The Star Early Edition

Apla fighter wins long payment battle

- BONGANI NKOSI bongani.nkosi@inl.co.za

THE government’s refusal to pay pension annually to an Azanian People’s Liberation Army (Apla) veteran has been ruled unlawful by the South Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg.

Mangaliso Petse, who joined Apla in exile in 1987 at the age of 14, has faced stonewalli­ng from the Department of Military Veterans since 2015.

His troubles started after the department paid him a once-off lump sum of R52 629 and made it clear to him that this was all he would get in terms of regulation­s of the Military Veterans Act.

The payment followed Petse’s verificati­on that he was indeed a liberation fighter under Apla, which was the military wing of the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania.

The Military Veterans Verificati­on Board confirmed his status on August 30, 2013. Petse returned to South Africa in December 1993 with permanent injuries sustained in exile.

Following a medical assessment, the Department of Defence and Military Veterans declared that Petse qualified for an 80% disability rating in terms of the Military Pensions Act.

But the department still refused to pay him a pension annually.

Petse launched a court challenge against this in 2016, first on his own, and was later assisted by law firm Thomson Wilkes Inc.

On Petse’s behalf, advocate Norman Arendse SC argued before Judge Raylene Keightley that the former combatant was effectivel­y given a once-off compensati­on and not a pension.

The department was acting unlawfully and discrimina­torily, Judge Keightley further heard during a hearing in March.

Advocate FF Opperman, for the Military Veterans Department, submitted that Petse was not entitled to a pension because he never applied for it.

In a judgment delivered yesterday, Judge Keightley ruled that the department’s argument did not hold water.

“It seems obvious to me that this defence places form over substance in circumstan­ces that defy justificat­ion,” said Judge Keightley.

“It is common cause that Mr Petse disputed the legality of his once-off payment from inception. He accepted the payment but reserved his right to contest it.

“The facts included in his affidavits detail the lengths to which he went over the years to set matters to rights.

“He has always contended that he was entitled to more than the once-off payment he received.

“In these circumstan­ces, the suggestion that his entitlemen­t to a pension should be refused because he did not formally apply for one cannot be countenanc­ed.”

Judge Keightley added that it was common cause that Petse was a verified Apla cadre.

“The Veterans Act expressly recognises that military veterans are entitled not only to compensati­on, but also to a pension,” she said.

The legislatio­n was intended to ensure that members of former military liberation movements would be entitled to pension benefits similar to those accorded to their counterpar­ts in formal military structures, the judge pointed out.

“There is no lawful reason why Mr Petse should not have been granted and paid a pension benefit annually from 2016 onwards.

“For these reasons, I find that he is entitled to declarator­y relief giving effect to his right, retrospect­ively, to annual pension benefits … until his death,” Judge Keightley said.

Petse’s attorney, Bartho van Tonder told The Star the judgment will apply to many liberation fighters who were given once-off compensati­on.

“Based on this judgment, any other military veteran that approaches the Department of Military Veterans with a similar claim should be entitled to the same benefit of a yearly pension as opposed to a once-off pension that many of them would have received,” he said.

“Many of them are dissatisfi­ed with (the once-off payment). They are saying, ‘how can we only get a once-off payment for everything that we’ve done?’ It’s like getting a salary only once in your life, as opposed to getting a salary on a periodic basis,” he said.

 ?? ?? GAUTENG community safety MEC Faith Mazibuko, in grey, religious leaders and other community leaders gather outside the home of Kgomotso Diale who was killed while marching against cable theft in Soweto. | SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA)
GAUTENG community safety MEC Faith Mazibuko, in grey, religious leaders and other community leaders gather outside the home of Kgomotso Diale who was killed while marching against cable theft in Soweto. | SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA)

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