Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Zimbabwe election report back in court

Zimbabwe election report back in court

http://www.businessday.co.za

ERNEST MABUZA
Published: 2011/03/08 06:28:27 AM

THE Presidency, in its appeal against the Supreme Court of Appeal judgment 
which ordered it to hand over a report on the 2002 Zimbabwe election to the 
Mail & Guardian newspaper, argues that sufficient evidence was placed before 
the courts in justifying the refusal of access to the report.

The case raises issues concerning the power of the president to appoint 
judges as special envoys, his ability to seek information on a confidential 
basis and the use of that data in promoting domestic and southern African 
regional policy objectives.

The report in dispute, which was commissioned by former president Thabo 
Mbeki , was prepared by Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke and 
Constitutional Court Judge Sisi Khampepe in 2002 before the Zimbabwe 
election. When the newspaper was refused access to the report, it lodged an 
application in the North Gauteng High Court for access to the report. In 
June, the high court ordered the Presidency to give the report to the 
newspaper, and in December, the Presidency failed in its appeal to the 
Supreme Court of Appeal.

In its written submissions to the Constitutional Court last week, the 
Presidency said the Supreme Court of Appeal had rejected the evidence 
tendered on the appointment of the justices and the evidence obtained and 
furnished to the court regarding the justices’ interactions and the purpose 
of their mission.

“We submit that the justices were not acting in their personal or judicial 
capacities or as members of the South African Observer Mission,” the 
Presidency’s advocates Marumo Moerane SC and Leah Gcabashe said.

They said support for this view was found in the Constitutional Court 
judgment of the South African Association of Personal Injury Lawyers vs 
Heath, where the court declined to “lay down rigid tests for determining 
whether or not the performance of a particular function by a judge is or is 
not compatible with the judicial office”.

They said there was no explicit or implicit prohibition on appointing 
members of other branches of government as special envoys. “A definitive 
ruling from this court on the matter would, however, be of great assistance 
in guiding the president on the future appointment of special envoys.”

Mr Moerane and Ms Gcabashe said the appointment of the two justices as 
special envoys was not incompatible with the judicial office that they held.

“Their qualities are that they are independent, able to weigh up information 
and form an opinion based on the evidence presented, and give a decision 
based on the consideration of relevant evidence. The functions they 
discharged as special envoys did not conflict with the central mission of 
the judiciary. It was a temporary assignment that did not require the 
justices to be partisan.”

The Constitutional Court will hear the case in May.

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