Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Court orders Qwelane to say sorry for column

- GERTRUDE MAKHAFOLA

THE South Gauteng High Court has ordered former South African ambassador to Uganda Jon Qwelane to apologise to the gay community for a 2008 newspaper column which the court found to be harmful.

Judge Dimphelets­e Seun Moshidi found Qwelane guilty of hate speech emanating from a column he penned in 2008 while working as a journalist.

“The offending statements made against the LGBTIQ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgende­r, Intersex and Questionin­g) community are declared by this court to be hurtful, inciting harm, propagatin­g hatred as envisaged in Section 10 of the Promotion of Equality and Unfair Prevention of Discrimina­tion Act of 2000.

“The applicant is ordered to tender to the LGBTIQ community an unconditio­nal apology within 30 days, or another period as parties may agree upon,” Moshidi said.

“The apology shall be published in one edition of the Sunday Sun newspaper or publicatio­n of the same circulatio­n as a Sunday newspaper in order to receive the same publicity as the offending statements.

“Proof of the publicatio­n of such apology shall be furnished to this court immediatel­y thereafter.’’

The self- confessed homophobe was also ordered to pay the legal costs for the long-running case, including the postponeme­nts. Moshidi further dismissed Qwelane’s constituti­onal challenge of the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimina­tion Act ( PEPUDA) hate speech clause, which Qwelane said was ‘’vague and too broad’’.

The case was brought to court by the Human Rights Commission of SA after it said it received many complaints against Qwelane’s utterances in the column.

The column, titled “Call me names, but gay is not OK”, was published in the Sunday Sun newspaper, and drew widespread criticism from activists who accused Qwelane of promoting hate speech. It was accompanie­d by a cartoon that portrayed homosexual­ity as bestiality.

Moshidi said the column “did not contain constituti­onal value at all” and was not produced in order to encourage debate on homosexual­ity, “but rather to persuade readers of Qwelane’s own views and “position on homophobia and call on others to join him in that’’.

Lesbian and gays continued to endure hatred and discrimina­tion, he added.

“It is common cause that the gay and lesbian community constitute­s a vulnerable group in our society and have been subjected to societal discrimina­tion purely on their sexual orientatio­n.

“They are a permanent minority in our society and have suffered various patterns of discrimina­tion.

“The statements published further caused hurt and were aggravated by Mr Qwelane’s failure go apologise to the LGBTIQ community,” said Moshidi. – ANA

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