Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1136South Africa
Mfalapitsa v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (2023/060969) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1136; 2025 (1) SACR 482 (GJ) (11 November 2024)
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mfalapitsa v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (2023/060969) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1136; 2025 (1) SACR 482 (GJ) (11 November 2024)
Mfalapitsa v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others (2023/060969) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1136; 2025 (1) SACR 482 (GJ) (11 November 2024)
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sino date 11 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL – Amnesty –
Review
of refusal
–
Murder
– Amnesty allowed for unlawful acts committed under
Apartheid, provided that those acts were associated with
political
objective – Amnesty committee not convinced that such link
existed – No evidence that deceased boys
were about to carry
out paramilitary action except at behest of applicant –
Decision to murder was wholly disproportionate
to political
objective – Majority decision was reasonable –
Application dismissed –
Promotion of National Unity and
Reconciliation Act 34 of 1995
,
s 20(3)(f).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 11 November 2024
Case
No. 2023-060969
In
the matter between:
TLHOMEDI
EPHRAIM MFALAPITSA
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
First
Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Respondent
DIRECTOR
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
DENZIL
POTGIETER NO
Fourth
Respondent
CHRIS
DE JAGER NO
Fifth
Respondent
LEAH
GCABASHE NO
Sixth
Respondent
MAIDE
CHRISTINA SELEBI
Seventh
Respondent
THANDI
CAMIL NHLAPO
Eighth
Respondent
TSHEPO
MOKGATLE
Ninth
Respondent
TRYPHINA
MOKGATLE
Tenth
Respondent
Summary
Section 20
(3) (f) of the
Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act 34 of 1995
discussed and applied.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 15 February 1982, the applicant, Mr. Mfalapitsa, locked
four teenage boys in a building on an abandoned mine. The building
had
been rigged with explosives. Mr. Mfalapitsa had told the boys
that he would train them to carry out acts of resistance to the
Apartheid
regime. He took them to the mine under the pretext of
teaching them how to use explosives. He told the boys to wait in the
building
while he fetched equipment necessary to conduct the lesson.
Once he had locked the door, Mr. Mfalapitsa ran. That was the signal
for a Mr. Rorich, who is not a party to these proceedings, to
detonate the explosives. Three of the boys, Eustice “Bimbo”
Madikela, Ntshingo Mataboge and Fanyana Nhlapo, were killed
instantly. The fourth, Zandisile Musi, survived with life-changing
injuries, but has died in the years since the explosion.
2
These boys became known as the “COSAS Four”. After
the Apartheid state collapsed in the early 1990s, Mr. Mfalapitsa and
Mr. Rorich applied for immunity from prosecution for their part in
murdering the COSAS Four. Their application was made under chapter
4
of the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act 34 of 1995
(“the Reconciliation Act”), which allowed for
amnesty for
unlawful acts committed under Apartheid, provided that those acts
were “associated with a political objective”,
and that
they were proportionate to that objective. Amnesty would have
provided the two men with complete indemnity for their part
in the
murder of the COSAS Four. As part of his application, Mr. Mfalapitsa
frankly admitted his role in the murder, and sought
to persuade the
committee that heard his amnesty application that his conduct had a
proportionate link to a political objective.
3
The amnesty committee was not convinced that such a link
existed. The committee denied Mr. Mfalapitsa’s application on
29
May 2001. That left Mr. Mfalapitsa vulnerable to prosecution. But
prosecutions for atrocities committed under Apartheid have been
a
long time coming. Mr. Mfalapitsa’s trial on charges of
murdering the COSAS Four is set down in this court for 20 November
2024, nearly twenty-three and a half years after his amnesty
application was refused, and nearly forty-three years since the boys
died.
4
Mr. Mfalapitsa now seeks to review and set aside the amnesty
committee’s decision to refuse the indemnity he sought. He also
asks that I substitute the committee’s decision for one
granting him amnesty. That would obviously have the effect of
permanently
preventing his prosecution for the murder of the COSAS
Four.
5
Mr. Mfalapitsa’s application is hopelessly out of time.
However, I have decided to overlook his delay in bringing the review
application, and to dismiss the application on its merits. In what
follows, I give my reasons for that decision.
