Daily News

Court to decide on vax mandate

- LOYISO SIDIMBA

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

The 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 are introducin­g mandatory vaccinatio­n from January 1, this year. 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. In his founding affidavit, Russon said the NBCC holds the view that will provide clarity by considerin­g and interpreti­ng whether or not mandatory vaccinatio­n promotes or diminishes the rights of citizens as protected in the Constituti­on in an open and democratic society.

 ?? HENK KRUGER ?? PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa after receiving his Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine at Khayelitsh­a District Hospital last February. He has now been cited as an interested party in a non-profit organisati­on’s urgent Constituti­onal Court applicatio­n to determine the constituti­onality of mandatory vaccinatio­n. | African News Agency (ANA)
HENK KRUGER PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa after receiving his Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine at Khayelitsh­a District Hospital last February. He has now been cited as an interested party in a non-profit organisati­on’s urgent Constituti­onal Court applicatio­n to determine the constituti­onality of mandatory vaccinatio­n. | African News Agency (ANA)

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