Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 325South Africa
M.P.T.M and Another v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others (2025-018563) [2025] ZAGPJHC 325 (28 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## M.P.T.M and Another v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others (2025-018563) [2025] ZAGPJHC 325 (28 March 2025)
M.P.T.M and Another v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others (2025-018563) [2025] ZAGPJHC 325 (28 March 2025)
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sino date 28 March 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 20
25-018563
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
28 March 2025
In
the matter between:
M[...]
P[...] T[...]
M[...]
First Applicant
S[...]
E[...]
M[...]
Second Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR, OFFICE OF WITNESS PROTECTION,
LIMPOPO
REGION
Second Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Third Respondent
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
GAUTENG
LOCAL
DIVISION
Fourth Respondent
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
Fifth Respondent
JOHN
HENRY FFENNEL NICHOLAS
Sixth Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
On 25 February 2025, the applicants, the M[...], approached me
in person in my urgent court seeking a range of relief against the
respondents. The relief sought included a claim for unliquidated
damages for what the M[...] say was their unlawful removal from
the
State’s witness protection programme; an order setting aside
the rescission of an order restraining their discharge from
that
programme, which was apparently granted by the Limpopo High Court on
30 June 2017; an interdict restraining the respondents
from killing
them, or threatening to kill them and their family; and an order
staying the execution of a Magistrates’ Court
order evicting
them from their home in Blairgowrie, Johannesburg.
2
Neither the damages claim nor the relief concerning the
M[...]’ discharge from the witness protection programme is
urgent.
There is also no basis on which I can grant judgment for
unliquidated damages on motion, or interfere with an order granted in
another division of the High Court. However, because there was clear
prima facie
evidence that a police officer had threatened to
kill the M[...], and because the M[...] face imminent eviction from
their home,
I was inclined to exercise my discretion to treat the
interdictory relief, and the relief claiming a stay of the eviction
order,
as urgent. I stood the matter down until 27 February 2025 to
allow the respondents an opportunity to deal with the M[...]’
application.
3
On 27 February, the relief claiming a stay of the eviction
order was settled between the parties. The M[...] undertook to leave
their Blairgowrie home by 31 March 2025, and the sixth respondent,
Mr. Nicholas, who owns the property, agreed not to execute the
order
before then.
The
interdict sought
4
Only the interdictory relief remained live. I was not
convinced that I had sufficient information to decide whether to
grant it
on the papers before me at that stage. Accordingly, I
postponed the application to 27 March 2025 in order to allow the
parties
to file further papers dealing with that relief, and with any
other matter they thought necessary. Having reviewed those papers,
I
have come to the conclusion that some interim relief should be
granted on an urgent basis. I now set out the nature of that relief,
and the basis on which it is justified.
5
The M[...] are married to each other and presently reside
together with their son at the Blairgowrie property. By order of the
Randburg
Magistrates’ Court, the M[...] must vacate that
property, and have undertaken to do by 31 March 2025. While it is not
clear
where the M[...] will go, they accept the Magistrates’
Court order, and have not sought to challenge it by way of review or
appeal.
6
The M[...] are accordingly presented with a future of
uncertainty and insecurity. But the problems they face on vacating
their home
extend further than might usually be expected. This is
because Mr. M[...]’s involvement as a State witness in a murder
case
has triggered a series of events which resulted in him being the
subject of a large number of threats on his life. On the papers
before me, it has been established, at least
prima facie
, that
those threats were issued by a police officer – one Lieutenant
Colonel Fatima Gafoor – who is currently posted
to the Parkview
Police Station.
7
The threats take the form of text messages to Mr. M[...]’s
phone. They are as pungent as they are numerous. The messages
placed before me span a period of just under two years, and were sent
from seven different cell phone numbers. They repeatedly
say that Mr.
M[...] and his family will be killed “like dogs”. They
are punctuated with the words “bang bang”
in a context
which obviously implies gunfire. In one of the messages, the author
appears to identify herself as Lt. Colonel Gafoor
by telling Mr.
M[...], in an apparent attempt at rhyme, that she is “GAFFOOR”
and that Mr. M[...] is just a “K****R”.
Mr. M[...] is of
African descent.
