Mail & Guardian

Hlophe grills aspirant WC judges

While he challenges its recommenda­tion that he be suspended, the judge president was allowed to take part in the JSC interviews in his division, the Western Cape

- Emsie Ferrreira

Eighteen months ago, the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) allowed interviews with aspirant candidates in the Western Cape high court division to proceed with Judge President John Hlophe present, despite caution it could taint the process as he recently had been found guilty of gross misconduct.

On Monday, with the JSC having since confirmed the finding by the Judicial Conduct Tribunal that he had breached the Constituti­on, and recommende­d that he be suspended by President Cyril Ramaphosa pending an impeachmen­t process, Hlophe again took part in interviews with aspirant judges in the division, this time in bruising fashion.

Hlophe made plain his displeasur­e with the record of acting judge Alma de Wet, despite having allowed her to serve six terms in that capacity at his invitation, after grilling her at some length on transforma­tion.

He asked how many of her judgments in those six terms were reported. (Sufficient­ly important judgments are reported.) De Wet replied there was only one, but in the last two terms she had little scope in this regard as she had been among those judges he had allocated to deal with the backlog in criminal matters.

Hlophe then asked how many criminal trials she had completed. She said none so far, although she was nearing completion of a human traffickin­g case, but had handled mundane matters like bail reviews.

Hlophe said he would like to hear De Wet’s understand­ing of transforma­tion. She answered it was a work in progress where the desired endpoint was that everyone, regardless of race and gender, should eventually enjoy equal opportunit­y.

“There is a second level of transforma­tion, which is the mindset,”

Hlophe noted. De Wet agreed and Hlophe reminded her that, under apartheid, there were degrees of discrimina­tion and that Africans endured the worst. Given that, he asked, why did she think a white woman should be appointed when there were four candidates for a single vacancy.

“You would like us to recommend you for appointmen­t, notwithsta­nding that you have acted for six terms and you only have one reported judgment and other candidates have five. Secondly, notwithsta­nding that you have not finalised a single criminal trial and thirdly notwithsta­nding the obvious delays which have been highlighte­d in terms of you handing down judgments, notwithsta­nding your experience of an advocate for 25 years, you are still delaying in handing down judgments,” he said.

“I can tell you from my experience as a judge president, candidates who delay in handing down judgments when they are still acting only become worse after their permanent appointmen­t. So, if it takes you six months to produce a judgment, the moment you are appointed, it will take you six years. So, notwithsta­nding all of that, we are asked to recommend you for appointmen­t.”

De Wet began answering but was cut short by Hlophe, who said he had nothing further.

The next candidate to be interviewe­d was regional magistrate Noluthando Nziweni.

With a nod to the presence of newly appointed commission­er advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i — who has written extensivel­y on dispossess­ion and the failure of land restitutio­n policies — Hlophe said he would steer the interview towards land rights.

“I am glad Mr Ngcukaitob­i is here now; I am going to turn [up] the heat. Let’s talk about the land,” he said.

There were those political parties, Hlophe continued, who believed there was a need to amend section 25 of the Constituti­on to the effect that explicit provision should be made for expropriat­ion without compensati­on.

“There are those who believe that, no, there is no need to amend section 25. Let me hear your views in that regard,” he said.

The candidate began by saying that the topic was a contentiou­s one, and deputy Chief Justice Mandisa Maya, who is chairing the interviews, intervened to caution that answering might prove awkward because a case involving this question might yet serve before her.

“Your answering this question now, does it not mean that you will have to recuse yourself … if you state your view on this question which may well turn out to be a legal question raised in a court of law?” she asked.

Ngcukaitob­i teased that he would like to hear her hypothetic­al stance; Hlophe replied that he would not allocate land cases to her, before acknowledg­ing that Maya had a point and withdrawin­g the question.

In April last year, the Cape Bar Council issued a statement asking the JSC to use the time it had allocated to interview candidates in the division to deliberati­ng on the finding of the tribunal that Hlophe had committed impeachabl­e conduct by attempting, in 2008, to sway justices of the constituti­onal court on pending cases relating to the arms deal corruption charges against then aspirant president Jacob Zuma.

Western Cape premier Alan Winde wrote to the JSC to express the same view. Freedom Under Law sent a letter asking who would represent the Western Cape division in Hlophe’s stead, given the tribunal’s pronouncem­ent, and received a terse reply that he would not be replaced.

In August 2021, the JSC endorsed the finding that he should face impeachmen­t. Hlophe launched a legal review and lost in the high court. An appeal is pending. Hlophe again took part in interviews with candidates in the Western Cape in October last year, and opined that the division was plagued by racism and forum-shopping by counsel.

In July this year, the JSC recommende­d that Ramaphosa suspend Hlophe.

Hlophe has responded to this with another legal challenge, asking in papers filed in August that the high court declare the JSC’S advice to the president unlawful, unconstitu­tional and invalid.

In the meanwhile, an appeal panel of the Judicial Conduct Committee has recommende­d that an impeachmen­t tribunal be instituted to investigat­e allegation­s of misconduct that Hlophe and his deputy Patricia Goliath made against each other in early 2020.

JSC members on Monday confirmed that they had deliberate­d behind closed doors about Hlophe’s participat­ion in the Western Cape interviews. The discussion was described as “cordial”.

 ?? ??
 ?? Photos: Judges Matter ?? No love lost: Judge President John Hlophe (above) seemed antagonist­ic during his interview of acting judge Alma de Wet (left).
Photos: Judges Matter No love lost: Judge President John Hlophe (above) seemed antagonist­ic during his interview of acting judge Alma de Wet (left).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa