WHAT BATHABILE DLAMINI PERJURY PROSECUTION TELLS US ABOUT JUDICIAL ABUSE UNDER RAMAPHOSA
By: Paul M. Ngobeni
Both the substance and the suspicious timing of the criminal charges of perjury against the ANCWL president expose the political misuse of public institutions, especially the NPA in the time of the ANC’s “step-aside” to fight political battles against certain political enemies of President Ramaphosa. Where serious allegations of corruption are leveled against Ramaphosa’s allies, he has not forced the ANC’s much vaunted step-aside policy to be invoked against them. Ramaphosa’s refrain has been to rally to the defence of his loyalists and even amidst vociferous calls from ANC members that the step-aside policy must be applied even-handedly to those facing serious fraud and corruption allegations. Ramaphosa has repeatedly made it clear that he rewards political allies and could even remove their political rivals from office to ensure that any investigation against them is quashed. That was done to Minister Sisulu when she initiated investigations into corruption implicating Eastern Cape Premier Mabuyane who is Ramaphosa’s hench-man.
Viewed with this prism, the NPA’s perjury prosecution against Minister Bathabile Dlamini is a political prosecution walking on stilts and having no prospect of success. Accordingly, it should come as no surprise that the NPA claims to be ill-prepared for such a supposed slam-dunk case. It is a damning indictment proving that political machinations and not the law are the motivating factors in such cases. Low level prosecutors are sometimes pressured by their superiors such as the Director of Public Prosecutions to bring meritless cases they clearly lack the will and skill to prosecute. That form of abuse must be halted forthwith though a change in leadership of the country.
The ANC has many competent women leaders such as Minister Lindiwe Sisulu who are capable of leading this country to build a capable state within an appropriate ethical framework and the required competent and incorruptible judiciary. The ANC Women’s League has recently declared that it will continue its fight to have a woman elected president of the African National Congress and the country. The abuse of rights by some in the judiciary and the NPA must be tackled and dealt with decisively.
It comes as no surprise that the presiding Magistrate in the perjury trial has rejected the NPA’s request for postponement of the case to February 2022. Magistrate Khumalo was displeased with the state’s “dilly-dalying” and dilatory tactics which had the effect of wasting the Court’s valuable time. The NPA, which is never short of frivolous excuses, requested a one day as it claimed it could not proceed with trial as it had not consulted with a witness, identified as Zodwa Mvulane. Magistrate Khumalo granted the request only for the state to declare overnight that it would no longer use the witness whose consultation was the basis for the postponement.
Thereafter the NPA made another outlandish request which reveals that the NPA is not genuinely interested in prosecuting the case as it was never about perjury or Minister Dlamini’s malfeasance in the first place. The NPA claimed it would need at “least four weeks to make travel and accommodation arrangements for a witness based in KwaZulu-Natal.” In a sheer display of chutzpa, the NPA requested a postponement of the case to February 2022 on that basis. But Magistrate Khumalo was visibly not impressed with the delays, saying she was not seeing "any efforts on the side of the State to secure witnesses". This means that Minister Dlamini’s lawyers must press for a dismissal with prejudice if the NPA is still not ready when the matter resumes on Friday 26 November 20221. They must not repeat the mistake made by President Zuma’s lawyers in 2006 when Justice Msimang struck a matter from the roll after severely criticizing the NPA for violating Zuma’s constitutional rights. Striking a matter from the roll is simply not enough where the state has engaged in dilatory tactics and has severely prejudiced a person’s fair trial rights. The magistrate has already taken notice that the State has not “put in efforts," to ensure that its witnesses were present in court.
But for now, I shall only highlight the plethora of legal blunders, substantive and procedural, by both the Constitutional Court and the NPA in framing the perjury charges and the latter’s handling of the perjury case against Minister Dlamini. The circumstances surrounding the genesis of the bizarre unsustainable perjury charge against Minister Bathabile Dlamini, president of the ANC Women’s League are detailed in the Concourt case Black Sash Trust (Freedom Under Law Intervening) v Minister of Social Development and Others [2018] ZACC 36. By way of background, the judgment deals with the issue of costs left open in Black Sash 1 where costs were reserved and Minister Dlamini was called upon to show cause on affidavit as to why she should not be joined to the proceedings in her personal capacity and why she should not pay the costs of the application out of her own pocket. In response, affidavits were filed that raised conflicts of fact in relation to an alleged parallel process of responsibility initiated by Minister Dlamini. Eventually the Court ordered that Minister Dlamini be joined in her personal capacity and that the parties report to the Court on whether they agreed to a process in terms of section 38 of the Superior Courts Act to determine the issues relating to Minister Dlamini’s role and responsibility in establishing the parallel decision-making and communication processes. The parties agreed on a referee and retired Judge President Ngoepe (Ngoepe JP) was appointed to conduct the fact finding inquiry.