8
The threats are incessant. Mr. M[...] is told that he is being
followed, that he will be “hunted” down, and that the
author of the messages will not rest until Mr. M[...] and his “stupid
family” are dead. There are threats to kill the
second
applicant, who is referred to as Mr. M[...]’s “pathetic
wife”. The messages say that various cases Mr.
M[...] has
opened with the police will be closed. There are details about the
car Mr. M[...] drives and Mr. M[...]’s movements.
One of the
messages says that Mr. M[...] had been followed from “Parkview
to [his] residence”. The messages say that
their author will be
protected by a “new” station commander, presumably at
Parkview, “who is an Indian like myself
and not a K****r like
[Mr. M[...]]”.
9
At least one of the cell numbers from which the threats
emanated was registered using Lt. Col. Gafoor’s identity
number. That,
together with the fact that the author of one of the
messages identifies themselves as “GAFFOOR” is good
prima
facie
evidence that Lt. Col. Gafoor is in fact the source of the
threats. The fifth respondent, the Minister, does not dispute that
Mr.
M[...] actually received the messages. Nor does he dispute that
one of the cell numbers that sent them was registered under Lt.
Col.
Gafoor’s identity number. Nor can the Minister deny that the
M[...] have obtained a final protection order under the
Protection
from Harassment Act 17 of 2011 against Lt. Col. Gafoor. It is perhaps
noteworthy that, two and a half weeks after the
protection order was
granted, the author of the text messages told Mr. M[...] that “no
court in this country is gonna stop
me from getting u killed”.
10
The Minister does not accept, however, that Lt. Col. Gafoor
actually sent the messages. Lt. Col. Gafoor, though not a party to
these
proceedings in her own right, apparently denies that she is the
source of the messages. The Minister alleges that she has opened
a
case of fraud against whomever used her identity to obtain the cell
number that sent one of the messages. The Minister also alleges
that
the owner of the store that sold the SIM card corresponding to the
number registered in Lt. Col. Gafoor’s name denies
having sold
the card to Lt. Col. Gafoor. The basis for this denial is apparently
that most of his customers are not of Lt. Col.
Gafoor’s race.
11
Lt. Col. Gafoor does not herself depose to an affidavit
dealing with the M[...]’ allegations. Nor does the Minister
produce
the statement allegedly given by the owner of the store that
sold the SIM card registered in Lt. Col. Gafoor’s name. The
Minister’s affidavit, deposed to on his behalf by a Colonel
Desre Grobler, deals with Mr. M[...]’ case in fairly laconic
terms. She does not produce copies of the various dockets under which
Mr. M[...]’ claims of intimidation and Lt. Col. Gafoor’s
claims of fraud have been investigated. Nor is it clear to me on the
papers what motive Lt. Col. Gafoor would have to embark upon
what was
obviously a sustained attempt to terrorise the M[...]. It does
appear, though, from the M[...]’ founding affidavit,
that Mr.
M[...] was dissatisfied with Lt. Col. Gafoor’s handling of
various complaints he laid at the Parkview Police Station.
These
complaints appear to have concerned the way he was treated in, and
ejected from, the witness protection programme.
The
requirements for interim relief
12
The upshot is that there is a clear evidentiary chain linking
Lt. Col. Gafoor to the threats contained in the text messages of
which
the M[...] complain. Though the Minister denies that there is
any such link, his papers do not cast serious doubt upon the evidence
the M[...] put up. On the well-known test set out in
Webster v
Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189, the M[...]’ papers
sustain a
prima facie
right to an interdict directing the
Minister to take such steps as may be necessary to ensure that Lt.
Col. Gafoor refrains from
making threatening contact with the M[...]
or from carrying out any of the threats that appear, at least
prima
facie
, to have emanated from her. Since the threatening messages
annexed to the M[...]’ papers clearly imply that Lt. Col.
Gafoor
was not the only police officer involved in following the
M[...] or issuing threats against them, it seems to me that the
Minister
ought to be placed under a duty to ensure that the M[...]
are not harmed or threatened by any other police officer either.
13
I am satisfied that the M[...] have a reasonable apprehension
of harm. The messages themselves make that harm clear. The only real
problem on the papers is that the last message alleged to have
emanated from Lt. Col. Gafoor is dated in May 2022. Ms. Jara, who
appeared for the first to fifth respondents, accepted that the papers
make out a
prima facie
case that Lt. Col. Gafoor is
responsible for sending the threatening messages. She nonetheless
argued that, because the messages
are so old, the M[...]’
application could not be urgent. Nor, Ms. Jara submitted, could there
be a reasonable apprehension
of harm.
