Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 919South Africa
Ndlhlovu v Head of Case Management Committee and Others (2024/00410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 919 (13 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 September 2024
Headnotes
in the “super-maximum” in Kokstad. He states this was later proven to be an unlawful committal that jeopardize his release from custody. It is not clear if there was a decision to this effect or what he bases this assertion on.
Judgment
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## Ndlhlovu v Head of Case Management Committee and Others (2024/00410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 919 (13 September 2024)
Ndlhlovu v Head of Case Management Committee and Others (2024/00410) [2024] ZAGPJHC 919 (13 September 2024)
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sino date 13 September 2024
THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case 2024/00410
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
Yes☐ / No ☒
3.
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
13 September 2024
In the matter between:
NDHLOVU,
ZIGGY XOLANE
Applicant
and
THE
HEAD OF CASE MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
KGOSI
MAMPURU II CENTRAL
1
st
Respondent
THE
HEAD OF PRISON KGOSI MAMPURU II CENTRAL
2
nd
Respondent
THE
AREA COMMISSIONER KGOSI MAMPURU II
CENTRAL
3
rd
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER CORRECITONAL
SERIVICES
4
th
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
5
th
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF HOME AFFAIRS
6
th
Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL OF HOME AFFAIRS
7
th
Respondent
Coram:
Du Plessis AJ
Heard on:
22 August 2024
Decided on:
Order
granted 22 August 2024, reasons on 13 September 2024.
The judgment has been
delivered by uploading it to the CaseLines digital data base of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court of
South Africa, Johannesburg, and
by email to the attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date
of the delivery is 22 August
2024.
JUDGMENT
DU PLESSIS AJ
Introduction
[1]
Mr
Ndhlovu is serving a term of imprisonment at the Kgosi Mampuru II
Central. He is making the application in terms of the Protection
of
Harassment Act
[1]
read with the
Intimidation Act,
[2]
asking that
the court declare that the Respondents’ conduct is in conflict
with ss 9, 10, 11 and 12 of the Constitution;
that they have
undermined and violated a previous order of this court; that they
must be sternly warned, restrained and interdicted
from harassing,
intimidating, insulting and scorning the applicant in any way, that
they are not allowed to question the applicant
about his nationality,
and that they remove the classification of him as an “immigrant”
on his system. This is what
he seeks in terms of his notice of
motion.
[2]
The complaint stems from the treatment he says he receives
because of being regarded as a Nigerian. He was born to a South
African
mother and a Nigerian father, which his mother confirms in a
confirmatory affidavit. Although his abusive Nigerian father took him
to Nigeria as a child, he returned to South Africa when he was 17 as
he preferred to stay in South Africa with his mother.
[3]
He sets out the history of the application in his affidavit as
follows: The trouble started in 2013 when he was arrested in Springs.
While applying for bail, he was taken to a branch office of the
Department of Home Affairs in Springs, which confirmed his identity
through fingerprints before he was granted bail. While on bail, he
was arrested for another matter in Benoni. When he arrived in
Modderbee prison in 2013, one of the officials, Mr Mangani, refused
to accept the information from Mr Ndhlovu that he is South
African
and born in this country and told him that since he “looks like
a Nigerian”, he would be entered into the system
as a
foreigner. Mr Ndhlovu claims that this is where his troubles started.
[4]
He was tried and convicted in both 2014 and 2015. The
committal warrants contained his personal information, including his
nationality.
Rather than relying on the warrants, they relied on the
information Mr Mangani entered into the system, which classified him
as
an immigrant. This information was used to put him on a
deportation list. The Department of Home Affairs was called in for
another
set of fingerprints, which confirmed that he was South
African. Yet he remained an immigrant on the system.
[5]
He alleges that in 2019, the South African Police and the
respondents (he does not specify who) unlawfully attached his
identity
document. He came to court and obtained an order on 6 August
2020, ordering, in short, the following:
1. That the
respondents must return his confiscated South African identity
document.
2. That the 1
st
to 3
rd
Respondents are interdicted and restrained to,
absent a valid court order, approach or interview the applicant in
relation to any
criminal investigation without his attorney.
3. That the 3rd to
7th respondents are interdicted to, without a valid court order,
assist a member of the South African Police
Service in any
investigation to any criminal investigation involving the applicant
without the involvement of his attorney;
4. That the
respondents are interdicted from assaulting, insulting, intimidating
or extorting the applicant.
[6]
He continues stating that before the elections in May 2024,
the Department of Home Affairs came to Kgosi Mampuru II and issued
him
a new smart identity card. Yet, on 25 June 2024, the respondents
again gave him a deportation form to sign. He asked the respondents
to stop violating his rights and respect the court, reprimanding them
to act within the bounds of the Constitution.
[7]
On 21 July 2024 he had a meeting with the first respondent to
discuss issues pertaining to his parole, for which he says he became
eligible three years ago, he says. He states that the respondents
used “all manners of dubious tactics to keep [his] release
in
abeyance indefinitely”. They questioned him once again about
his nationality. He states that he saw the parole board on
28 July
2022 and was given a new date to return to the parole hearing on 28
June 2024, but the respondents failed to take him to
the board that
day.
