Sowetan

‘Forcing us to court puts us on Covid-19 risk’

Malema, Ndlozi face cop assault charge

- By Naledi Shange

EFF leader Julius Malema, who risked arrest had he failed to appear in the Randburg magistrate’s court yesterday, said it was irresponsi­ble for the court to have summoned him to appear.

Speaking to the media shortly after his case was heard in court, where his trial was set down for October, Malema said: “I think it was unnecessar­y for us to come today because we are going through a pandemic as a country, therefore any court that requests us to appear without [hearing evidence in the] trial is risking our lives and the lives of ordinary people.”

Malema said the court had placed himself and others in danger by making him physically attend proceeding­s.

“You will know that, as public figures, when we come here, a lot of people will want to interact with us and we don’t know who is in a good state of health and who is not, so it was irresponsi­ble to even ask us to appear,” he said.

The Red Berets leader said he also had criminal charges pending in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal courts. He said those courts had agreed that there was no need for him to attend what would be postponed proceeding­s.

“All those courts have said for the purposes of postponeme­nt of these cases, it will not be necessary for us to appear, especially now during Covid-19. So I think someone was irresponsi­ble by inviting us here,” Malema said.

In the Randburg court, Malema and EFF MP Mbuyiseni Ndlozi face charges of assault relating to an incident that unfolded at the funeral of Struggle stalwart Winnie Madikizela-Mandela in 2018.

The pair face assault charges after they were allegedly caught on CCTV footage assaulting a police officer at the funeral.

During the last court sitting, AfriForum’s private prosecutio­n unit, which had pushed for the prosecutio­n, told Sowetan’s sister publicatio­n TimesLIVE that the court sought to establish why Malema and Ndlozi had failed to appear in court.

“Both Malema and Ndlozi will have to appear in court on September 14 for a court investigat­ion into whether the warrants of arrest against them should be suspended because they failed to attend previous court proceeding­s,” said advocate Phyllis Vorster for AfriForum’s prosecutio­n unit.

The two men had allegedly missed previous court proceeding­s due to the coronaviru­s pandemic and its regulation­s.

Their trial has been set down for October 13 and 28.

“The National Prosecutin­g Authority (NPA) reconsider­ed its initial refusal to prosecute after continued pressure from AfriForum, and has since instituted prosecutio­n. Now the legal process must run its course. However, we will continue to support the police colonel,” said Vorster.

The lobby group pursued action against the two after it alleged the NPA had dragged its feet on the case.

The two accused have previously denied assaulting the police officer. “I’ve never done that. If I laid a hand on him, I would have panel-beaten him. I don’t play when I lay a hand... Mbuyiseni didn’t do that,” Malema said as he addressed a crowd outside court earlier in the case.

 ??  ?? Mbuyiseni Ndlozi and Julius Malema talk to the media. /Thapelo Morebudi
Mbuyiseni Ndlozi and Julius Malema talk to the media. /Thapelo Morebudi

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