CHIEF JUSTICE MOGOENG'S OATH OF OFFICE AND HIS SPEECH OF 6 JULY ADVOCATING FOR TRANSFORMATION
The Centre for Constitutional Rights is deeply concerned about some of the comments made by Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng at the Advocates for Transformation's Annual General Meeting on 6 July.
The Chief Justice has taken an oath "to administer justice to all persons alike, without fear, favour or prejudice in accordance with the Constitution and the law".
This means, firstly, that the Chief Justice must at all times conduct himself in such a manner that all South Africans, regardless of their race, will have confidence that they will be treated equally, impartially and without prejudice by the judicial system. The Chief Justice must accordingly take great care in his public statements to avoid any perception of racial bias or ethnic animosity.
Unfortunately, in his speech of 6 July, Chief Justice Mogoeng manifests barely disguised hostility to everyone who is critical of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC). He begins, in stark contrast with his later references to unity and nation-building, by reminding his audience that those South Africans who were the major cause of the suffering caused by apartheid are still, according to him, the main beneficiaries of the system. He then asserts - without producing the slightest shred of evidence - that "a grouping of its [apartheid's] key operators"are masquerading as "agents for the enforcement of constitutional compliance when they are in fact a change resistance force".
He blatantly misrepresents the well-founded concerns of respected members of the legal profession and of civil society regarding the appointment of judges on merit, as an attempt to protect "white male dominance of the profession and of the bench". Whether the Chief Justice's comments were intended to inflame certain sentiments in his primarily black audience, or merely an expression of his personal opinion, they are unacceptable. What assurance can all South Africans have that such sentiments will not colour any judgment that Chief Justice Mogoeng might make in cases where their respective interests are involved?