ms. Tshuma. It only emerged in the second bail application that the
lease agreement
of that address is in the name of Ms. Ntsolongo. The
address was not mentioned in the first bail application, despite Ms.
Ntsolongo
being aware of its existence and testifying in the
appellant’s first bail application. The address was mentioned
as a new
fact, as initially, the court
a
quo
refused to admit the appellant to
bail because no address provided could be verified. The lease
agreement in respect of the address
was concluded by Ms. Ntsolongo
long before the arrest of the appellant.
41.
When deciding what would constitute a new
fact, the court in the matter of
S v
Peterson
2008 (2) SACR 355
stated that:
“
[58]
Where
evidence was available to the applicant at the time of the previous
application but, for whatever reason, was not revealed,
it cannot be
relied on in the later application as new evidence. If the evidence
is adjudged to be new and relevant, then it must
be considered in
conjunction with all the facts placed before the court in previous
applications, and not separately.”
42.
The investigating officer visited the
address of Ms. Tshuma, but he did not find anyone there. He was not
provided with Ms. Tshuma’s
contact details, thus he could not
contact her telephonically to confirm whether she really resides at
that address. As a result,
while the investigating officer located
Ms. Tshuma’s address, it could not be verified as being the
address where she and
her children reside.
43.
In my considered view, without the
verification of the address for the purposes of release on bail, it
will be difficult for the
investigating officer to enforce the bail
conditions in the event of breach thereof.
STRENGTH OF THE
STATE’S CASE
44.
The appellant did not mention in either of
his bail applications whether he intends to challenge the
constitutionality or legality
of the
section 252A
authority which led
to his arrest. The appellant only avers that the State’s case
against him is weak, without providing
any further details.
45.
At the time of his arrest, the appellant
was found in possession of the money he demanded from the complainant
to “withdraw”
the charges against him. He led the police
to his co-accused, who was then also arrested on some of the charges
levelled against
the appellant.
46.
It is trite that there are prescribed
minimum sentences for certain offences the appellant is charged with.
The nature and gravity
of the punishment which will likely be imposed
in the event of a conviction may serve as incentive for the appellant
not to stand
trial.
47.
I am alive to the fact that this court is
not seized with determining the guilt of the appellant. The
investigations in the matter
are almost concluded and the only
remaining aspect at the hearing of this matter was the cellphone
records of the appellant. The
court in the
Dlamini
(supra)
matter,
reasoned as follows when determining the strength of the State’s
case:
“
[11]
…An important point to note here about bail proceedings is so
self evident that it is often overlooked. It is
that there is a
fundamental difference between the objective of bail proceedings and
that of the trial. In a bail application
the enquiry is not
really concerned with the question of guilt. That is the task
of the trial court. The court hearing
the bail application is
concerned with the question of possible guilt only to the extent that
it may bear on where the interests
of justice lie in regard to bail.
The focus at the bail stage is to decide whether the interests of
justice permit the release
of the accused pending trial; and that
entails in the main protecting the investigation and prosecution of
the case against hindrance.”
48.
The appellant’s co-accused was
released on bail pending trial for reasons which are not before me.
The circumstances relating
to the appellant’s co-accused cannot
be equated to those of the appellant, despite facing the same
charges. The co-accused
is a South African citizen, whereas the
appellant is not.
GENERAL
49.
When determining the application for bail
on new facts (the second bail application), the presiding Magistrate
found that the appellant
did not deal with new facts and, in my view,
correctly dismissed the bail application.
50.
The fact that the appellant was financially
responsible for the minor children served in both bail applications
and it is thus not
a new fact. The appellant stated that he does not
reside with his minor children and that they reside with their
mother, and in
my view, the Magistrate was correct in finding that
the appellant was not a primary caregiver to his minor children (see
S v M (Centre for Child Law as Amicus
Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007 (2) SACR 539
(CC)
).
The address where the appellant is to reside should he be released on
bail remains doubtful and the Magistrate did not misdirect
herself in
making such a finding.
51.
I find that there was no misdirection on
the part of the court
a quo
which calls for this court to interfere with her decision. The
appellant remains an illegal foreigner in the country, despite his
pending PAJA review, he does not have a fixed address and the State’s
case against him is watertight.
ORDER
52.
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The appeal against the decisions of
Magistrate Setshogo to refuse to admit the appellant to bail is
hereby refused.
MJ MOSOPA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
Adv.
KP Letswalo
Instructed
by:
Mwim &
Associates Inc.
For
the respondent:
Adv.
MM Thulare
Instructed
by:
SCCU,
DPP Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
24
April 2023
Date
of judgment:
Electronically
delivered on 15 June 2023
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