Because the NPA chose to charge Dlamini with “perjury” it is important to
clearly identify what the Ngoepe inquiry did or did not say about Dlamini’s
conduct. In his report, Ngoepe alleged that Dlamini was an evasive
witness."... I simply could not understand why the minister was not
properly answering such a simple question," Ngoepe said. He also said that Dlamini would "unjustifiably answer with 'I don't
know/remember' to important questions". Further, he said: "She would
simply not answer some of the questions. Instead of answering the questions,
she told counsel to proceed to the next one. He claimed that she gave long answers, which did not speak
to the question asked. Ngoepe stated: “It is difficult to understand how the
minister could have justifiably leave out the issue of the appointment of
streams, their role, who appointed them, when and to who they reported;
especially when she was the one who had instructed that they be appointed, and
identified specific individuals to be appointed.” None of these findings constitutes the elements of the crime of perjury.
The crux of the Court’s finding against Dlamini is contained in the following paragraphs of the Ngoepe Report:
“14.1 The Minister’s answer to the question is the following: She did not understand the Court’s request as asking of her to give an overview of the work during 2016. She says her focus was on what she understood the call to be, namely, why she should not be made to pay the applicant’s costs personally. She denies that the reason she did not disclose the appointment of the individuals to work streams, and that they reported to her, was because she was responsible for the crisis experienced in March 2017. It is also submitted for the Minister that this question is predicated on the premise that the work streams reported to the Minister and not to SASSA. This aspect has already been dealt with above: the work streams did report directly to the Minister and not to SASSA, which was why Mr Magwaza, the CEO, complained; as did Mr Dangor.
14.2 To answer the question ‘why’, I have to, inevitably, consider the Minister’s explanation for the non-disclosure of the information in question. Her explanation is unconvincing and therefore falls to be rejected: The appointment of work streams and their role was central to the whole exercise of meeting the deadline. Therefore, in dealing with any aspect relating to the crisis, it is difficult to understand how the Minister could justifiably leave out the issue of the appointment of work streams, their role, who appointed them, when and to whom they reported; especially when she was the one who had instructed that they be appointed, identified specific individuals to be appointed and ordered that they report to her directly. Add to that the fact that Ms Mvulane reported to her regularly about her activities.
14.3 Back to the question ‘why’: In contesting the Minister’s reasons for the non- disclosure, her opponents came up with a variety of reasons; for example, fear of loss of office, fear of loss of standing in the public’s eye and within own party, protecting the government and own political party, reluctance to take the blame for the crisis and of course fear of being personally mulcted in costs. Mr Semenya argued that all these were mere conjecture. He argued that the Minister furnished the inquiry with a certain set of facts, which constituted her explanation. Those facts, he argued, could not be contrasted with mere conjecture. Therefore, he argued, in the event the Minister’s explanation fell away, I would be left with no answer to the question ‘why’; under those circumstances, he argued, I should declare myself unable to tell the reason for the non-disclosure, and report [same to] the Court. I disagree. I have been asked ‘to enquire and report on’ . . . the ‘reason why the Minister did not disclose.’ The Inquiry’s mandate can’t simply be restricted to recording the explanation given. To complete the mandate ‘to enquire and report,’ I must look into the soundness or otherwise of the reason given. If it is good, I so report. If it is not, I don’t just stop there; I must, on the evidence I took the trouble to listen to, establish the real reason for the non-disclosure if that is possible, and report accordingly. I therefore proceed to deal with what appears to be the reason why the Minister did not disclose the information in question.
14.4 There were two things, and two things only, which the Minister was called upon by the Court to fend off: being joined in her personal capacity, and, that happening, being mulcted in costs in her personal capacity. The reason for not giving the information in question can therefore only be related to these two things. In contrast, all other conceivable reasons, conjectures etc, fear of the two is therefore not something sucked from the thumb. We now know that the Minister has already been joined in her personal capacity; but at the time she made the affidavit which did not disclose the information sought, this was of course not yet the case. Fear of being joined must therefore be factored in.