[8]
His profile, he says, was prepared and submitted to the parole
board in 2022, and he was refused to be released on parole on the
grounds of being held in the “super-maximum” in Kokstad.
He states this was later proven to be an unlawful committal
that
jeopardize his release from custody. It is not clear if there was a
decision to this effect or what he bases this assertion
on.
[9]
He saw the parole board, but the 1
st
respondent did
not act upon the issues raised by the parole committee that refused
him parole and instead decided to question him
about his nationality.
He states that despite this, and in contravention of the court order
against them, they called the 6
th
and 7
th
respondents who came in on 15 July 2024 and demanded his identity
documents, and further questioned, threatened, insulted and
victimised him over an identity document they issued to him. He now
refuses to cooperate and go through another verification process.
[10]
Ms Mphahlele, the head of the correctional services Kgosi
Mampuru Correctional Centre, the second respondent, filed an
answering
affidavit. She states that this is not an interlocutory
application deriving from the main application brought in 2019 under
case
number 85772/2019, where directives were made. The main
application was disposed of in 2020. There is no information about
the
main application made available to the respondent or the court.
Thus, there is insufficient information before this court can
determine
this application. While I agree with this, I also accept
that as a self-represented litigant, the applicant might not always
follow
the correct procedure. Not much turns on this, as will be
explained below.
[11]
Furthermore, the applicant also fails to make a case to be
protected from harassment. His main issue is with the committal
warrant
supplied by the courts to the respondents after conviction by
Mr Mangani, an official at Modderbee Correctional Centre, by being
called an immigrant. This was in 2013. He does not take the point
further. He is wasting the court’s time.
[12]
The second respondent further points out that the applicant is
misleading the court regarding his parole hearing. He initially
obtained
a parole date to appear before May 2022, when his offender
status was of an offender incarcerated in the medium section of
Leeuwkop
Correctional Centre. However, in 2022, a violent incident
happened at Leeuwkop, where the applicant was implicated as being the
central figure in the violence. This led to the applicant and various
inmates being transferred to Kokstad (Ebongweni) Correctional
Centre
based in Kwazulu Natal. His category changed from being an inmate
with medium status to a maximum offender. Because of the
change in
the category, the applicant lost the privilege of being assessed by
the Parole Board at Leeuwkop. The rule is that only
inmates in the
medium category have the privilege of being assessed by the Parole
Board. There is thus no further date to attend
the hearing at the
Parole Board provided to the applicant.
[13]
He was also not seen by the parole board on 28 July 2022. He
was re-classified as a maximum offender with no privilege of being
interviewed by the Parole Board. His accommodation in Kgosi Mampuru
is temporary; he is permanently accommodated at Kokstad (Ebongweni)
Maximum Facility. He is considered a security risk as well as a
maximum offender. The respondents did not harass the applicant.
The
applicant is merely wasting the court’s time.
[14]
On the day of the hearing, the applicant handed up his
replying affidavit. He submitted that the respondent was wasting the
court’s
time as they merely recited what he said in his
founding affidavit. He also states in his replying affidavit that he
was sentenced
in October 2014 to 16 years and thus became eligible
for parole in 2022. He states he qualifies for parole, yet he is
still in
custody. He argues that he is two years beyond his release
date. He states that the respondents criminally blocked his release
on parole. He regards the committal that the respondents allude to in
Ebongweni as unlawful and adds again that it “was proven
to be
fraudulent”. He, however, does not understand the relevance of
that saga in this court.
[15]
Apart
from the applications, Mr Ndhlovu also made submissions to the court,
also on the Ebongweni issue. It should be stated that
this issue was
before Mia J in January 2024, and she handed down a judgment in
Ndhlovu
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services.
[3]
Mia J had to review an application to transfer the applicant to
Ebongweni. This judgment referred to the incident in Leeuwkop
Correctional Centre. The incident occurred in May 2022, where inmates
in possession of knives attempted to assault Correctional
Centre
officials, resulting in two inmates being killed. There was a
lockdown, and the cells the applicant occupied, along with
thirty
others, were searched. The prison officials found the applicant’s
laptop, which he declared he used for study purposes,
along with a
cell phone, which he denied was his.
[16]
A disciplinary inquiry was held that he did not attend, and he
was not informed of the outcome. However, he understand that he was
suspected of being involved in the assault incident at Leeuwkop
relating to the stabbing of the correctional centre officials and
the
possession of the cell phone. They were, therefore, transferred to
Ebongweni, and the matter was transferred to the Hawks.
As far as he
was seeking to have that disciplinary set aside, the court found that
he had not exhausted the internal remedies and
that the court was not
able to consider that matter in terms of PAJA. The court dismissed
that application.
[17]
After hearing the applicant, there were two issues in terms of
the notice of motion to determine: the harassment and, linked to
that, the applicant’s nationality and the fact that he is
indicated as an immigrant on the system. The issue of parole was
not
raised in the notice of motion.
