Highest Court of Appeals rejects Tshwane Metro’s street names application
10 August 2015
AfriForum has given the Tshwane Metropolitan Council a thorough beating in court for the fourth time in response to the Metro’s hasty removal of historic street names in the city center and elsewhere in Pretoria, when two judges rejected the Metro's application for special leave to appeal.
Appeals judges Maya and Dambuza dismissed the Metro's application for special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein with costs and ruled that the Metropolitan Council had been unable to demonstrate that grounds exist for such an appeal.
The court battle regarding the name changes of 25 streets in Pretoria and surrounding areas that took place without due process has been raging since 2012. In April of that year, the Mayor, Kgosientso Ramokgopa, announced that the names of 25 streets in the city center and elsewhere in the Metro would be changed to pay tribute to several struggle heroes.
The Metro, however, then failed to follow its own revised policy on street name changes, renaming streets as Church Street, Schoeman Street, Vermeulen Street, Andries Street and Zambezi Drive. Contrary to its own policy, the council inter alia failed to consult with ward committees throughout the metropolis.