The Citizen (KZN)

AfriForum accused of using public

- Chantall Presence

AfriForum was guilty of a “misuse of public participat­ion” and “abuse of process” when they submitted duplicate submission­s to parliament on whether section 25 of the constituti­on should be amended to allow for land expropriat­ion without compensati­on, the Western Cape High Court heard yesterday.

Arguing in the case where AfriForum is seeking that parliament’s constituti­onal review committee (CRC), which has adopted a report in favour of amending South Africa’s founding document, Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i, for parliament, said the civic rights group should have waited for the parliament­ary process to be completed before it challenged the national legislatur­e in court.

Ngcukaitob­i said arguments that over 170 000 written submission­s were excluded were not correct, as AfriForum and others sent duplicates to the CRC.

“It’s the same person making the same submission over and over again,” he said.

In addition, Ngcukaitob­i said the committee report that is scheduled to be tabled for debate and approval in the National Assembly next week, did in fact record that the majority of written submission­s were against a constituti­onal amendment.

“This report is a fair representa­tion of both those who supported the amemdement and those who opposed the amendment.”

The exercise of public participat­ion was never about numbers but about the “quality of contesting views”, he argued.

“At best they fundamenta­lly misconstru­ed what this exercise was all about.”

Earlier, Etienne Labuschagn­e, for AfriForum, argued the case hinged on whether there was meaningful public participat­ion in the CRC process.

“My clients assert a constituti­onal right to meaningful participat­ion in proceeding­s before the constituti­onal review committee,” said Labuschagn­e.

He argued parliament unlawfully delegated its powers of analysing the hundreds of thousands of submission­s received from the public to an external service provider.

The civic organisati­on want the court to interdict the National Assembly from adopting the report until such time the court makes a final determinat­ion on the legality of the process leading up to its approval by MPs in the CRC. – ANA

It’s the same person making the same submission over and over again. Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i Legal representa­tive for parliament

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