Business Day

Hlophe in bid to stop Ramaphosa’s axe falling and halt impeachmen­t process

- Franny Rabkin

Western Cape judge president John Hlophe is making an urgent applicatio­n to court for an interdict to stay parliament’s impending impeachmen­t process against him and the process for his suspension by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

The Judicial Service Commission (JSC) in August decided by a majority that Hlophe was guilty of gross misconduct for a 2008 complaint by all the then justices of the Constituti­onal Court. The justices complained that he had sought to influence the outcome of cases, then pending before their court, related to corruption charges against former president Jacob Zuma.

The JSC’s decision was then sent to parliament, which must still in terms of the constituti­on decide whether to impeach.

Hlophe will also ask the high court in Johannesbu­rg, in Part B of his applicatio­n, to declare that the August 25 meeting at which his guilt was decided was unlawful because the JSC was not constitute­d properly.

This was, he argues, because neither the chief justice nor deputy chief justice was there, as required by the constituti­on. Constituti­onal Court justice Sisi Khampepe “was neither the chief justice nor a deputy chief justice at the taking of the JSC decision on 25 August”, he says.

Hlophe says that neither the president nor deputy president of the Supreme Court of Appeal was there and an attorney, supposed to represent the attorneys profession in terms of the constituti­on, was also absent.

The judge president also asks the court for a declaratio­n that Khampepe, Supreme Court of Appeal justice Boissie Mbha, Gauteng judge president Dunstan Mlambo and Western Cape premier Alan Winde were “automatica­lly disqualifi­ed” from participat­ing in the JSC meeting.

He says that these people “suffer from various degrees of conflict, or are people against whom I have a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias”.

The judges mentioned were all part of panels that made decisions in some of the many court cases over the 2008 complaint, he says. Hlophe says Mlambo was “involved and actively participat­ed” in his removal from the JSC as a representa­tive of the judges president.

“The tradition has always been to have the most senior judge president represent the heads of court ... I was the most senior judge president who succeeded judge president Ngoepe. My removal from the JSC was mastermind­ed and instigated by judge president Mlambo and other judges,” he says.

The reason for their actions was that his removal was justified by the complaint against him, says Hlophe.

Winde, says Hlophe, “adopted inexplicab­le animosity towards me”. He says he could explain this only on the basis that Winde was a “staunch and committed” member of the DA.

Hlophe also asks the high court in Johannesbu­rg to set aside the decision of the Judicial Conduct Tribunal, on which the majority of the JSC based its decision.

He also asks the court to set aside the majority’s decision on the basis that it violates his right to equality before the law “and the right to an adjudicati­on by an impartial tribunal”.

 ?? /Supplied ?? Unlawful: Western Cape judge president John Hlophe says the Judicial Service Commission ruling against him is unlawful.
/Supplied Unlawful: Western Cape judge president John Hlophe says the Judicial Service Commission ruling against him is unlawful.

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