The Citizen (Gauteng)

Case still making waves

CONCOURT: WHO SHOULD RENEW TOP COP’S CONTRACT STILL IN DISPUTE

- Bernade e Wicks – bernadette­w@citizen.co.za

McBride is out, but foundation won’t let matter rest.

Last month, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) threw out the Helen Suzman Foundation’s bid to void former Independen­t Police Investigat­ive Directorat­e (Ipid) head Robert McBride’s ousting in 2019. But the battle is not over yet.

The foundation this week announced it had lodged an applicatio­n for leave to appeal against the SCA’s decision with the Constituti­onal Court.

It said the order handed down last month “gives a judicial stamp of approval to a constituti­onally impermissi­ble interpreta­tion of the Ipid Act – eroding the independen­ce of Ipid and exposing it to actual or perceived political interferen­ce”.

The drawn-out case dates back to January, 2019, when McBride rushed to the High Court in Pretoria after learning Police Minister Bheki Cele had decided not to renew his contract as Ipid’s executive director, which was set to expire the following month.

He originally wanted an order stating the decision was not Cele’s to make but they ended up reaching a last-minute agreement

– later made an order of the court – that Cele could make a recommenda­tion to the police portfolio committee but it would make the decision.

The portfolio committee also decided against the renewal of McBride’s contract and he has since taken up a position with the State Security Agency.

But the foundation, which was admitted as amicus curiae in the original case, says the agreement which set these events in motion

should never have been okayed by the high court.

McBride is no longer actively taking part in these proceeding­s.

However, the foundation argues the Ipid Act does not stipulate whose call it is to extend the executive director’s contract for a second term, stating only that the appointmen­t “is for a term of five years, which is renewable for one additional term only” and that it should actually have been for McBride to decide.

The SCA last month described this interpreta­tion as “illogical”.

Suzman foundation director Francis Antonie accused the SCA of “ignoring the constituti­onally impermissi­ble manner in which the high court rubber stamped the settlement agreement”.

Moreover, he said, the SCA judgment and order undermines the independen­ce of Ipid and impedes its ability to effectivel­y perform its mandate.

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