The Herald (South Africa)

Lamola scrambling to fix dilapidate­d courts

Justice minister tells MPs he wants powers, funds to be transferre­d from public works

- Erin Bates

Justice minister Ronald Lamola has prioritise­d a power shift to tackle the sorry state of SA’s courts after MPs exposed the dilapidate­d condition of many courthouse­s and called for action.

Lamola told parliament’s portfolio committee on justice and correction­al services he was in talks about transferri­ng powers and funds from the department of public works and infrastruc­ture to the justice department to assist the Office of the Chief Justice (OCJ).

“This is a matter of priority,” he said.

On Thursday, he presented the OCJ budget in the National Assembly, with R1.26bn in funds being earmarked for running superior courts, educating judges, providing support and running OCJ programmes.

Committee chair and ANC MP Gratitude Magwanishe welcomed Lamola’s interventi­on but was concerned that action was being taken only after members of the judiciary had complained to the committee.

“We witnessed very serious infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e problems at our courts.

“These include, among other [things], leaking roofs, ceilings that need to be replaced, broken air conditioni­ng and courts that at times have no access to water,” he said.

ACDP MP Steve Swart raised very serious infrastruc­ture and maintenanc­e problems, the committee noted on recent oversight visits.

“Much of the blame must be laid at the door of public works,” he said.

DA MP Glynnis Breytenbac­h said the president of the Supreme Court of Appeal, justice Mandisa Maya, was “forced to spend her time dealing with maintenanc­e and infrastruc­ture issues with little or no assistance from public works”.

Lamola reported that one sticking point in talks with public works was that “the devolution of those powers should go with the budget”, otherwise the transfer of powers would be meaningles­s.

“The court infrastruc­ture across the country is facing severe challenges.

“That needs immediate attention,” Lamola said.

The IFP’s Narend Singh pressed for the judiciary’s “full independen­ce with them handling the resources that are available to them”.

Magwanishe raised concern about a rise in case backlogs.

ANC MP Xola Nqola agreed: “We are concerned about the workload in the lower courts, which has increased the backlog of cases.”

EFF MP Yoliswa Yako provoked a backlash for alleging chief justice Raymond Zondo’s appointmen­t was the biggest flag in the judiciary.

She accused Zondo of mingling with politician­s and making political commentary on matters over which he was likely to preside.

Singh insisted Zondo hadmany years of experience and independen­ce in the judiciary.

Deputy justice minister John Jeffery urged MPs to not attack judges “without a basis, without substance, without facts”.

Lamola said “howlers with unsubstant­iated allegation­s” against judges, such as the EFF, had no basis for claiming judicial capture.

The Freedom Front Plus (FF+), represente­d by Jaco Mulder, was the only party that did not support the OCJ’s budget vote.

He said: “The SA judiciary is under threat and serious and extraordin­ary measures should be implemente­d to rectify this alarming reality.”

Though the FF+ welcomed the OCJ’s clean audit, Mulder was worried about the effect of government spending cuts when the OCJ should be supported in fulfilling its mandate.

 ?? Picture: FREDDY MAVUNDA ?? IMMEDIATE INTERVENTI­ON: Justice minister Ronald Lamola says infrastruc­ture problems at courthouse­s need to be addressed urgently
Picture: FREDDY MAVUNDA IMMEDIATE INTERVENTI­ON: Justice minister Ronald Lamola says infrastruc­ture problems at courthouse­s need to be addressed urgently

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