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Charges against Malema to be dropped, says Floyd

- BALDWIN NDABA baldwin.ndaba@inl.co.za

THE charges of incitement under the notorious Riotous Assemblies Act in post-apartheid South Africa against EFF leader Julius Malema will soon be dropped.

This is according to EFF deputy leader Floyd Shivambu after the conclusion of Malema’s applicatio­n in the High Court in Pretoria yesterday to declare Section 18 (2) (b) of the Riotous Assemblies Act unconstitu­tional and unlawful.

Shivambu said his party’s legal representa­tive “has put up a superior legal argument” to justify the withdrawal of charges against Malema.

He made the comments, after Malema’s legal counsel, advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i, had argued in court that the State had used cases of people who were convicted for sleeping with prostitute­s and killing rhinos, to justify the continuati­on of criminal charges against Malema.

Ngcukaitob­i lodged the dramatic attack after counsel for the State argued yesterday that the EFF leader was not the first person to be charged under Riotous Assemblies Act in post-apartheid South Africa on similar facts.

State counsel advocate Hilton Epstein is opposing Malema’s applicatio­n in the High Court in Pretoria to declare Section 18 (2) (b) to be unconstitu­tional and unlawful. Malema made the applicatio­n in the High Court after civil society organisati­on AfriForum lodged incitement charges against him for comments he made on December 16, 2014 in Bloemfonte­in, June 26, 2016, and November 7, 2016 in Newcastle.

In all these instances, Malema is accused of having encouraged his EFF supporters to occupy vacant land.

In court yesterday, Malema argued that he was charged under a law which was promulgate­d during apartheid to suppress black political parties.

Malema argued that the specific section of the law was promulgate­d in 1956 following the adoption of the Freedom Charter by the ANC in Kliptown, Soweto, in June 1955.

Asking the State to declare the Act unlawful and unconstitu­tional, Malema argued that he was charged under the same Act, for merely expressing the view that the ANC had failed to restore land to black people.

Ngcukaitob­i argued that Malema was the first person to be charged under the same Act in post-apartheid South Africa, but the State disagreed.

Epstein gave the court a list of cases in which the State prosecuted under the Riotous Assemblies Act. He admitted that the State used the Act to convict people who were charged under the Contravent­ion of the Sexual Offences Act.

Ngcukaitob­i said the State used cases of people who were convicted for conspiracy under Section 18 (2) (a).

“Mr Malema is challengin­g the constituti­onality of Section 18(2)(b) which relates to freedom of speech. The State has failed to produce a single case to justify why charges should continue against Mr Malema,” Ngcukaitob­i said.

Judgment was reserved.

 ??  ?? Julius Malema
Julius Malema

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