Mr.
Mfalapitsa, Vlakplaas and the COSAS Four
6
Mr. Mfalapitsa and Mr. Rorich were joined in their amnesty
applications by three further individuals: Jan Coetzee, Willem Schoon
and Abraham Grobbelaar. These individuals, all of whom are now dead,
had varying degrees of command responsibility for a special
unit
within the Apartheid state’s security apparatus. That unit was
known as “Vlakplaas”, after the farm at which
it was
housed.
7
My sense is that Vlakplaas is no longer as notorious as it
once was. It is accordingly important to emphasise, in a judgment of
this nature, just how macabre the Apartheid state’s efforts to
sustain itself were. Apartheid was, for the most part, enforced
by
law. There were the everyday humiliations inflicted on the majority
of South Africans through what was known as “petty
Apartheid”:
the segregation of public facilities and private life through a
system of legally sanctioned racial preference.
There was also the
deep structure of economic, social and geographical subordination,
known as “grand Apartheid”, which
was enforced through
the pass laws, the Group Areas Act 41 of 1950 (together with its
amendments and successor statutes), and the
other laws that
controlled the jobs Black people could do, the property they could
keep, and the places they could live. Those
laws also sanctioned the
arbitrary arrest, detention, incarceration and execution of the
Apartheid regime’s opponents. The
legacy of these laws, the
economic system they created and sustained, and the conduct of the
state and judiciary that enforced
them, still blight our attempts to
build and maintain a free, equal and dignified society.
8
But Vlakplaas, like the Apartheid state’s other
clandestine policing and military operations, was something
different. It
existed beyond the laws that even the Apartheid state
could conceive. Vlakplaas was a death squad, charged with the torture
and
extra-judicial execution of identified opponents of the Apartheid
state.
9
Mr. Mfalapitsa was a foot soldier, or “askari”, in
the Vlakplaas apparatus. He had once been in exile, serving in
Umkhonto
we Sizwe (“the MK”), which was the African
National Congress’ military wing. However, he had become
disillusioned,
or perhaps merely homesick, and decided to return to
South Africa. He handed himself in to the authorities. He ended up
working
for Vlakplaas, presumably because the security police thought
that he would be of some use in identifying and eliminating recruits,
or potential recruits, to the liberation movement. There is some
obscurity on the papers about the extent to which Mr. Mfalapitsa
volunteered to work for the security police. Mr. Mfalapitsa says he
was essentially dragooned into the Vlakplaas unit. The respondents
in
this application – consisting of the various state entities
responsible for the administration of the Reconciliation Act
and for
Mr Mfalapitsa’s prosecution; the members of the amnesty
committee that considered Mr. Mfalapitsa’s amnesty
application,
cited in their official capacities; and the families of the COSAS
Four – say that the facts suggest a more enthusiastic
participation in Vlakplaas than that.
10
Whatever the truth of the matter, Mr. Mfalapitsa soon became
involved in attempts to identify and eliminate potential threats to
the Apartheid regime. It was in this context that he met and
befriended Zandisile Musi. Mr. Musi was a member of COSAS. COSAS was
an anti-Apartheid student movement, founded in 1979. It had links
with the ANC in exile. It was later to become a prominent member
of
the United Democratic Front, which was the principal domestic vehicle
for resistance to Apartheid after 1983. Mr. Mfalapitsa
knew and was
apparently close to Mr. Musi’s older brothers, with whom he had
served in the MK. There is, again, some obscurity
on the papers about
whether Mr. Mfalapitsa knew that Mr. Musi was a member of COSAS. Mr.
Mfalapitsa initially denied it, and the
committee that considered his
amnesty application accepted his denial. However, Mr. Mfalapitsa now
asks me to accept that he did
know that Mr. Musi was a member of
COSAS.
11
Mr. Musi told Mr. Mfalapitsa that he and three of his friends
wanted to go into exile and train with the MK. Mr. Mfalapitsa
dissuaded
them from that course of action by telling them that he
would train them as resistance fighters himself. He encouraged them
to
identify targets for potential paramilitary action, and promised
to train them in the techniques necessary to carry out that sort
of
action. The boys obliged by identifying a security police officer,
one of their teachers and a local councillor as potential
targets. At
Mr. Mfalapitsa’s urging, they drew up a sketch plan of the
targets’ houses.