[18]
During
the hearing, I indicated that there was not enough evidence before
the court to make a finding in line with what the applicant
sought in
terms of the notice of motion or any other issue he raised in the
court. As for the harassment claim, it was not clear
who was
harassing him or what actions he deemed to be “harassment”.
The respondents’ version is that he was not
seen by the parole
board, where he claims to have been harassed. The respondents'
version prevails in terms of
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
.
[4]
[19]
He was unhappy, but absent proof of harassment and
intimidation based on answerable allegations about his nationality, I
cannot
grant the relief sought in his notice of motion. However, to
get clarity on the nationality issue, I informed Mr Ndhlovu that I
would order that his identity documents be validated, and if it is a
valid document and he is South African, that this be reflected
in the
system. I should add that he handed up a paper that indicated that he
is classified as an “immigrant” on the
system, but it was
not clear where the paper comes from or what it pertains to.
[20]
Ms Ali explained that the issue with the identity document is
not as straightforward as the applicant stated. However, she agreed
that an order to verify the identity document might help resolve the
issue and that once that is addressed, ensure that this reflects
on
the system if it does not already do so. I asked Ms Ali to draft an
order to that effect and email it to me.
[21]
Despite not seeking any relief regarding the parole in his
notice of motion, Mr Ndhlovu got angry when Ms Ali raised the issue
of
his status. He insisted that he was not a maximum offender and
insisted that the court must help with the parole issue. No document
or affidavit was uploaded to confirm the unlawfulness of his
detention in Ebongweni. Ms Ali, for the state, relied on the
affidavit
from the second respondent, where it is explained that he
is a maximum offender. Ms Ali informed the court that he has not
appealed
or reviewed the disciplinary hearing outcome, as Mia J
explained, must happen. The disciplinary committee's finding thus
stands,
which is why he is regarded as a maximum offender. I then
informed Mr Ndhlovu that I could grant an order that the first to
fifth
respondents must clarify his offender status for the next court
hearing the matter having clarity on it, but also, should he wish
to
take that classification on review, that the relevant information is
available.
[22]
Since this special court for incarcerated people does not sit
on regular days, it was not possible to make a
rule nisi
for
the respondents to return on a specific day. I was assured that
postponing the matter
sine die
solves that conundrum. Ms Ali
emailed the draft order after court on the Thursday, as requested. I
did not sign it, as I intended
to write a judgment to explain the
reasons for the order for Mr Ndhlovu’s benefit.
[23]
On Monday, 26 August 2024, I received an email through my
registrar sent from “UMEH Group” to inquire about the
court
order. The email was not signed. The writer explained that they
expected the order to be emailed the next day and that it would
also
be emailed to his PA. This never happened. The writer referred to
this as an injustice in the hands of the courts. In the
email, it was
noted that the writer is displeased by how they are being treated by
the court officers, presumably because they
have not received a copy
of the order yet. I have not written a judgment by Monday. I
considered Mr Ndhlovu’s request and
decided to sign a draft
order, indicating on the order that the reasons for the order will
follow.
[24]
As I prepared this written judgment, I noted that the first
paragraph in the order did not contain what was agreed upon in court:
if Mr Ndhlovu’s citizenship is verified, it should reflect
correctly on the system. I have clarified this agreement in the
order.
[25]
I requested Mr Ndhlovu to send his replying affidavit via
email so that it can be uploaded to CaseLines to ensure the record is
complete. Along with the replying affidavit, Mr Ndhlovu sent other
affidavits and attachments. I have not read the other attachments
and
the “supplementary affidavit”, as it was not part of the
documents filed for the hearing on 22 August 2024 for
me to consider.
If the outcome of this case aggrieves Mr Ndhlovu, the correct
procedure would be to apply for leave to appeal.
[26]
Should the applicant launch further applications on the issue
of his nationality, the disciplinary hearing, his classification as
a
medium or maximum offender or his parole, it would be helpful if the
outcome of the verification of his identity document, as
well as
proof of his offender status, together with all the judgments and
orders handed down by the courts concerning the applicant,
is
uploaded onto CaseLines so that the court can better understand the
issues.
[27]
Lastly, I must point out that Mr Ndhlovu's allegations are
serious. Should they be proven to be true, that would indeed amount
to
an infringement on his rights to equality and dignity. Regardless
of Mr Ndhlovu’s nationality, he has a right not to be
discriminated
against because of his nationality or perceived
nationality. Xenophobia has no place in a constitutional democracy.
Order
[27]
The following order is made:
1. The First to
Fifth Respondents are required to verify whether the identity
document of the Applicant is indeed a valid
South African identity
document. Once the Applicant’s nationality is verified, this
should reflect correctly on the correctional
services system.
2. The application
is postponed
sine
die
for
First to Fifth Respondents to provide proof clarifying Applicant’s
prison status, whether Applicant is classified as
a medium or maximum
offender in terms of its Records.
WJ du Plessis
Acting Judge of the High
Court
For the Applicants: Mr
Ndhlovu, self-represented.
For the Respondents: N
Ali, instructed by the state attorney.
[1]
17
of 2011.
[2]
72
of 1982.
[3]
[2024] ZAGPJHC 24.
[4]
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
[1984] (3) SA 623
(A).
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