The Citizen (Gauteng)

SA expert enters new legal territory

CONTRIBUTI­NG TO DEVELOPMEN­T OF LEGALITIES AROUND PANDEMIC

- Rorisang Kgosana – rorisangk@citizen.co.za

From giving legal advice to a former foreign affairs minister and contributi­ng to United Nations resolution­s which led to the ousting of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, internatio­nal law expert Professor Dire Tladi has set his sights on the legalities of global regulation­s relating to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Tladi, 45, was recently appointed to serve in the Geneva-based Institut de Droit Internatio­nal’s Commission on Pandemics and Internatio­nal Law.

It is an opportunit­y to contribute to the developmen­t of internatio­nal law surroundin­g the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I feel honoured and I feel this is recognitio­n of my work which I have put in over the years.

“I am proud that South Africa is recognised through my appointmen­t,” he told Saturday Citizen.

A University of Pretoria lecturer and professor in the law faculty’s Institute for Internatio­nal and Comparativ­e Law in Africa and the department of public law, he knew he wanted to take the legal route when he was just 10 years old.

Tladi, who was born in Ga-Rankuwa and raised in Mafikeng, said: “There was no one who inspired me to do it, there were no lawyers in my family.

“I just knew from the time I was young that this is what I want to do.”

He got an opportunit­y to pursue his dream in 1994, enrolling at the University of Pretoria to study law.

That was when he gained knowledge about internatio­nal law and was immediatel­y drawn to it.

“It struck me as an interestin­g field of law,” he said. “I knew that this is more of my kind of thing.

“I enjoyed internatio­nal law because it gave space for independen­t thinking and it is less developed than domestic law, due to its nature. “Domestic law is legislatio­n, meaning there is less room for instilling your own values.”

After completing his first degree, a BLC, he was offered a position in the university’s law faculty.

What struck the young lawyer was the racial imbalance among his colleagues at the time, which sparked an initiative to transform the faculty.

“It was an all-white university at the time. This was in the mid-1990s and the staff complement at the law faculty was completely white.

“One of the questions was, how does the university and the faculty, in particular, transform?

“We embarked on a programme called Grow Your Own Timber to take talented black students who just completed their first degree to be appointed into the faculty.”

His academic career began to take off and he also joined the University of South Africa in 2002 as an associate professor.

Four years later, he joined the then department of foreign affairs as a legal adviser.

In 2009, he went to New York to start a new job as legal counsellor to the South African Mission of the United Nations.

He was one of the legal minds that contribute­d to the resolution­s that ultimately led to the removal of Libya president Muammar Gaddafi.

In 2011, he was appointed to serve as a special rapporteur at the UN Internatio­nal Law Commission.

He was subsequent­ly re-elected by the UN in 2016.

Amid the uncertaint­y and global panic over the deadly coronaviru­s, the pandemic has opened more doors for the professor.

He will now be giving his input on the legalities surroundin­g the worldwide coronaviru­s and said he hoped to clarify how to beat the spread of the virus while protecting human rights.

“For me, this is an important opportunit­y to contribute to the developmen­t of internatio­nal law in an area not properly regulated by internatio­nal law.

“There are rules which could have an impact and how these rules come together is not clear.”

He has already started here at home, having since written to President Cyril Ramaphosa about the brutality of soldiers and police officers against citizens during the lockdown.

“I watched videos and pictures on social media depicting violence by the military and police and it was inhumane, degrading punishment, like making people do frog jumps.

“I then wrote a letter to the president, noting my concern at some of these things and questionin­g whether or not they are consistent, not only with the constituti­on, but with obligation­s by South Africa and internatio­nal law.

“It’s these kinds of issues that the [pandemics and internatio­nal law] commission will address.”

For me, this is an important opportunit­y

 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? CLIMBING THE LADDER. Professor Dire Tladi hopes to clarify how to beat the spread of the coronaviru­s while protecting human rights in his new position.
Picture: Jacques Nelles CLIMBING THE LADDER. Professor Dire Tladi hopes to clarify how to beat the spread of the coronaviru­s while protecting human rights in his new position.
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