The Citizen (Gauteng)

Mkhwebane in fight for her job

APPEAL BID: ADVOCATE CITES ‘20 CARDINAL ERRORS’ High court throws out attempt for process for removal from office to be halted.

- Bernade e Wicks bernadette­w@citizen.co.za

Public Protector Busisiwe Mkhwebane is fighting tooth and nail against her removal from office and has hit back at the Western Cape High Court’s dismissal of her legal bid to halt the process, with a list of 20 “cardinal errors” her legal team says it made.

Mkhwebane approached the court with a two-part applicatio­n this year after National Assembly Speaker Thandi Modise approved a Democratic Alliance motion to institute removal proceeding­s against her. Last month, the court dismissed part A of the applicatio­n, in which Mkhwebane wanted the process halted pending the finalisati­on of part B, in which she wants the new rules for unseating heads of chapter nine institutio­ns declared unconstitu­tional and invalid.

Mkhwebane’s legal team returned to court yesterday to argue for leave to appeal last month’s ruling. Mkhwebane’s advocate, Dali Mpofu, picked it apart. He detailed 20 “cardinal errors” he said the court made, ranging from “mischaract­erisation” of the applicatio­n to “internal inconsiste­ncies and contradict­ions” in its ruling to its “rejection of undisputed objective facts”.

But “one of the most egregious” of these, he said, was the court’s handling of an issue Mkhwebane had raised about the limitation­s on legal representa­tion in the new rules for the removal of office bearers of Chapter Nine institutio­ns. The court found it unnecessar­y to express “any view” on the issue, pointing to Mkhwebane’s pending review of the new rules.

“The court, with respect, simply abdicated its responsibi­lity,” Mpofu charged. “Clearly, another court, any other court, would find it necessary to express a view.”

Mpofu was adamant it was in the interests of justice that the issues be ventilated before a higher court and highlighte­d what was at stake for Mkhwebane. “The speaker has issued a public pronouncem­ent she now intends to forge ahead with the appointmen­t of the independen­t panel and the rest of the removal process.

“If the process continues much further before part B is determined, the public protector faces the prospect of suspension, while the unconstitu­tionality of the rules might well be confirmed.” –

Unconstitu­tionality of rules might be confirmed

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