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Concourt reserves judgment on pardons case

11th November 2009

By: Sapa

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Constitutional Court judges reserved judgment in a case involving an Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) member who wants to be pardoned for a political violence offence.

This followed lengthy discussions on Tuesday, which centred around striking a balance between rights of political violence offenders and their victims.

AWB member Ryna Albutt wants the Constitutional Court to overturn a decision made by the High Court in Johannesburg in March this year, which interdicted the President from granting pardons to perpetrators of political violence without first consulting the victims concerned.

Challenging the High Court decision along with Albutt was the President and the Minister of Justice.

His lawyer, Advocate Neil Tuchten, said the interdict hindered constitutional processes of reconciliation, while a lawyer representing the State, Advocate Vincent Maleka, said the High Court decision "was wrong".

"The main purpose of the pardon process is to achieve national reconciliation and [it] is without a doubt within the President's power to exercise it," said Tuchten.

But Constitutional Court judges questioned this, asking Tuchten how national reconciliation could be achieved without the victim's participation in the process.

"How can he [the President] ignore the victims when his aim is national reconciliation?" asked Justice Edwin Cameron.

In response, Tuchten said the President was constitutionally empowered to decide on pardons without input from the victims and that there was no evidence that the victims will be traumatised as a result of the pardons.

"The job of the President is to uphold the Constitution... act in accordance with the Constitution," he said.

This discussion was taken further by lawyers representing civil rights organisations on behalf of the victims who said pardoning the perpetrators without involving the victims undermined reconciliation.

"Nothing will make the victims more angry than hearing that the perpetrators have been granted pardons without prior consultation.

"What we are faced with, are people who made vicious racial attacks on the public. When the victim says, I want to be heard, they say no, their views are irrelevant... I want pardon now," said Advocate Geoff Budlender.

At the centre of this case is the November 21, 2007, announcement by former President Thabo Mbeki on the handling of pardon requests.

The process was available to people convicted of offences they claimed were politically motivated and who were not denied amnesty by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Mbeki established a Pardons Reference Group (PRG) where each political party in Parliament was represented. The PRG was formally constituted on January 18, 2008.

It considered 2114 applications for pardons and made recommendations to the President.

From February, 2008, to March, 2009, the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation and other nongovernmental organisations attempted unsuccessfully to influence the PRG, the President and the minister to ensure victim participation in the process.

They also sought greater transparency and public disclosure. After they failed to secure the participation of victims, they lodged an urgent application in the High Court to prevent the President from issuing political pardons pending the final determination of the rights of victims.

The High Court held that victims of crime had a right to be heard before the President exercised his pardon.

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