14.5 The two issues were the only ones the Minister was answering to. On the face of it, the information not disclosed was inimical to the Minister’s case in fending them off; the fear of them as the reason for the non-disclosure therefore commends itself more readily to mind than any other reason. That then, to me, is ‘the reason why the Minister did not disclose . . . that these individuals were appointed at her instance and that they had to report directly to her’.”
Judge Froneman who made the ruling in the Concourt and referred the matter to the NPA for perjury prosecution appears to have grossly misunderstood the crime of perjury as evidenced by his statements. He sated in paragraph 6 of the Judgment the following: In relation to the last question, namely “[t]he reason why [Minister Dlamini] did not disclose to this Court that these individuals were appointed at her instance and that they had to report directly to her,” the report was diplomatic but nevertheless damning. In essence it found that Minister Dlamini had failed to make full disclosure to this Court.
The Concourt was hinting at a new species of perjury unknown in South Africa law, namely, perjury by omission or non-disclosure. But that kind of jurisprudence has been rejected in more advanced democracies. See Bronston v. United States, 409 U.S. 352, 360, 362 (1973) (holding that “the perjury statute is not to be loosely construed, nor the statute invoked simply because a wily witness succeeds in derailing the questioner—so long as the witness speaks the literal truth”). The literal truth defense forbids using a literally true but unresponsive statement to form the basis of a perjury conviction. The purpose of the defense is to protect witnesses who misunderstand a question while permitting the law to punish individuals who clearly lie. In creating the literal truth defense, the Court noted that it is not surprising for witnesses to give answers that are not “entirely responsive” under the “pressures and tensions of interrogation.” Although the Court acknowledged that it might be possible for an unresponsive answer to mislead a questioner, it ultimately concluded that unresponsive answers should alert the questioner to continue his inquiry until obtaining the desired information. When the questioner fails to do so, a defendant can take advantage of this defense and utilize it even when he intended to mislead the questioner or provided an answer that created a false-negative implication. Ngoepe was appointed as a referee and had the duty to ask probing questions but he failed to do so by his own admission.
Under modem case law, it is clear that a statement
constitutes neither perjury nor a false declaration unless it is found to be
literally false. The leading contemporary case is Bronston v. United States 409 U.S. 352 (1973). Bronston was president of a movie
production company that petitioned for bankruptcy. At a bankruptcy hearing,
Bronston was asked, "Do you have any [Swiss bank accounts]?," to
which heresponded "no"; and "Have you ever?," to which he
responded, "The company had an account there for about six months, in
Zurich." The truth was that Bronston had had Swiss bank accounts for five years,
but did not have any at the time of the trial, and so his first answer was
correct. As for his second answer, had he said "no," he would have
been guilty of perjury. Instead, he gave a literally true answer to a question
that had not been asked-namely, whether his company had ever had a Swiss bank
account-which was misleading as an answer to the question actually asked. In
overturning Bronston's conviction, the US Supreme Court held that the perjury statute is
not meant to apply to: (1) statements that are literally true; (2) statements that
are untrue only by "negative implication" (i.e., literally true, but evasive,
answers); and (3) literally true but misleading or incomplete answers. Under
the Court's reasoning, although a witness' testimony might be misleading, it is
the responsibility of the questioning lawyer to probe until the truth can be
uncovered. If the lawyer fails to do so adequately, the witness is not guilty
of perjury. That is Ngoepe, the referee failed to do.
Another outrageous example is the Fourth Circuit's decision in United States v. Earp. 812 F.2d 917 (4th Cir. 1987). During the course of his testimony before a grand jury, defendant, a member of the Ku Klux Klan, was asked whether he had ever burned a cross at the home of an interracial couple. He denied that he had. The truth was that he had attempted to burn a cross, but had fled before it was lit. The court, following Bronston, reversed his conviction on the grounds that defendant's testimony, though obviously misleading, was nevertheless literally true, and therefore not perjurious.
A lawyer who fails to clarify evasive or nonresponsive statements from a witness bears even more responsibility for improper inferences than does a listener in everyday conversation. As Bronston put it:
[I]t is the responsibility of the lawyer to probe; testimonial interrogation, and cross-examination in particular, is a probing, prying, pressing form of inquiry. If a witness evades, it is the lawyer's responsibility to recognize the evasion and to bring the witness back to the mark, to flush out the whole truth with the tools of adversary examination. Bronston, 409 U.S. at 358-59
This is in accordance with the idea that perjury requires
lying, and that the witness who makes an evasive or unresponsive, but literally
true, statement has not lied, and therefore has not committed perjury. The Bronston case influenced thousands of
further perjury trials. This case was also used later in the perjury
proceedings involving President Bill Clinton, which raised a huge public
controversy. The total sum of Ngoepe's complaints against Minister Dlamini is that she was evasive and a difficult witness - that is not tantamount to perjury.