12
All the while, Mr. Mfalapitsa relayed details of his
interactions with the boys to Mr. Coetzee. Mr. Coetzee gave the
instruction
that the boys were to be killed in a manner that could be
made to look like an accident. A plan was hatched to lure the boys to
an abandoned mine under the pretence of giving them explosives
training. They would then be killed in an apparent mishap during
the
course of that training. That is what led to the 15 February 1982
explosion that killed three out of four of them.
The
amnesty committee’s decision
13
Faced with these facts, the amnesty committee, consisting of
the fourth, fifth and sixth respondents, decided by a majority (the
fifth respondent, Mr. De Jager, dissenting) that Mr. Mfalapitsa and
his co-applicants had failed to establish that the boys’
murder
was proportionate to the political objective they sought to achieve.
The requirement of proportionality is set out in section
20 (3) (f)
of the Reconciliation Act. Applicants for amnesty had to establish
that the act or omission for which they sought indemnity
had a
sufficiently direct, proximate and proportional relationship to the
political objective the act or omission was meant to
promote.
14
The text and purpose of the Reconciliation Act make clear that
the proportionality of the act or omission must be assessed in the
context of the evidence as a whole. In other words, whether there was
proportionality between a political objective and the act
or omission
for which amnesty was sought depended critically on the circumstances
in which the act or omission took place. While
proportionality
generally requires a sufficiently close link between means and ends,
just how close that link had to be was left
up to the amnesty
committee seized with a particular application.
15
The majority of the amnesty committee approached the facts on
the basis that Mr. Mfalapitsa had made full disclosure of the act for
which he sought amnesty (which was itself a requirement of the
Reconciliation Act); that his version was to be believed; that the
object sought to be achieved by the murder of the COSAS Four was
sufficiently “political” to qualify for amnesty; and
that
Mr. Mfalapitsa’s application otherwise complied with the
requirements for amnesty set out in the Act.
16
Even assuming all this in Mr. Mfalapitsa’s favour,
however, the majority of the committee could not accept that, when
evaluated
in context, Mr. Mfalapitsa’s participation in the
murders was proportionate to the objective sought to be achieved. The
majority
of the committee found that the COSAS Four had essentially
been entrapped by Mr. Mfalapitsa and lured to their deaths. There
was,
the majority found, no evidence that the boys were about to
carry out paramilitary action except at the behest of Mr. Mfalapitsa
himself. Mr. Mfalapitsa and his commanders at Vlakplaas had in fact
created the threat they then sought to eliminate. The mere
fact that
the boys wanted to join the MK in exile was not enough to make their
killing proportionate to Vlakplaas’ objectives,
and the only
way that they could otherwise have carried out any paramilitary
action would have been with Mr. Mfalapitsa’s
encouragement and
assistance. Even with Mr. Mfalapitsa’s support, the boys were
nowhere near carrying out the operations
they had outlined to him. It
was accordingly unnecessary to kill them to prevent such operations
from being carried out, and the
decision to do so was wholly
disproportionate to the political objective it was meant to achieve.
17
In his minority decision, Mr. De Jager agreed with the
majority’s view that all the requirements for the grant of
amnesty
short of proportionality had been met. However, on the facts,
he found that the proportionality requirement had been met too.
Although
it does not expressly say so, the gravamen of the minority
decision appears to be that, in the context of widespread political
unrest, the mere identification of the boys as “supporters of
the liberation forces” was sufficient to create a
proportionality
between the political objective of maintaining the
Apartheid state and the decision to kill them (see page 7 of the
minority decision).
18
I now turn to Mr. Mfalapitsa’s review.
