Publication: The Star
Issued:
Date: 2006-02-18
Reporter: Karyn Maughan
Reporter: Jeremy Gordin
Reporter:
Publication |
The Star
|
Date |
2006-02-18 |
Reporter
|
Karyn Maughan,
Jeremy Gordin |
Web Link
|
www.thestar.co.za
|
Won't
make himself available to try rape case because of `struggle
bond'
Saturday Star has learnt that Deputy Judge President
Phineas Mojapelo's "personal reasons" for not being available to try Jacob Zuma
for rape, are based on his long-standing relationship with the disgraced former
deputy president, stemming from the days of the anti-apartheid
struggle.
Zuma rocked the legal world this week when a judge president
recused himself and the next two most senior judges in the Transvaal Provincial
Division (TPD) made themselves unavailable to try the embattled former deputy
president on charges of raping a 31-year-old Aids activist in his Forest Town
home in Johannesburg last year.
Judge Bernard Ngoepe, the judge president
of the TPD, recused himself from the trial on Monday afternoon. When he did so,
he announced that one of his two deputy judge presidents, Judge Mojapelo, who
had been widely tipped as the judge who would try Zuma, was not prepared to hear
the case for "personal reasons" and that the other deputy judge president,
Jeremiah Shongwe, was likely to hear the trial.
Judge Shongwe never
appeared in court on Tuesday morning, after it became known that Zuma had
fathered an illegitimate child, now a 29-year-old man named Edward, with Judge
Shongwe's sister.
Judge Ezra Goldstein then presided in court on Tuesday
and promptly granted Zuma's defence team a three-week postponement to deal with
a mass of new evidence, including telephone records and a psychiatrist's report,
which the prosecution had suddenly introduced.
Yesterday, Saturday Star
learnt that Judge Mojapelo's personal reasons for not hearing the case were
because of his apartheid-era connections with Zuma.
Impeccable sources
revealed last night that Judge Mojapelo - who operated Nelspruit's first black
law firm with former Mpumalanga premier Mathews Phosa - declined to hear Zuma's
case because his anti-apartheid practice had put him in frequent contact with
Zuma.
"I think [Judge Mojapelo] considered that it would be highly
unethical to try his former struggle comrade for rape," the source said last
night.
While Zuma's supporters expressed their disapproval when Judge
Goldstein postponed Zuma's case this week, it is understood his advisers and
legal team have no qualms about a white judge hearing the
case.
Judge Ngoepe said on Monday that seniority would be the only
basis for choosing judges in high-profile cases.
"There are very clear
criteria, namely the most available senior judge," he said. "We don't use colour, gender or the size of people's feet or
noses. We use seniority."
Judge Ngoepe's explanation will be
tested in the wake of his senior judges declaring themselves unavailable since
the next top 15 senior available judges are all white
males. Judge Lucy Mailula, one of the few permanent female High Court
judges, is at number 16.
A current list of Transvaal and Witwatersrand
judges, ranked in order of seniority, shows that Pretoria High Court Judge
Willie van der Merwe follows Judge President Ngoepe and his two deputies. Judge
Goldstein is the most senior Johannesburg High Court judge, but according to
court rosters he is due to hear a civil case on the week of Zuma's new court
date.
Pretoria judges Fanie Mynhardt, Chris Botha and Ben du Plessis are
the next most senior. Judge Meyer Joffe is the next most senior Johannesburg
judge after Judge Goldstein, but he is also due to hear a civil trial on March
6.
Next in line after Pretoria Judge Willem de Villiers is Judge Joop
Labuschagne, who presided over the trial of Donovan Moodley, Leigh Matthews'
killer. He is listed as due to hear "special criminal
matters" in the week of March 6. *1
The fourth Johannesburg judge,
in order of seniority, is Judge Lewis Goldblatt. He was responsible for granting
a final restraining order against the man accused of stalking former Miss South
Africa Basetsana Kumalo.
With acknowledgements to Karyn Maughan,
Jeremy Gordin and The Star.
*1 2 + 2 = 4?