The Citizen (KZN)

AWOL medics fired – again

CUBA: 36 SOLDIERS ABSENT FROM CLASS HAD NO PERMISSION

- Bernade e Wicks – bernadette­w@citizen.co.za

Court clear they must be dismissed after more than 30 days’ absenteeis­m.

The 36 South African soldiers who went AWOL while studying military medicine in Cuba have been given their marching orders. Again. The soldiers were discharged last year after refusing to attend lectures as a result of concerns they had about the accreditat­ion of the institutio­n they were at.

They then approached the High Court in Pretoria, where Judge Annali Basson found in the soldiers’ favour and ordered they be reinstated.

But the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) took Basson’s ruling on appeal to a full bench and on Tuesday was successful.

Judge Wendy Hughes – with Judge President Dunstan Mlambo and Judge Ellem Jacob Francis concurring – overturned Basson’s ruling and found the soldiers’ dismissal could not be reviewed.

“Once a member absents himself or herself from official duty without permission for more than 30 days, the operation of law kicks in and it is deemed that the member is dismissed. There is no decision taken whatsoever,” Hughes said in handing down judgment.

“Now if there is, in fact, no decision taken and the dismissal is purely by operation of law, there will most certainly be no decision or administra­tive act to review. Hence, in these circumstan­ces the dismissal ‘decision’ was not susceptibl­e to review.”

She said by the time the soldiers returned to South Africa, they had already “absented themselves from their classes for more than 30 days, without permission”.

“Critically, one needs to acknowledg­e that attending medical classes was the very purpose for which they had been sent to Cuba and contracted with the SANDF,” she said. “It must be stressed that in these circumstan­ces there is no decision per se to dismiss, but merely one is deemed to be dismissed by operation of law in that the requisite time having lapsed.”

Hughes pointed out that the soldiers were given opportunit­ies to make submission­s as to why they should not be discharged, “but were dogmatic and dug in their heels”.

She also found Basson had misdirecte­d herself in dealing with whether or not all the requiremen­ts for a dismissal had been met and that she had added an “additional jurisdicti­onal fact”.

“This fact being, that a board of inquiry must have been establishe­d where a member is absent for more than 30 days to determine whether a member is absent and the reason for the absenteeis­m,” Hughes said.

“The Supreme Court of Appeal highlighte­d that the establishm­ent of the board … was solely to verify that indeed the member was still absent and was to establish the whereabout­s of that absent member’s kit.

When Basson initially reinstated the soldiers, she did so retrospect­ively and also granted them a special order putting their relief into immediate effect, regardless of whether or not her decision was going to be appealed.

On Tuesday, Hughes also overturned this special order.

The SANDF did not respond to a request for comment yesterday.

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