The
lateness of the review
19
Mr. Mthembu, who appeared for Mr. Mfalapitsa, contended that
the review application was brought in terms of the common law. In
this
he was mistaken. Except perhaps when dealing with some decisions
of private bodies which do not entail the exercise of a public
power,
a court’s powers of review have long been governed by section 1
(c) of the Constitution, 1996, and, where the decision
sought to be
reviewed is administrative action, by the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
20
It seems plain to me that the decision of the amnesty
committee constitutes administrative action within the meaning given
to that
term under PAJA. The committee’s decision was rendered
shortly after PAJA came into effect. It was plainly an exercise of
a
public power in terms of legislation that had an adverse, direct and
external legal effect on Mr. Mfalapitsa’s rights.
The principal
reported judgments dealing with reviews of amnesty committee
decisions confirm that the amnesty committees established
under the
Reconciliation Act were administrative bodies making decisions of an
administrative nature (see
Simelane v Minister of Justice
2009
(5) SA 485
(C), especially paragraphs 11 and 40;
Derby-Lewis v
Chairman, Amnesty Committee
2001 (3) SA 1033
(C) at 1056D and
1065E-F; and
Nieuwoudt v Chairman, Amnesty Subcommittee
2002
(3) SA 143
(C) at 155D-E. See also
Sidumo v Rustenburg Platinum
Mines Ltd
2008 (2) SA 24
(CC), paragraph 83).
21
Section 7 (1) (b) of PAJA requires a review to be brought
within 180 days of the applicant becoming aware of the administrative
action and the reasons for it, or within 180 days of the point at
which the applicant ought reasonably to have been aware of the
act
and the reasons.
22
The amnesty committee’s decisions were rendered on 29
May 2001. There is no serious dispute that Mr. Mfalapitsa became
aware
of the majority decision on or shortly after that date.
However, Mr. Mthembu contended in his written submissions that Mr.
Mfalapitsa
only became aware of the minority decision on 4 May 2023.
At the hearing, I engaged counsel on the question of whether, if that
is true, Mr. Mfalapitsa could be said to have acquired knowledge of
the reasons given for the amnesty committee’s decision
before 4
May 2023, because the reasons for the amnesty’s committee’s
decision must be the reasons of the minority as
well as the majority.
Both Mr. Deeplal, who appeared together with Mr.
Masitenyane
for the Minister of Justice and the prosecutorial authorities, and
Mr. Varney, who appeared for the families of the
COSAS Four, argued
that Mr. Mfalapitsa need only have known about the reasons for the
majority decision to have “become aware”
of the amnesty
committee’s decision and the reasons given for it.
23
I am not sure that is correct, but I need not decide the
issue. This is because the version that Mr. Mfalapitsa lacked
knowledge
of the minority decision until 4 May 2023 is nowhere
confirmed under oath by Mr. Mfalapitsa himself. Absent an explanation
from
Mr. Mfalapitsa of how he came to overlook the minority decision
despite becoming aware of the majority decision published
simultaneously
with it, I cannot accept the contention that the
minority decision only recently came to his attention.
24
Mr. Mfalapitsa’s review was instituted on 11 July 2022,
over twenty-one years after the amnesty committee published its
decision,
and well over twenty years after the period for instituting
a PAJA review of that decision expired. Mr. Mfalapitsa seeks what he
calls “condonation” of that delay in his notice of
motion, but it was accepted at the hearing that this was in substance
an application for an extension of time under section 9 (1) of PAJA.
I can grant such an application if the interests of justice
so
require.
25
Mr. Mfalapitsa’s explanation for the delay is extremely
weak. It boils down to the proposition that he expected that he would
never be prosecuted for his role in the murder of the COSAS Four, and
that this expectation hardened as the years went by. It was
also
contended that Mr. Mfalapitsa lacked the resources necessary to
secure legal representation, but next to nothing is said about
the
steps he took to secure such representation in the two decades he had
to find it. Accordingly, I reject the contention that
legal
representation could not have been obtained if Mr. Mfalapitsa had
sought it. It seems clear to me that Mr. Mfalapitsa’s
interest
in challenging the amnesty committee’s decision was only
excited once he was charged with murdering the COSAS Four.
26
Strong prospects of success on the merits of a review will
often compensate for a weak explanation for delay, but I do not think
that Mr. Mfalapitsa’s prospects are so strong as to justify
overlooking a two decade delay.