14
Mr. M[...] says that there are more recent messages that were
not attached to the application papers. I obviously have not seen
these messages and cannot fairly have regard to them. However, the
M[...] face a spell of transience on their vacation of the
Blairgowrie
property. They believe that Lt. Col. Gafoor and other
unknown police officers may take the eviction as an opportunity to
carry
out their threats. In all the circumstances of this case, I am
inclined to accept, at least
prima facie
, that this
apprehension falls within the bounds of reasonableness, and that the
M[...]’ application is urgent.
15
The balance of convenience favours the grant of interim
relief. Whether or not Lt. Col. Gafoor presents a threat to the
M[...],
there can be no real inconvenience to the Minister from
placing him under a duty to ensure that the threats are not repeated
and
that the M[...] do not come to harm at the hands of his officers.
If that fear turns out to have been far-fetched, then the Minister
need do nothing at all to allay it. If, however, there is a credible
threat to the M[...]’ safety on their vacation of the
Blairgowrie property, then the inconvenience those threats pose
clearly outweighs any inconvenience caused to the Minister by the
relief I intend to grant.
16
If, as I have accepted, there is at least a
prima facie
basis to accept that Lt. Col. Gafoor is the source of the threats
made to the M[...], then there can be no effective legal remedy,
other than an interdict, to restrain her from carrying them out.
Joinder
of Lt. Col. Gafoor
17
It seems to me that, other than the relief I intend to grant,
the matter cannot proceed further without joining Lt. Col. Gafoor to
these proceedings in her own right. The M[...]’ application
supposes that Lt. Col. Gafoor is using the trappings of her office
to
intimidate them. They seek to compel the Minister to prevent her from
doing so. It is, however, possible that Lt. Col. Gafoor
is on a
frolic of her own, and ought to be joined in her personal capacity.
Moreover, since she is the focus of so much of the
interim relief I
intend to grant, she ought to be placed in a position to oppose its
finalisation in her own right.
18
Ms. Jara confirmed that Lt. Col. Gafoor is a police officer on
active duty, and that she is stationed at Parkview. She may be served
care of the Parkview Police Station’s address.
Order
19
For all these reasons –
19.1
Lieutenant Colonel Fatima Gafoor is joined as the seventh respondent
in these
proceedings. The State Attorney is directed to serve a copy
of this judgment on her at the SAPS Parkview Police Station, 7[...]
D[...] Ave, Parkview, Randburg, 2[…], and to ensure that she
is given access to the Caselines file for this case.
19.2
A
rule nisi
is issued calling on any interested party to show
cause before Wilson J on Wednesday 4 June 2025 (“the return
day”)
why the following orders should not be granted –
19.2.1
The fifth respondent is directed to take such steps as may
be
necessary to ensure that Lieutenant Colonel Fatima Gafoor ceases,
whether herself or through the agency of any other SAPS officer,
to
harass, threaten or intimidate the applicants in any manner
whatsoever.
19.2.2
The fifth respondent is directed to take such steps as may be
necessary to ensure that Lieutenant Colonel Fatima Gafoor refrains
from carrying out, whether herself or through the agency of
any other
SAPS officer, any of the threats made in the messages marked as
annexures 2 to 20 to the applicants’ founding affidavit,
or
from harming the applicants in any other way.
19.2.3
The seventh respondent (Lt. Col. Gafoor) is interdicted and
restrained,
whether herself or through the agency of any other
person, from harassing, threatening or intimidating the applicants in
any manner
whatsoever, and from carrying out, whether herself or
through the agency of any other person, any of the threats made in
the messages
marked as annexures 2 to 20 to the applicants’
founding affidavit, or from harming the applicants in any other way.
19.3
The relief set out in paragraphs 19.2.1 to 19.2.3 above is to operate
as an interim
interdict pending the return day.
19.4
The question of costs is reserved.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 28
March 2025.
HEARD
ON:
27
February and 27 March 2025
DECIDED
ON:
28 March
2025
For the
Applicants
In
person
For
the Respondents:
P
Jara
Instructed
by the State Attorney
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