US federal courts have consistently drawn the line when dealing with perjury cases. In United States v. Hilliard, 31 F.3d 1509 (10th Cir. 1994), a case involving a defendant's challenge to a two-level enhancement under the sentencing guidelines for perjury, the court states that "a defendant's truthful answer to a reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous question does not constitute perjury." Id. at 1519. It also quoted Bronston approvingly:
Under the pressure and tensions of interrogation, it is not uncommon for the most earnest witness to give answers that are not entirely responsive. Sometimes the witness does not understand the question, or may in an excess of caution or apprehension read too much or too little into it. . . . It is the responsibility of the lawyer to probe: testimonial interrogation, and cross examination in particular, is a probing, prying, pressing form of inquiry.
Hilliard, 31 F.3d at 1519 (quoting Bronston, 409 U.S. at 358).
Under South African law our judges have struggled with the distinction between perjury and a finding that a witness’ testimony is unsatisfactory, that she is evasive and that her evidence falls to be rejected. See, PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA AND OTHERS v SOUTH AFRICAN RUGBY FOOTBALL UNION AND OTHERS 1999 (4) SA 147 (CC). There then Justice William de Villiers said that the evidence of former President Nelson Mandela was unsatisfactory because he refused to answer certain questions, answered back and used the court for political rhetoric. Mandela was incensed at being called a liar and he made that very clear when he stated: “'Let me say, Judge, I never imagined that Dr Luyt would be so insensitive, so disrespectful, so ungrateful as to say of the President of this country that when I gave my affidavit and signed it under oath, I was telling lies. I was not being honest because that is what he says. I never imagined that he would do a thing like that.'
In a scathing judgment, De Villiers called Mandela an "often argumentative" and "less than satisfactory" witness whose overall demeanour was subject to material criticism. He said Mandela flatly refused to answer certain questions and used the court as a "podium for political rhetoric". In his ruling, Mr de Villiers stopped just short of calling the late president a liar, saying that Mr Mandela's testimony lacked credibility on a number of issues. "His overall demeanour is, to my mind, subject to material criticism," the judge said of the president.
Mandela succeeded in appeal to the Constitutional Court which ruled that de Villiers had made key errors of law and fact in compelling Mr Mandela to testify in court and then all but calling him a liar. The head of Sarfu, Louis Luyt, launched a court challenge to Mr Mandela's right to appoint the commission and questioned whether he had followed proper procedures. Mr Luyt shocked many South Africans when he attempted to humiliate Mr Mandela by demanding that a president testify in a civil case for the first time. A Pretoria high court judge, William de Villiers, compelled Mr Mandela to take the stand.
Just to be clear Minister Dlamini is not the first witness to be criticized by a judge or to be accused of lying as the Mandela example shows. The perjury case is proving difficult for the NPA because it was driven by a political narrative and not the evidence.
To be fair to Judge Ngoepe, he did not make any findings that remotely suggested that Minister Dlamini had committed perjury. But his unanswered questions suggested that he misapprehended his duties as a referee under Section 38. It was his duty to probe with the assistance of the lawyers, to delve deeper into the answers given by Ministter Dlamini. That he did not do. Equally at fault were the lawyers who were lollygagging and asleep instead of heeding the Bronston admonition that “is the responsibility of the lawyer to probe; testimonial interrogation, and cross-examination in particular, is a probing, prying, pressing form of inquiry. If a witness evades, it is the lawyer's responsibility to recognize the evasion and to bring the witness back to the mark, to flush out the whole truth with the tools of adversary examination.”
In any event, the allegations of non-disclosure in motion proceedings where the Minister was responding to the applicants’ case as she understood it cannot be equated with perjury. See, the recent case of Koni Multinational Brands (Pty) Ltd v Beiersdorf AG (SCA) (unreported case no 553/19, 19-3-2021) (Schippers JA (Cachalia JA and Sutherland and Unterhalter AJJA concurring)), where the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) referred a matter to the Legal Practice Council [LPC], Pretoria, “to investigate the circumstances in which the respondent’s attorneys, [and the customer who gave the evidence], failed to disclose [the customer’s] association with the respondent’s attorneys to the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg and this court, when filing an affidavit by her as a member of the public, and to take whatever steps it deems appropriate in the light thereof’.”