27
Nevertheless, I think that it is, overall, in the interests of
justice that I consider the merits of the review application. If the
review application is good, then the prosecution should not be
allowed to proceed. However, if the application is bad, then it
should not be allowed to cast a shadow over the legitimacy of Mr.
Mfalapitsa’s long-delayed prosecution. The interests of
justice
accordingly require that the application be considered on its merits,
so that the prosecution shortly to be pursued may
either be
discontinued or placed on the firmest footing possible.
28
In argument, Mr. Deeplal and Mr. Varney readily conceded that
the unusual facts of this case warrant the consideration of the
review
on the merits. I think that concession entails the proposition
that it is in the interests of justice to extend the time available
to institute the review in order for those merits to be considered.
There is no other reason not to consider the merits. While
a Rule 53
record was neither filed by the Minister nor formally waived by Mr.
Mfalapitsa, Mr. Mthembu urged me to find that the
material necessary
to dispose of the application was all before me. In addition to the
parties’ affidavits and the amnesty
committee’s decision,
I was also given a transcript of the amnesty committee’s
hearing. There is no suggestion that
I lack the material necessary to
make a just decision on the merits of the review. Although Mr.
Mfalapitsa’s application
was not explicitly pleaded under PAJA,
there is no real obstacle to my dealing with the application under
that statute, and no
prejudice to the parties if I do so.
29
The time available to institute the review will accordingly be
extended to 11 July 2023.
The
merits of the review
30
Though they are not a model of precision, if they are read
sympathetically for their substance, Mr. Mfalapitsa’s
affidavits
advance the simple proposition that the majority of the
amnesty committee was legally mistaken in applying the
proportionality
requirement as it did, and that the looser and more
forgiving approach of the minority is to be preferred. In substance,
the attack
is really one of error of law under section 6 (2) (d) of
PAJA.
31
So construed, I think that attack is misguided. Section 20 (3)
(f) of the Reconciliation Act requires an examination of “the
relationship between the act, omission or offence and the political
objective pursued, and in particular the directness and proximity
of
the relationship and the proportionality of the act, omission or
offence to the objective pursued”. This entails a granular
analysis of the particular context of the act for which indemnity is
sought, and an assessment of whether, in that particular context,
there was a proportionality between the act and the objective.
32
The majority decision provides exactly that sort of analysis.
It carefully isolates Mr. Mfalapitsa’s situation and the
circumstances
that he was presented with. The majority found that
there were courses of action open to him, and to the other applicants
for amnesty
before it, short of the murders and maiming that they
committed. The essence of the proportionality enquiry is to identify
the
best way reasonably open to a person of achieving a particular
objective in a given set of circumstances. An act that does
significantly
more than it needs to in order to achieve a particular
end is generally disproportionate. In the context of this case,
killing
the COSAS Four was substantially more than was required in
order to eliminate any threat they posed to the Apartheid regime in
general or to the identified objects of their paramilitary plans in
particular.
33
To the extent that it may be contended that Mr. Mfalapitsa had
to kill the boys because he was commanded to do so, I think the
majority
of the amnesty committee was right to point out that he
played a critical role in talking up the threat they posed and in
provoking
the order to kill that he eventually received. Mr.
Mfalapitsa encouraged the boys to become the threats that he was
later ordered
to eliminate. He was his commanders’ only source
of information about the boys and their activities. I think that the
majority
decision was correct to point out that the boys had not yet
become a source of any imminent threat. But even if they had, it was
only because Mr. Mfalapitsa had made them so. In these circumstances,
Mr. Mfalapitsa can hardly be heard to complain that he had
no choice
but to carry out the order to kill them. He took active steps which
he must have known would create the context in which
the order was
very likely to be given. There was no evidence before the amnesty
committee that he was compelled to take any of
those steps.
34
The minority decision takes account of none of this. It
instead takes the view that, in the fog of war, atrocities are
committed
on both sides, and that too close a relationship between
means and ends ought not to be required. In the words of the minority
decision, there was “an ongoing war between the security forces
and the liberation movements . . . the killing of supporters
of the
liberation forces by one combating party is as far remote or as
proximate to that cause, as the killings by the opposition
party of
their counterparts are to their cause” (see page 7 of the
minority decision).
