The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mogoeng slates system

- Sipho Mabena

Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, pictured, has laid bare the challenges the judicial system is grappling with, including acute shortage of magistrate­s, unsafe courts, and bumbling detectives.

In what he described as a “haemorrhag­ing access to justice”, the chief justice lamented that there were 665 unfilled prosecutor­s’ posts, which he said would weaken court performanc­e even more.

Delivering the 2018 Judiciary Annual Report for the first time in the history of the country’s judiciary at the Constituti­onal Court in Johannesbu­rg yesterday, he pleaded for more funding for the National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA), so that these posts could be filled, which he said would strengthen the criminal justice system.

The chief justice also called for the ramping up of safety in courts, saying “courts are virtually unsecured” as those offering security were armed with batons they cannot even use.

“Sadly, judiciary is unable to do anything about it but raise it as a concern,” Mogoeng said.

In March last year, his own office in Sandton was burgled, with thieves making off with 15 computers with judges’ sensitive informatio­n stored on them.

Turning to police detective capacity, Mogoeng pleaded for investment in the sharpening of police detectives, coming short of saying detectives were clumsy in dischargin­g simple duties such as taking of witness’s statements.

The chief justice said he had shared his impression of the detective capacity with police top brass.

He said he could not understand the way police took statements, saying for instance things like “a black man raped a black woman and the weapon used then you refer to the genitalia of a man”.

Also of concern to Mogoeng was the police tendency to arrest even when it was unnecessar­y, saying this clogged up the system.

Also in Mogoeng’s basket of challenges were the department of justice and correction­al Services’ delay in transferri­ng reports and library materials to the office of the chief justice, which he said hampered access to the tools of trade.

He said the judiciary is acutely underfunde­d compared to other arms of state, with the judiciary unable to afford an annual Judicial Colloquium.

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