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City bids farewell to one of Kimberley’s firsts

- BENIDA PHILLIPS BENIDA.PHILLIPS@ACM.CO.ZA

WHAT was expected to be a sombre event, turned out to be an event filled with song and laughter as friends, family members, acquaintan­ces and the Kimberley community bid farewell to Judge Yvonne Mokgoro during a memorial service.

The memorial service was hosted at the St Boniface Catholic Church in Kimberley where the late judge completed her schooling career.

Judge Mokgoro died on May 9, 2024 following an accident involving a truck on the road between Warrenton and Kimberley in 2023.

She sustained serious injuries which impacted her health and she had to withdraw from public obligation­s.

Friends lovingly remembered her as a diligent, meticulous, hard-working, barrier breaker, soft-spoken, music lover and a humble person with a very naughty streak which those in her close circle got to see and experience.

Northern Cape High Court Judge and Chairperso­n of the Sol Plaatje University, Judge Mmathebe Phatsoane, relayed what appeared to be an unending list of Mokgoro’s achievemen­ts.

“Judge Mokgoro was born in Galeshewe and matriculat­ed at St Boniface High School in 1970. She studied mostly part-time, obtaining a Bachelor of Law degree at the University of Bophuthats­wana, now known as the North West University, in 1982 and completed her Masters in Law (LLM) in 1987.

“She also studied at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in the United States of America where she was awarded a second LLM degree. She started her work experience as nursing assistant and later as a retail salesperso­n before her appointmen­t as a clerk in the Department of Justice of the erstwhile Bophuthats­wana.

“After her completion of her LLB, she was appointed as maintenanc­e officer and public prosecutor in the then Mmabatho Magistrate’s Court. In 1984, she was appointed lecturer in law in the Department of Jurisprude­nce at the University of Bophuthats­wana where she rose to the ranks to Associate Professor and served there until 1991,” Judge Phatsoane said.

From 1992 to 1993, she served as Associate Professor at at the University of the Western Cape from where she moved to the Centre for Constituti­onal Analysis at the Human Science Research Council where she held the position of Specialist Researcher (Human Rights) while also lecturing part-time at at the University of Pretoria until her appointmen­t to the Constituti­onal Court in October 1994.

“Throughout her career she taught numerous courses which include Constituti­onal law, Human Rights Law Jurisprude­nce, Comparativ­e Law, Criminal Law, Customary Law at a number of universiti­es in South Africa, the United Kingdom, the United States and Netherland­s.”

She has written and presented papers and participat­ed in a number of national and internatio­nal conference­s. Judge Mokgoro also served on the Advisory Committee of the South African-canadian Linkage Project from its inception in 1994 until it ceased in 2004.

From 1995 until 2005 she was the President of Africa Legal Aid (AFLA), which provides legal aid and human rights education throughout Africa and is based in Accra in Ghana. She served on a number of boards and trusts, including the Nelson Mandela Children’s Fund which she chaired.

She also served as the Chairperso­n of the Selection Committee of the Press Council of South Africa which is responsibl­e for appointing the Press Ombudsman and members of the Press Appeal Bard.

Judge Phatsoane added that Judge Mokgoro was also the recipient of numerous awards and honours which, amongst others, include the Human Rights Award by the Black Lawyers Associatio­n, the Oude Molen Reserve Order of Merit, the Legal Profession's Woman Achiever Award by the Centre for Human Rights and the University of Pretoria, the Kate Stoneman Democracy Award from the Albany Law School in New York, the Tshwane Outstandin­g Service Award (TOSA) and the James Wilson Award from the University of Pennsylvan­ia Law School.

In 2006, Judge Mokgoro was selected as an icon of the history of Women lawyers in South Africa. She served as a Judge in the Office of the Chief Justice (OCJ) from 2011 to 2013. In 2013 she was appointed to chair a Tribunal which investigat­ed the ethical conduct of the President of the Lesotho Court of Appeal. She was awarded the Order of the Baobab in bronze by former President Jacob Zuma in 2015 in recognitio­n of her excellent contributi­on to law and the administra­tion of justice in a democratic South Africa.

Judge Phatsoane said besides Judge Mokgoro’s great achievemen­ts in law, she was also a “dear friend,a dviser and confidant”.

The Mayor of Sol Plaatje, Kagisho Sonyni said she was Kimberley's rare diamond . . . to South Africa and the world.

“Like Kimberley’s many firsts, Justice Mokgoro’s distinguis­hed career has left its own imprints of many firsts engraved in South African history. Her’s is a legacy deserving salutation­s from the South African National Defence Force in having being accorded a Special Official Funeral Category 1,” said Sonyoni.

Mokgoro was buried yesterday in Bryanston.

FULL STORY ON WWW.DFA.CO.ZA

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