The Citizen (Gauteng)

Another hitch in Juju’s bid to derail ‘apartheid law’

- Rorisangk@citizen.co.za

Rorisang Kgosana

Scores of red berets filled Madiba Street in Pretoria yesterday in support of Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) leader Julius Malema, who was challengin­g the legality of the Riotous Assemblies Act in the high court.

The EFF commander-in-chief is facing two separate charges of contraveni­ng the Riotous Assemblies Act of 1956 in Bloemfonte­in and Newcastle, where he urged his supporters to invade unoccupied land.

The Act prohibits any outside gatherings seen as a threat or an incitement of hostility between Africans and non-Africans.

This, Malema’s legal team argued, was an apartheid law that could not still be considered to be constituti­onal.

Represente­d by advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i, Malema argued that the ANC government used this “apartheid legislatio­n” to charge him.

The matter, which has been ongoing since November 2016, was postponed yet again due to a procedural error when Ngcukaitob­i’s team made their submission­s, under notice 16a of the court, in May this year.

The notice was required to be put on the court’s notice board to attract public participat­ion.

But a court clerk apparently misplaced the second page of the notice, which detailed the party’s submission, Ngcukaitob­i said in his defence.

This further delayed the already two-year long case in a matter which was of public interest and was urgent, defence attorney Hilton Epstein SC said.

Representi­ng the department of justice, which is a respondent in the matter, Epstein said it was important for the matter to go ahead so Malema’s court cases at both the Bloemfonte­in and Newcastle magistrate’s courts could get under way.

“It is in the interest of justice that the criminal trial of Malema proceeds. If he is correct that his rights to free public expression are violated by this act, that needs to be determined.”

Deputy Judge President Aubrey Ledwaba gave the EFF defence team five days to file their notice to the registrar. The matter was postponed to December 12 and 13. The said notice must also be served to the respondent­s. –

 ?? Picture: Jacques Nelles ?? PUSHING BACK. EFF leader Julius Malema in the High Court in Pretoria yesterday where he was applying for the Riotous Assemblies Act to be declared illegal in post-apartheid South Africa.
Picture: Jacques Nelles PUSHING BACK. EFF leader Julius Malema in the High Court in Pretoria yesterday where he was applying for the Riotous Assemblies Act to be declared illegal in post-apartheid South Africa.

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