In the original court proceedings, the respondent’s legal practitioners relied on evidence obtained from a customer believed to be a member of the public. According to the affidavit, the customer thought she was purchasing the applicant’s shower gel, when she was actually purchasing the respondent’s shower gel. The customer claimed that she realised the error after closely inspecting the product at home and after her husband had already used it. During the hearing in the SCA, an astute judge inquired whether the customer was associated with respondent’s legal practitioners of record, which the counsel confirmed. The customer’s identity was then revealed. As it turned out, the customer was a legal practitioner, who at the time, worked for the law firm, Adams & Adams, the respondent’s legal practitioners. This then prompted the appellant’s legal practitioner to submit that the conduct of the respondent’s legal practitioners had constituted a serious and material non-disclosure. Differently formulated the argument was, that the respondent’s legal practitioners failed to disclose a material fact. Non-disclosure certainly raised a question of whether the presentation of misleading evidence was deliberately planned.
As the High Court noted in Beiersdorf AG v Koni Multinational Brands (Pty) Ltd 2019 BIP 23 (GJ), per Makgoka JA, ‘Beiersdorf knew very well that had it disclosed [the customer’s] true identity, her evidence would have carried little, if any weight at all’. The court reasoned that ‘in the absence of any explanation, an irresistible inference must be that this was a conscious effort to mislead the court’. But it cannot be said that the legal practitioners committed perjury - the conduct in question does not meet the legal definition of perjury. In motion proceedings where the applicants bear the burden of pleading their own case and relying on evidence they have it is a bit far-fetched to argue that Minister Dlamini had the obligation to disclose the workings of the teams she established and that her non-disclosure amounted to perjury.
The Constitutional Court’s ruling was also an unprecedented and baffling case of serious judicial incompetence where the apex court imposed a hefty financial penalty of R650 000 on Minister Dlamini for alleged “failure to disclose facts to the Court” and the same court referred the matter to the NPA for perjury prosecution on exactly the same set of facts. Apparently Justice Froneman who wrote the unanimous judgment had never heard of the double jeopardy principle in our Constitution. In brief, the applicant, Black Sash Trust submitted that Minister Dlamini’s actions amounted to bad faith. This was on the basis of “five factors arising out of the findings of the report, all of which relate to the Minister’s failure to disclose the truth relating to her interference with governance in relation to the work streams, despite filing affidavits under oath with this Court.” Freedom Under Law submitted similarly, that the non-disclosure by Minister Dlamini evinces her bad faith.The Concourt then opined that the common-law rules for holding public officials personally responsible for costs are now buttressed by the Constitution:
“Within that constitutional context the tests of bad faith and gross negligence in connection with the litigation, applied on a case by case basis, remain well founded. These tests are also applicable when a public official’s conduct of his or her duties, or the conduct of litigation, may give rise to a costs order.”
The Court explained the serious import of the factual dispute about the alleged parallel process:
“These are serious allegations. If it is correct that the Minister appointed the members of the work streams and that they reported directly to her in contravention of governance protocol, then her failure to disclose this to the Court bears strongly on whether she has acted in good faith or not.”10
[12] The Inquiry Report’s finding that the Minister’s failure to disclose this information was her fear of being joined in her personal capacity and being mulcted personally in costs has not been, and cannot, be faulted.11 The inference that she did not act in good faith in doing so is irresistible. At best for her, her conduct was reckless and grossly negligent. All that is sufficient reason for a personal costs order.
The Court then ruled that “it is proper that Minister Dlamini must, in her personal capacity, bear a portion of the costs. It would account for her degree of culpability in misleading the Court - conduct which is deserving of censure by this Court as a mark of displeasure - more so since she held a position of responsibility as a member of the Executive. Her conduct is inimical to the values underpinning the Constitution that she undertook to uphold when she took up office.”
Further, the Court concluded that the “report by Ngoepe JP revealed that the Minister misled the Court to protect herself from the consequences of her behaviour. She allowed a parallel process to occur knowing that she withheld information that would lead to her being held personally liable for the social grants disaster.” It stated further, that it was “difficult to determine the proper extent of the personal costs order. The determination is a discretionary one. We have to consider Minister Dlamini’s personal responsibility, arising from the parallel process she set in motion, and her shielding this truth from the Court, against the fact that ordinarily state officials do not bear personal responsibility for the good faith performance of their official functions. It is a novel matter to hold a cabinet minister personally responsible for the costs of litigation. In the circumstances it will be appropriate to order that she must pay 20% of the taxed costs.”
