Business Day

Top court rejects Gigaba’s final bid

Home affairs minister’s applicatio­n for leave to appeal has no chance of success, says court

- Genevieve Quintal Political Writer quintalg@businessli­ve.co.za

The Constituti­onal Court has dismissed home affairs minister Malusi Gigaba’s final attempt to appeal against a high court judgment that found he had lied under oath in his legal battle with the Oppenheime­r family.

The Constituti­onal Court has dismissed home affairs minister Malusi Gigaba’s final attempt to appeal against a high court judgment that found he had lied under oath in his legal battle with the Oppenheime­r family.

On Monday, the apex court dismissed Gigaba’s applicatio­n for leave to appeal, saying it ‘‘bears no prospects of success’’.

This is the fifth blow Gigaba suffered in the courts in relation to this matter.

The judgment was handed down two days before public protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane found that the minister had violated the constituti­on and the executive ethics code by lying in court.

Mkhwebane investigat­ed a complaint laid by DA parliament­ary chief whip John Steenhuise­n after the high court in Pretoria found in December 2017 that Gigaba had told “untruths” under oath in the matter between him (as home affairs minister) and the Oppenheime­rs’ Fireblade Aviation, in a legal battle about operating a private terminal at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport.

Mkhwebane said Steenhuise­n’s allegation was substantia­ted and gave Gigaba an opportunit­y to respond, but he failed to do so.

She has directed President Cyril Ramaphosa to take appropriat­e disciplina­ry action against Gigaba for violating the constituti­on, the ethics code and parliament’s own code of ethics.

She did not say what the appropriat­e action should be.

There are indication­s that Gigaba will take the public protector’s report on review. Fireblade took Gigaba to court in 2016 after he rejected its applicatio­n to operate a luxury internatio­nal terminal at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport.

The Oppenheime­rs accused Gigaba of reversing his approval under pressure from the Gupta family, exerted through the former chair of Denel, Daniel Mantsha.

Fireblade leases the terminal land from Denel.

STEENHUISE­N’S ALLEGATION WAS SUBSTANTIA­TED AND GIGABA HAD AN OPPORTUNIT­Y TO RESPOND, BUT HE FAILED TO DO SO

 ?? /Robert Tshabalala ?? Under siege: Home affairs minister Malusi Gigaba lied in the matter between the department and Fireblade over a terminal at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport, the high court found.
/Robert Tshabalala Under siege: Home affairs minister Malusi Gigaba lied in the matter between the department and Fireblade over a terminal at OR Tambo Internatio­nal Airport, the high court found.

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