The Star Early Edition

Mayor, city manager fall foul of top court

Ekurhuleni bosses accountabl­e for Bapsfontei­n ruling

- GABI FALANGA

THE SOCIO-Economic Rights Institute (Seri) has welcomed a Constituti­onal Court ruling which means that officials of Ekurhuleni municipali­ty and the Department of Human Settlement­s can be held individual­ly responsibl­e for implementi­ng the court’s orders.

Ekurhuleni metro was found to have violated its constituti­onal obligation­s by failing to comply with a 2011 Concourt ruling ordering it to provide Bapsfontei­n residents alternativ­e accommodat­ion, after it forcibly removed them.

But the Concourt stopped short of finding the metro in contempt of court in a judgment delivered on Thursday.

The Concourt said the municipali­ty’s mayor, manager and head of department for human settlement­s as well as the Gauteng Human Settlement­s MEC should be joined to the case to ensure that the court’s orders were followed.

Seri’s executive director, Stuart Wilson, said this remedy, suggested by Seri as friends of the court, would be particular­ly effective because it held individual­s accountabl­e, rather than an abstract entity such as a municipali­ty.

“The mayor, manager and director of housing were all joined. The major effect of that is that they can be held directly and personally liable for the city’s failure to effect the order,” he pointed out.

The order would make it more difficult for the municipali­ty to disobey a court order.

Mayor Mondli Gungubele opposed being linked to the case, saying he was not responsibl­e for the “day to day administra­tive functions” of the municipali­ty.

The court found that “these disclaimer­s were unseemly and highly inappropri­ate”.

“Who in a local authority, if not the mayor and municipal manager, is responsibl­e for its failings of function? It is wrong for them to shrug off responsibi­lity when their own municipal structure, the one at whose symbolic and operationa­l head they stand, conspicuou­sly fails to fulfil a duty imposed by a court order,” it said.

It said the original Bapsfontei­n court order, issued in 2011, affected hundreds of families and households.

“Their daily living, human dignity and security and comfort were directly at stake. It is precisely because of the leadership entrusted to the mayor and the municipal manager, that they have a duty to undertake responsibi­lity for imple- menting court orders.”

In 2010, the municipali­ty evicted more than 700 people from their shacks in Bapsfontei­n after discoverin­g that the settlement was built on dolomitic land – prone to sinkholes – and it was declared a disaster area. The eviction without a court order was declared unlawful by the Concourt in December 2011 and the municipali­ty was ordered to find suitable land for the residents by December 2012.

But Ekurhuleni failed to do this. In Thursday’s judgment, the Concourt also found that the municipali­ty had failed to provide it with progress reports on the relocation of residents. The municipali­ty, however, argued that it had not followed the Concourt’s orders because it had not been made aware of them by its attorney, Bongani Khoza, because Khoza failed to notify the court and the municipali­ty of changes in his contact details.

The court did not find either the municipali­ty or Khoza in contempt of court for not complying with its order. However, it ordered each to pay half of the applicants’ costs.

“Mr Khoza and the municipali­ty are each ordered to pay 50 percent of the applicants’ costs in the contempt proceeding­s. Accordingl­y, Mr Khoza must be ordered to pay the costs from his own pocket to mark this court’s displeasur­e at his gross negligence, particular­ly as an officer of this

They can’t just shrug off this responsibi­lity

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