The ruling falters as its narrative is devoid of logic. At the time Minister Dlamini filed her pleadings in court, she had not been joined as a party and the issue of her personal liability for costs was not in the picture. Ngoepe’s report stated: We now know that the Minister has already been joined in her personal capacity; but at the time she made the affidavit which did not disclose the information sought, this was of course not yet the case.” Even with the benefit of hindsight, it is simply illogical for the Court to rule that “she withheld information that would lead to her being held personally liable for the social grants disaster.” Conjecture and rank speculation cannot be a substitute for a reasoned, logical and coherent judgment from the apex court.
In referring the matter to the NPA the Concourt reasoned that the “Inquiry Report’s findings suggest very strongly that some of Minister Dlamini’s evidence under oath in the affidavits before this Court and orally before the Inquiry was false. The Registrar of this Court must be directed to forward a copy of the Inquiry Report and this judgment to the National Director of Public Prosecutions, to consider whether Minister Dlamini lied under oath and, if so, whether she should be prosecuted for perjury.” But the Concourt overlooked an important provision of the law. Namely
Section 38 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 which provides:
(b) Any person who, after having taken an oath or having made an affirmation, gives false evidence before a referee at an enquiry, knowing such evidence to be false or not knowing or believing it to be true, is guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to the penalties prescribed by law for perjury.
Once again, the Court is waffling between saying that the real offence was non-disclosure in the affidavits filed in Court before the matter was even referred to the referee Ngoepe and implying that the lying was in her testimony before Ngoepe. The latter did not make any such finding of lying – he made adverse findings against Minister Dlamini as a witness but did not say she committed perjury. The Court itself stated that “the report was diplomatic but nevertheless damning. In essence it found that Miniter Dlamini had failed to make full disclosure to this Court.” Importantly, the Report itself mentioned Minister Dlamini’s explanation for the alleged non-disclosure which was focused on the allegations made by the applicants.
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights recognises, under Article 14 (7): "No one shall be liable to be tried or punished again for an offence for which he has already been finally convicted or acquitted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of each country." Section 35(3)(m) of the South African Constitution provides that an accused person has the right not to be tried for an offence in respect of any act or omission for which that person has previously been acquitted or convicted – a right that entrenches the common law right expressed in the maxim ‘nemo debet bis vexari pro una et eadem causa’. The right is of ancient origin and is almost universally applied. It is based on two main values. First, the need to ensure that matters reach finality, both in the interests of an accused and of the State. Second, the need to safeguard an individual against State oppression by placing constraints on the prosecuting authority to avoid successive prosecutions for the same conduct.
In Grayston Technology Investment (Pty) Ltd and Another v S (A225/2014) [2016] ZAGPJHC 249; [2016] 4 All SA 908 (GJ) (23 September 2016) the Court opined that there “would appear to be a constitutional safeguard against double jeopardy irrespective of whether the forum empowered to impose the sanction is a criminal court, a civil court or an administrative tribunal. Section 35(3)(m) of the Constitution gives expression to a fundamental principle which transcends the confines of purely criminal procedure. The provisions of that section are illustrative of the broader concept which underpins the plea of autrefois convict and acquit, and also res judicata; nl, “. . . die eenvoudige feit dat dit weersinwekkend is vir ons gevoel van billikheid en regverdigheid, dat . . . die gestrafte vir die tweede maal . . . weens dieselfde misdaad vervolg sou word” R v Manasewitz 1933 (AD) 165 at 177.
These doctrines give expression to the same legal sentiment; a person should be protected from being repeatedly brought to answer in respect of the same conduct. They are intended to secure justice and reasonableness through the finality of proceedings.
Here the Constitutional Court ruling was also an unprecedented and baffling case of serious judicial incompetence where the apex court imposed a hefty financial penalty of R650 000 on Minister Dlamini for alleged “failure to disclose facts to the Court” and the same court referred the matter to the NPA for perjury prosecution on exactly the same set of facts. Those who continue to ignore obvious injustice while shouting rule of law and respect for the judiciary must one day answer this very simple question: what happens when the judiciary itself operates outside the law and violates people’s constitutional rights with impunity?
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