Cape Argus

INQUIRY GO-AHEAD

Commission will need a month and a half to prepare before public hearings restart

- Clayton Barnes POLITICAL WRITER clayton.barnes@inl.co.za

A MONTH and a half – that’s how long it will take the commission of inquiry set up to probe alleged police inefficien­cy in Khayelitsh­a to get public hearings restarted, said commission secretary Amanda Dissel.

But all eyes will be on Police Minister Nathi Mthethwa this week as he decides whether to appeal the Western Cape High Court’s judgment allowing the inquiry to continue.

The commission was establishe­d by Premier Helen Zille in August to probe allegation­s of police inefficien­cy and the alleged “breakdown in relations” between the community and the police in Khayelitsh­a. The commission was suspended a month later, pending the outcome of the court proceeding­s.

Yesterday, Judges Jeanette Traverso and James Yekiso concurred that Mthethwa’s applicatio­n for an urgent interdict against the commission be dismissed.

The Social Justice Coalition (SJC), which called for the establishm­ent of the commission, hailed the ruling as a victory for people fed-up with crime in South Africa. The SJC’s Zackie Achmat said the court’s decision was a victory for all South Africans.

“The people of Khayelitsh­a and South Africa have been vindicated,” Achmat said. “The issue with the police is a systematic issue, it does not just relate to one or two rotten apples.”

Judge Traverso dismissed the applicatio­n with cost to the first, fourth to seventh and ninth respondent­s – which include Zille, retired Judge Catherine O’Regan, who heads the commission, and advocate Vusi Pikoli, secretary to the commission and the SJC.

In the majority judgment, Judges Yekiso and Traverso said: “The premier made her decision without the benefit of any substantiv­e input from SAPS despite repeatedly having requested the provincial commission­er to provide comment on the complaint and having granted the national commission­er no less than two extensions of time within which to provide their responses and comments.

“Thus, the applicants in the

‘THE ISSUE WITH POLICE IS SYSTEMIC, IT DOES NOT JUST APPLY TO ONE OR TWO ROTTEN APPLES’

today to map a way forward. Dissel said the commission would need at least a month and a half to prepare before public hearings resume.

Mthethwa’s spokesman Zweli Mnisi said the minister’s lawyers were studying the judgment and would “determine, at a later stage whether to appeal the ruling or not”.

Achmat said it would be “foolish” of Mthethwa to appeal.

 ?? PICTURE: JASON BOUD ?? VICTORY FOR SA A jubilant crowd celebrates outside the High Court after hearing the news that Nathi Mtethwa lost his appeal to stop the Khayelitsh­a inquiry
PICTURE: JASON BOUD VICTORY FOR SA A jubilant crowd celebrates outside the High Court after hearing the news that Nathi Mtethwa lost his appeal to stop the Khayelitsh­a inquiry

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