Comment on application for leave to appeal against the interdict on the construction at the River Club redevelopment
11 April 2022
We note that the LLPT, the City, DEADP and the FNC have filed for leave to appeal Judge Goliath’s ground-breaking interdict regarding the River Club re-development. The judgement was historic because it recognised that “this matter ultimately concerns the rights of indigenous peoples” and economic benefits “can never override the fundamental rights of First Nations Peoples.”
We believe that the arguments made by the respondents are not likely to be successful. The courts did not consider hearsay, did not deprive the respondents of the opportunity to state their case and Judge Goliath’s reasoning is most certainly not misinformed about the public participation processes. Far from being ‘extensive’, she identified, from the evidence before the court, that the purported consultation with First Nations groups was wholly inadequate. Our case that there was irreparable harm to cultural and heritage resources should the development proceed, an argument we have been making throughout the process, but which has been strenuously ignored by the authorities, was deemed valid by the court. Now the respondents are seeking to overturn a historic decision which recognises the particular legal obligations placed on governments when dealing with intangible heritage of indigenous peoples.
We would have imagined that the consultation order, motivated by appropriate concerns on the part of the Court, consistent with the fundamental rights in the Bill of Rights, the values underlying it and the State’s obligations to First Nations groupings under international law, would have presented an opportunity for the developer and other parties to welcome a meaningful consultation process to secure heritage resources. Instead, we see government ganging up with a wealthy developer to block this opportunity.
In rejecting meaningful consultation, the respondents appear to be happy with the butchering of the original Liesbeek River course and desecration of a sacred floodplain. Let us remind them, this heritage is not for sale. It is part of the national estate and deserves full protection rather than barbarous destruction. Why is the City and Province pursuing this defence of a private development with public money? How many houses could have been built and how many jobs created for our people with these millions? Wasteful and frivolous expenditure is surely a sign of poor leadership and accountability.