The Star Early Edition

Farmer loses bid to gag social media posts of dead animals

- ZELDA VENTER zelda.venter@inl.co.za

A FARMER who complained after a wildlife conservati­onist posted pictures sent to him of a dead baboon and porcupine in cages on the farmer’s premises on social media lost his legal bid not to have this informatio­n published.

Eastern Cape farmer and insurance broker Herman Botha was livid after conservati­onist Bool Smuts posted pictures of the dead animals on Facebook.

Also included were Botha’s details, such as where he lived.

Botha turned to the Grahamstow­n High Court and obtained an interdict against Botha from publishing his details online. While Botha did remove some of the details, he did not take the interdict against him lightly.

He turned to the Supreme Court of Appeal, where five judges ruled in his favour and ordered that the interdict had to be lifted.

The judges reasoned that while the right to privacy was important, there were occasions that the public interest prevailed. The court said that, besides, a lot of Botha’s personal informatio­n, such as that he owned the farm, were in any event out there of his own accord.

Botha’s unhappines­s followed an incident in September 2019, in the early hours of the morning, when a group of cyclists were participat­ing in an adventure trip.

During their ride they cycled past the farm Varsfontei­n belonging to Botha and one of them noticed two cages on the farm, one containing a dead baboon, the other a dead porcupine.

According to the cyclist the cages were in the sun, there was no water, and there were some oranges near the baboon. He formed the view that the animals had died as a result of dehydratio­n while trapped in the cages.

He sent the pictures to Smuts, who is also the founder and executive director of the organisati­on Landmark Leopard and Predator Project – South Africa.

Smuts contacted Botha via

WhatsApp and Botha confirmed that he had a valid permit to hunt, capture and/or kill the baboons, porcupines and other vermin.

Smuts then posted, on Landmark Leopard’s Facebook pages, pictures of the dead baboon and the porcupine trapped on the farm and included a picture of Botha holding his 6-monthold daughter.

Additional­ly, he posted a Google Search Location of Botha’s business, home address and telephone numbers.

As a caption to the pictures, Smuts, among others, called Botha’s conduct “unethical”, “cruel” and “barbaric”.

Botha successful­ly obtained an interdict prohibitin­g Smuts from publishing “defamatory” statements about him and from posting pictures of him and his family and stating where they lived.

In granting the interdict, the high court reasoned that the name of the farm and Botha’s identity, as owner of it, constitute­d personal informatio­n protected by his right to privacy.

Nonetheles­s, it found that there was no compelling public interest in the disclosure of Botha’s personal informatio­n.

On appeal, Judge Steven Mathopo said the high court erred in issuing the interdict. His reasons included that the court failed to recognise that publicisin­g the truth about Botha’s animal trapping activities did not trump his right of privacy.

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