10. Carmel Rickard's article in Legal Brief on what the NP govt's choice of LC Steyn as Chief Justice in 1959 says about Justice Minister Jeff Radebe's recent appointment of Moketedi Mpshe as an acting judge:
Rickard writes: "What does the case of L C Steyn have to say to us today? Mainly that we should have learnt how disastrous it is to appoint a government employee as a judge. This is even more so under our new democratic constitutional dispensation when we are entitled to demand from our judges that they be free of any special interest. That's why the Judicial Service Commission asks candidates so many questions about their background and their financial and political links and why they are asked to quit all such links when they take office. And that's also why the decision by the Minister of Justice to appoint Mokotedi Mpshe as an acting judge in Mafikeng is, quite correctly, the subject of protest."
9. The Pretoria News on the case of Pretoria District Court magistrate Ndileka Ndamase who stands accused of 42 charges of misconduct, including allegedly sleeping in court:
Hanti Otto reports that "When the hearing started on Monday, Ndamase wanted the presiding officer, senior magistrate Dirk van Greuning, and senior magistrate Gail Pretorius, who led the evidence against her, to recuse themselves, as they were white and spoke Afrikaans. She said she feared she would not get a fair hearing."
8. Rhoda Kadalie's opinion piece in the Guardian.co.uk on how Nelson Mandela avoided the exiles' disease (of bitterness and paranoia):
Kadalie writes: "Our former political prisoners, of whom Madiba is king, are a much nicer bunch than those who went into exile. My favourite recent story of Mandela was when I, as chair of the street renaming committee, called his office to inform him of the calls for Hertzog Boulevard to be renamed after him. His response was: ‘I shan't replace any former Afrikaner political hero, thank you very much.' And that was that. Dare we conclude that 27 years of prison preserved Mandela's humanity in ways that exile could never have. Or is this too sacrilegious a thought?"