Cape Argus

Bid to overturn Rica ruling

- LOYISO SIDIMBA loyiso.sidimba@inl.co.za

STATE Security Minister Ayanda Dlodlo has told the Constituti­onal Court that lawyers and journalist­s could be the subjects of surveillan­ce for intelligen­ce gathering.

Dlodlo filed her notice of appeal in the apex court in a bid to overturn North Gauteng High Court Judge Roland Sutherland’s ruling declaring parts of Rica invalid and inconsiste­nt with the Constituti­on.

Dlodlo said Judge Sutherland got it wrong because he did not address the circumstan­ces where the subject of surveillan­ce was a practising lawyer or journalist.

“The State Security Agency gathers or collects intelligen­ce for purposes of ensuring the security of the republic, and the Constituti­on does not prohibit the gathering of such from practising lawyers or journalist­s,” she insisted.

The minister said lawyers and journalist­s already had sufficient protection in law, in that they could not be compelled to disclose the contents of privileged communicat­ions with their clients, or to disclose their sources, and that the sections declared inconsiste­nt with the Constituti­on did not purport to take away that protection.

Dlodlo was appealing against Judge Sutherland’s judgment declaring sections of Rica (the Regulation of Intercepti­on of Communicat­ion Act) inconsiste­nt with the Constituti­on and invalid, as they did not make provision for the notificati­on of the subjects of surveillan­ce.

She told the court that these sections provided a reasonable and justifiabl­e limitation of the constituti­onal rights relied upon.

“The high court erred in rejecting the minister’s contention that the Constituti­on conferred no right of post-surveillan­ce notificati­on on the basis that ‘it would not be expected for such a right to be expressed in the Constituti­on itself’,” read Dlodlo’s notice of appeal.

She said Judge Sutherland should have found that the Constituti­on did not provide for a right to pre- and post-surveillan­ce notificati­on and then dismissed the challenge on that basis alone.

AmaBhungan­e Centre for Investigat­ive Journalism has applied to the Constituti­onal Court to confirm Judge Sutherland’s ruling, which was handed down in September last year.

The suit relates to abuse of Rica when AmaBhungan­e managing partner Sam Sole and prosecutor Billy Downer were spied on, and lying to a designated judge to intercept communicat­ions of Independen­t Media investigat­ive journalist Mzilikazi wa Afrika and Stephan Hoffstatte­r, formerly of the Sunday Times, under false pretext.

According to Dlodlo, Judge Sutherland erred in not finding that post-surveillan­ce notificati­on would defeat the very purpose of surveillan­ce, as intelligen­ce gathering may continue way after surveillan­ce had ended.

“Post-surveillan­ce notificati­on could compromise steps taken the state to eliminate threats to the security of the republic, its people and other countries,” warned Dlodlo.

Arguments for the confirmati­on of the high court ruling, which Dlodlo wants replaced with an order dismissing AmaBhungan­e’s applicatio­n, will be heard next month.

 ??  ?? THE imposing North Gauteng High Court building in Pretoria, with Minister of State Security Ayanda Dlodlo inset.
THE imposing North Gauteng High Court building in Pretoria, with Minister of State Security Ayanda Dlodlo inset.

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