35
This is precisely the kind of bland equivocation that section
20 (3) (f) rules out. Section 20 (3) (f) makes clear that a killing
is not just a killing. It is a conscious act performed in a
particular set of circumstances. Section 20 (3) (f) recognises that,
even in the context of war, or widespread civil unrest, the
protagonists can and do deliberate over the proper and most effective
courses of action to take, and that they generally have the space in
which to pursue more or less destructive methods to achieve
their
objectives. In order to obtain indemnity for what even the Apartheid
state would officially have deemed criminal offences,
section 20 (3)
(f) requires that a proportionality between a political objective and
a specific act or omission be shown. There
is no reason to doubt that
the majority of the amnesty committee was correct in deciding that
Mr. Mfalapitsa had shown no such
proportionality.
36
This conclusion means that it is unnecessary to consider
whether Mr. Mfalapitsa was forced to join Vlakplaas, or whether he
knew
that Mr. Musi was a member of COSAS. Even if I were to accept,
as Mr. Mfalapitsa urges, that he was an unwilling recruit, and that
he knew of Mr. Musi’s COSAS membership, that would make no
difference to my evaluation of the decision to refuse him amnesty.
37
There was, finally, a suggestion in the papers, which was not
pursued with any vigour in argument, that Mr. Mfalapitsa believed
that the COSAS Four had been planted by his commanders to assess his
honesty and effectiveness as an askari. The suggestion seems
to have
been that he could not act to protect them for fear of exposing
himself as unreliable, or as a traitor, to his commanders.
In my
view, that contention is fanciful. It is inconsistent with the role
Mr. Mfalapitsa himself played in identifying and grooming
the COSAS
Four as Vlakplaas targets.
38
Other than by relying on the minority decision, Mr. Mfalapitsa
takes no significant issue with the reasoning and conclusions of the
amnesty committee’s majority decision. It seems to me that the
majority decision was reasonable, factually accurate and entirely
consistent with the applicable law. The review application must fail.
Costs
39
Both Mr. Varney and Mr. Deeplal were fiercely critical
of the decision to bring this application. They painted it as
frivolous,
and doomed to predictable failure. They were right to
point out that the application was very weak, and that it was
inartfully
pursued. The reasons I have given for entertaining the
application on its merits have less to do with its inherent strength
than
with the need to ensure that the prosecution Mr. Mfalapitsa now
faces can proceed on a proper footing without delay.
40
Nevertheless, Mr. Varney accepted that, notwithstanding these
unfortunate features of the case, and given that Mr. Mfalapitsa is
represented by a public defender at Legal Aid South Africa, who has
had scant exposure to civil litigation, it would be inappropriate
to
mulct Mr. Mfalapitsa in costs. Indeed, Mr. Mthembu frankly admitted
that he was arguing his first civil case in the High Court
before me,
and appeared not to be fully acquainted with the procedures
applicable to PAJA reviews.
41
Mr. Deeplal sought costs despite these features of the case.
However, I do not think that a costs order should be made. The most
compelling reason for that view is that these proceedings are so
closely associated with a criminal prosecution – in which
there
is generally no question of ordering costs against an accused –
that mulcting Mr. Mfalapitsa in costs would not be
appropriate. In
addition, and despite his inexperience, Mr. Mthembu’s
good-natured and earnest pursuit of the application
on Mr.
Mfalapitsa’s behalf was far from vexatious. Each party will pay
their own costs.
Order
42
Accordingly –
42.1
The time available to institute this application is extended
to 11 July 2023.
42.2
The application is dismissed, with each party paying their own
costs.
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
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 November 2024.
HEARD
ON:
DECIDED
ON:
15
October 2024
11
November 2024
For
the Applicant:
I
Mthembu
Instructed
by
Legal Aid SA
For
the First to
Third
Respondents:
N
Deeplal
S
Masitenyane
Instructed
by the State Attorney
For
the Seventh to
Tenth
Respondents:
H
Varney
(Heads
of argument drawn by H Varney and G Snyman)
Instructed
by the Legal Resources Centre
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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