Complainants to challenge SAHRC findings

 

Zwelithini was only "hurtful" - SAHRC

 

 

Nabeelah Shaikh, Sunday Tribune, Durban, 6 December 2015

 

Complainants who took King Goodwill Zwelithini to the South African Human
Rights Commission (SAHRC) for his utterances relating to foreigners are
unhappy with the findings of a preliminary report released this week.

 

They are prepared to take the matter to the Equality Court if he does not
apologise for his actions.

 

The complainants included the African Diaspora Forum and 30 other private
individuals, who alleged that King Zwelithini's comments that foreign
nationals must pack their bags and go back to their home countries led to
the xenophobic violence in KwaZulu-Natal in March. He made the comments at
an address in Pongola, earlier in March.

 

The findings of the report went against claims that his speech constituted a
call to locals to take up arms or harm foreign nationals. The SAHRC said it
could not have been reasonably construed as inciting harm or violence
against foreign nationals. It was only "hurtful".

 

It recommends that mediation be used to solve the issue and that the king
indicate to the commission within 30 days of the final report whether he
agrees to apologise publicly and to submit to a private mediated settlement
of the dispute.

 

One of the complainants said the report was flawed and didn't handle the
king in the manner in which he deserved to be handled.

 

"The report is thin in its legal and substantive arguments for its findings
that the king's comments were only hurtful. This is challengeable in a court
of law. The report reads like a whitewash and damages the standing of the
SAHRC, which appears cowed, political and devoid of principle. It undermines
our constitutional regime as a whole. I am extremely disappointed," he said.

 

Another complainant said the only way forward was for the king to apologise.

 

Equality Court

 

"Failing an apology, the king must be brought personally before the Equality
Court, as it sets out in the report. We will not give up our struggle to
transform this country into a nation we can be proud of, where equality,
peace and respect for each other are paramount. The king, like every other
citizen in this country, must respect the laws of the land and remain within
them," she said.

 

Meanwhile, complainants were also upset that their identities had been
revealed to one another when the SAHRC sent out a group e-mail to all of
them. Their e-mail addresses, which contained some of their names, were made
public.

 

But Lindiwe Khumalo, chief executive officer of the SAHRC, said none of the
complainants asked for their identities to be withheld. Khumalo said she had
received a lot of criticism about the report.

 

"But this is what it's all about. This is now a chance for the complainants
to respond to us, so we thank them and welcome any criticism they may have.
Their feedback will be vital in putting together the final report," she
said.

 

The final report will be released at the end of February.

 

[email protected] 

 

 

From:
http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/kwazulu-natal/complainants-to-challen
ge-sahrc-findings-1.1955997#.VmUKKbh9600

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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