Sunday Times

Black justice official target of racist FB posts

- By KHANYI NDABENI

● Two Department of Justice employees have been suspended after they referred to a black colleague as a baboon and a monkey.

In several Facebook posts, accountant Lourens Botes and chief clerk Natascha Steynberg Roos referred to senior accounting clerk Wisani Mkhari in derogatory terms as they discussed work politics.

In the first incident, on March 25 2017, Steynberg Roos wrote a post to Botes on her timeline saying: “Did you see that baboon send email to chief director about overtime period from 2am and the computer stolen.”

In a later post to Botes that day she wrote: “That baboon dink dit is sy company [thinks it is his company] ek haat hierdie mense [I hate these people] yesses! he must voetsek already!” Botes responds: “haha praat more. delete post pls.”

On June 1 Steynberg Roos posted to Botes on her timeline: “Did you hear what your bobbejan friend Mr Wisani did today?”

On November 1 Botes wrote a post to Steynberg Roos saying: “Did you see that monkey request leave audit?”

On November 20 Steynberg Roos posted yet another message to Botes saying: “That baboon is going to a disciplina­ry hearing!! God is goed [God is good].”

Mkhari, 41, was alerted to the posts two weeks ago and laid a complaint. The posts, which the Sunday Times has seen, have been deleted.

Mkhari said he had been traumatise­d by the posts. “It is the same as calling someone the K-word. The fact that they posted it on Facebook several times means they are used to calling black people all sorts of derogatory names.”

Mkhari said he had raised issues of alleged unfair discrimina­tion in chief financial officer Louraine Rossouw’s department in Pretoria, to no avail.

Justice Department spokesman Stephens Mahlangu said the department was investigat­ing and that Steynberg Roos and Botes had been suspended.

“All such allegation­s are considered in a serious light by the department, and therefore a decision was taken to immediatel­y remove the individual­s from the workplace, firstly by arrangemen­t between the supervisor and the colleagues and subsequent­ly via precaution­ary suspension­s, after due process was followed.

“The department initiated a forensic/technical investigat­ion, which included independen­t services, and this included an assessment of the cellular telephones of the colleagues against which the allegation were made.

“After completion of the technical assessment, the matter was referred to the employee relations component for possible misconduct investigat­ion, [which] should be finalised soon.”

Questions sent to Botes and Steynberg Roos on Facebook went unanswered. Rossouw referred all questions to Mahlangu, who said he could not provide contact numbers for Steynberg Roos and Botes because it might jeopardise the internal investigat­ion if they spoke to the media.

National Health Education and Allied Workers’ Union chairman Dennis Mulidzwi said the department had not given any support to Mkhari.

“The department was supposed to send Mkhari for trauma counsellin­g.”

Mulidzwi said Nehawu had staged a protest in front of the department’s national office on Friday last week, soon after learning about the Facebook posts. It also complained to the Human Rights Commission.

“In the past we have lodged several racial and discrimina­tion cases in the department of the chief financial officer.

“Some of the cases go nowhere because the majority of the people who hold senior positions are white and they protect each other.”

However, Mahlangu said of the 266 filled posts within the CFO branch, 38 were filled by white employees.

He said all five chief directors were black, as were six of the eight directors, nine of the 13 deputy directors and 22 of the 27 assistant directors.

HRC provincial manager Buang Jones said the complaint had been brought to its attention last week and a preliminar­y assessment determined that there was a prima facie violation of the right to equality and human dignity.

“The commission will consult with the complainan­t and thereafter determine whether to institute legal proceeding­s in the Equality Court or whether the complaint merits a full investigat­ion,” said Jones.

 ??  ?? Natascha Steynberg Roos, above, and her correspond­ence with Lourens Botes, below.
Natascha Steynberg Roos, above, and her correspond­ence with Lourens Botes, below.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa