Sunday Times

African spirituali­ty on the stand

Tribunal to weigh spiritual journey and delayed judgments

- By FRANNY RABKIN

● The “question of African spirituali­ty must be put on the judicial agenda”, traditiona­l healer and spiritual leader Gogo Aubrey Matshiqi told a judicial conduct tribunal investigat­ing the possible impeachmen­t of Gauteng judge Nomonde Mngqibisa-Thusi.

Matshiqi’s evidence was summarised in written submission­s to the tribunal’s panel. The oral hearing, in which Matshiqi testified, was held partially behind closed doors to protect her privacy. However, the written submission­s have been released to the Sunday Times with the permission of the tribunal chair, retired Constituti­onal Court justice Chris Jafta.

Mngqibisa-Thusi faces possible impeachmen­t for 27 long-delayed judgments — some outstandin­g for more than a year — over about two-and-a-half years. It is the first judicial conduct tribunal dealing with longdelaye­d judgments as a possible basis for impeachmen­t.

But it is also the first time a judge has defended herself against possible impeachmen­t by relying on a spiritual calling and mental health challenges. In written submission­s, Mngqibisa-Thusi’s legal representa­tive, Gauteng judge Gcina Malindi, referred to a global survey that explored the links between judges’ wellbeing and judicial integrity. Malindi said the survey found that 92% of judges are “subjected to stress occasioned by excessive workloads” and 68% of them feel that talking about it is “taboo”.

On top of these, the summary of the evidence in the written submission­s reveals that during the relevant period, a wide range of personal circumstan­ces proved challengin­g for Mngqibisa-Thusi. Her husband got Covid-19. Her mother fell ill and eventually died. Her son struggled with addiction. She broke her elbow and wrist, the one that she used for writing.

Malindi quoted from another article in a journal that said women judges were “particular­ly prone to stress ... exacerbate­d by, inter alia, personal factors, but primarily family responsibi­lity which must be balanced with their responsibi­lities and duties as a judge, which many male judges never experience, this amounting to a level of corollary gender bias”.

In the evidence summarised in the written submission­s, Mngqibisa-Thusi and Matshiqi revealed that she had been struggling with a spiritual calling since the age of nine but had resisted it because of her strong Christian beliefs. As a result, she had periods in which she suffered from “migraines, visions, nightmares, disorienta­tion and mindlessne­ss”, which had affected her work.

But she had now “fully recovered from the debilitati­ng challenges that prevented her from fulfilling her responsibi­lities”, said Malindi, and would be able to cope in future. A similar prognosis was reached in a report by a clinical psychologi­st in relation to her diagnosis and treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), according to Malindi’s submission­s.

Matshiqi argued that while the constituti­on said South Africa belonged to all who live in it, in reality it “belongs to those who conquered her, which has imposed a social, cultural and spiritual reality in which a numerical minority has become a cultural majority whose ways of being, seeing and doing ... have become the dominant reality”.

The problem, from Gauteng judge president Dunstan Mlambo’s side, was that she had never said anything to him about this. If she had, he could have helped by alleviatin­g her

workload. The written submission­s revealed that Mlambo told the tribunal he did not know why she had not approached him directly “as he grew up in an African society and members of his family had gone through [similar] issues ...

“He feels bad that Mngqibisa-Thusi was of the view that he would stigmatise her and break her confidenti­ality.”

But, said the submission­s from the evidence leader, Mlambo also said she “had a responsibi­lity to seek assistance”.

“A judge’s fear of embarrassm­ent or shame was [not] sufficient reason not to disclose his or her challenges,” said the evidence leader in summarisin­g Mlambo’s evidence.

Evidence leader Adrian Mopp’s submission­s set out the details of some of the delayed judgments: one was a Road Accident Fund claim, after the submission of which the claimant had to take out a loan while he was waiting for her order, which took more than a year. Another was a case where, by the time the judgment came out, it was pointless because the defendant’s financial position had deteriorat­ed so much that the plaintiff was unable to recover anything.

Malindi’s submission­s said that the fear of being stigmatise­d was a real one for Mngqibisa-Thusi: “It is suggested that her failure may mean that she is not bona fide in her defence, which ... is raised opportunis­tically when she is facing removal as a judge,” he said.

Stigmatisa­tion resulted in a sense of being different, based on the belief that no-one else has had such an experience and that others would reject or discrimina­te against a person who had or has one. “Thus guilt, fear and shame are incidental dynamics,” he said. He quoted from justice Edwin Cameron’s writings on the internalis­ation of stigma and shame when he contracted HIV/Aids.

“Mngqibisa-Thusi testified at length about how she internalis­ed stigmatisa­tion, shame and self-isolation,” he said. Though it was suggested to her that, as a judge, she was in a powerful position to disclose and embrace her spirituali­ty, the example of Cameron showed that it was a matter of “the readiness of the concerned individual”, said Malindi. In any event, she had spoken to two acting deputy judge presidents, though they were not in a position to alleviate her workload as Mlambo would have been.

Malindi submitted that Mngqibisa-Thusi should be cleared of all misconduct. At worst, she should be reprimande­d or given a written warning.

Mopp, however, said there were grounds for impeachmen­t: “Her reluctance ... revolved around her own fears about what others would think of her. With respect, the respondent placed her own considerat­ions or self-interest above the consequenc­es her conduct had on litigants who were waiting for their judgments.

“In so doing, she also failed in her profession­al duties as a judge,” he said.

The respondent placed her own considerat­ions above the consequenc­es her conduct had on litigants who were waiting for their judgments ... she failed as a judge Adrian Mopp evidence leader

 ?? Picture: Papi Morake/Gallo Images ?? Judge Mngqibisa-Thusi and her legal team at the Hilton Hotel in Johannesbu­rg on January 29 during the hearings on the complaint brought by judge president Dunstan Mlambo against her.
Picture: Papi Morake/Gallo Images Judge Mngqibisa-Thusi and her legal team at the Hilton Hotel in Johannesbu­rg on January 29 during the hearings on the complaint brought by judge president Dunstan Mlambo against her.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa