Cape Argus

Concourt could have final say on mandatory vaccinatio­n

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

THE Constituti­onal Court (Concourt) has been approached to urgently decide whether or not the implementa­tion of mandatory Covid-19 vaccines is ultra vires (beyond the powers) and derogates non-derogable constituti­onal rights.

Non-profit organisati­on the National Black Consumer Council (NBCC), which says it is not anti-vaccine but pro-choice, has filed an urgent applicatio­n at the apex court and has also issued a stern warning to companies forcing their employees to get vaccinated.

In the applicatio­n served on the Presidency’s legal and executive services unit on Monday, NBCC secretary-general Dr Raynauld Russon told the Concourt that the urgency is based on the fact that certain employers had introduced mandatory vaccinatio­n from January 1.

President Cyril Ramaphosa is cited as an interested party.

The NBCC wants the apex court to interpret and define legal clarity and certainty on whether the non-derogable rights enshrined in the Constituti­on and the National Health Act can be diminished or derogated through a directive issued by Employment and Labour Minister Thulas Nxesi in June last year, paving the way for employers to make vaccinatio­n mandatory.

According to the consumer council, the country’s highest court must state whether informed consent can be mandatory and whether the implementa­tion of mandatory vaccine policy is ultra vires (beyond the powers) and derogates non-derogable rights enshrined in the Constituti­on.

The NBCC, which has 60 000 members and supporters, also wants the Constituti­onal Court to provide interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on based on the will of the people expressed in its preamble, human dignity expressed in its finding provisions, the bill of rights, non-derogable rights and the Disaster Management Act.

”What is the legal status of a direction (issued by Nxesi) as it relates to the supremacy of the Constituti­on?” asks the council.

The NBCC believes the concealmen­t of the contents of Covid-19 vaccines violates the fundamenta­l rights enshrined in section 12 of the Constituti­on, which deals with the freedom and security of the person.

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