The Star Early Edition

Zuma acted illegally in SADC call

Suspension of operations of tribunal ruled irrational by court

- JONISAYI MAROMO

FORMER president Jacob Zuma acted unlawfully, irrational­ly and unconstitu­tionally when he supported and took part in a resolution suspending the operations of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC) Tribunal, the High Court in Pretoria ruled yesterday.

“It is clear that the president’s signature could not have ensured the respect of an institutio­n as the respondent­s would have it. In fact, it severely undermined the crucial SADC institutio­n, the Tribunal.

“It detracted from SADC’s own stature and institutio­nal accountabi­lity and violated the SADC Treaty itself,” Judge President Dunstan Mlambo said in a unanimous scathing judgment on behalf of a full bench of high court judges.

Judge Mlambo said that if the intention of the Zuma-led government was to withdraw Pretoria from the SADC Treaty and Protocol, Parliament’s consent had to be obtained first.

“Failure to do so, in the present context, is unlawful and furthermor­e irrational,” said Judge Mlambo.

“As a result, the applicant’s argument relating to the rationalit­y of the president’s conduct must be upheld. There is no reason not to grant the order sought by the Law Society…”

He then announced the order of the court: “It is declared that the first respondent’s (Zuma) participat­ion in suspending the SADC Tribunal and his subsequent signing of the 2014 Protocol on the Tribunal is declared unlawful, irrational and, thus, unconstitu­tional.

“The applicants (Law Society, Zimbabwean farmers Luke Tembani, Ben Freeth, Richard Etheridge, Chris Jarretas, Zimbabwean agricultur­al estates Tengwe Estates and France Farm) as well as the first and second amicus curiae (friends of the court) are entitled to the costs of the applicatio­n, including costs of two counsel, which includes the costs pertaining to the intervenin­g applicatio­n.”

The applicants had approached the superior court seeking declarator­y relief relating to two decisions of the South African government to support a resolution suspending the operation of the Tribunal in 2011.

In 2011 and 2012, Zuma supported repeated SADC summit decisions – punted by Zimbabwe’s former president Robert Mugabe – which in effect suspended the operations of the Tribunal.

Mugabe’s gripe followed the court’s rulings in 2007 and 2008 that the Zimbabwean government’s seizure of the farm of white farmer Mike Campbell without compensati­on was racist and unlawful and had violated the SADC Treaty because he had been denied the right to complain to the Zimbabwean courts. – African News Agency (ANA)

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JACOB ZUMA

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