The Star Late Edition

We’ll junk Joburg, says Cosatu

- ZELDA VENTER

THE WHEELS of justice grind slowly – especially in the case of controvers­ial drink-and-drive high court judge Nkola Motata.

He has been on special leave since 2007, more than nine years after his gold Jaguar ploughed through the wall of a house in Joburg.

The taxpayer is, meanwhile, forking out for his full pay, although he has not served on the bench for a day since his drunken-driving offence.

Lusanda Ntuli, for the office of Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, told The Star’s sister paper, the Pretoria News, that Judge Motata was still receiving his salary. “He is on special leave and, therefore, paid a salary,” she said.

Judge Motata has already cost taxpayers about R16 million.

The annual salaries of judges, as published in the Government Gazette in March, are just over R1.7m.

The money already received by Judge Motata, possibly the only judge in the country with a criminal record, is expected to grow after he filed papers in which he questioned the constituti­onality of legislatio­n which could see him impeached.

This is expected to put any inquiry into his alleged misconduct on hold. Judge Motata turned 66 in February, and judges normally retire at 70.

His problems started after the accident, when he allegedly said while drunk: “No Boer is going to undermine me; this used to be the white man’s land but it is not anymore.”

These words could see him impeached if a tribunal set up by the Judicial Service Commission finds him guilty of misconduct. But Judge Motata is set on pulling out all the stops to prevent this.

Following his conviction and subsequent R20 000 fine in 2009, he has been on special leave pending a disciplina­ry hearing into his conduct.

A complaint was lodged against him by a senior Joburg advocate as well as AfriForum, who claimed that his remarks were racist and constitute­d gross misconduct.

The disciplina­ry proceeding­s were put on hold for three years pending the outcome of a Constituti­onal Court challenge regarding the constituti­onality of section 24 of the Judicial Service Commission Act. The case was initiated by Constituti­onal Court justices Bess Nkabinde and Chris Jafta.

They challenged the legality of the tribunal before which they were to testify, after misconduct allegation­s against Western Cape Judge President John Hlophe. Their applicatio­n delayed the tribunal hearing against Judge Hlophe for three years, as well as other similar hearings.

The highest court in the country last week turned down the constituti­onal challenge by the pair, but Judge Motata subsequent­ly filed papers with the high court in Pretoria.

In this latest move, Judge Motata is challengin­g the constituti­onality of the various sections of the act. This latest move by Judge Motata is likely to see all tribunals of this nature further put on hold pending the outcome of his latest challenge, which is expected to also end up in the Constituti­onal Court.

Judge Motata said in an affidavit that the tribunal set up to investigat­e the allegation­s against him was illegal.

According to him, the compositio­n of the tribunal did not adhere to the constituti­on. One of his grounds was that Parliament had usurped the procedure regarding the handling of complaints against a judge, and whether a judge should be removed from office.

His argument will be that only the commission may determine its own procedure and not Parliament. He stated that Parliament’s interferen­ce in the matter was against the separation of powers and infringes on judicial independen­ce.

No date has yet been set.

He is on special leave, therefore paid a salary

THE Congress of South African Trade Unions yesterday vowed to challenge the recent announceme­nt by newly elected mayor of Joburg Herman Mashaba that he planned to privatise Pikitup, the city’s rubbish collection entity.

Cosatu spokesman Sizwe Pamla said in a statement they would challenge and oppose Mashaba’s plans to outsource to the private sector.

“We are ready and willing to collapse and shut down the City of Joburg if mayor Mashaba thinks he is going to do the bidding of his friends from the Free Market Foundation by introducin­g their anti-worker and anti-union policies,” Pamla said.

Mashaba has been adamant, even during the campaign trail ahead of the August 3 local government elections, about his plans to privatise Pikitup and break up the waste removal company into different parts.

Cosatu is not alone against Mashaba’s plans, and the SA Municipal Workers Union also said yesterday that Mashaba’s plan to sell Pikitup would never come about.

Pamla said privatisat­ion would hurt the socio-economic interests of the poor and lead to decreased and inferior quality services for them as they would not be able to afford the services provided by private interests.

He said Cosatu would continue to fight to ensure that municipal services remained the core function of municipali­ties and that all municipali­ties did not outsource basic services they were able to render themselves. – ANA

 ??  ?? UNDER THE INFLUENCE: Judge Nkola Motata sits in his smashed Jaguar after hitting a wall in 2007.
UNDER THE INFLUENCE: Judge Nkola Motata sits in his smashed Jaguar after hitting a wall in 2007.

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