Zuma sends condolences to Langa’s family


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Johannesburg – President Jacob Zuma has sent his condolences over the death of former chief justice Pius Langa, who died on Wednesday morning.

 

“The country has lost one of its best legal minds, a dedicated Human Rights jurist and a veteran struggle activist. On behalf of government and the people of South Africa, we wish to convey our deepest condolences. May his soul rest in peace,” said President Zuma.

 

Langa died at the age of 74 at Milpark hospital in Johannesburg, Gauteng, following a long illness.

 

He retired in 2009 and went on to chair the Press Freedom Commission, which looked into regulation of the print media in South Africa.

 

Pius Nkonzo Langa was born in Bushbuckridge on 25 March 1939.

 

He went from a factory job to the country’s top judicial post after a long legal career.

 

Chief justice

 

He became deputy chief justice in 2001 and was appointed chief justice by then president Thabo Mbeki four years later, succeeding Arthur Chaskalson.

 

He began his career in law as a messenger in the justice department in 1960, after a three-year stint working in a shirt factory.

 

He went on to study for B Luris and LLB degrees, via correspondence, at the University of South Africa, and became an advocate in 1977.

 

Langa practised at the Natal Bar and was known for defending opponents of the apartheid regime. At the time, he was also actively involved in the United Democratic Front.

 

His biography on the Constitutional Court website also notes that he served on the executive committee of the Democratic Lawyers’ Association, was a founder member of the National Association of Democratic Lawyers, and served as its president from 1988 to 1994.

 

He served on the boards and as trustee of various law-related institutions, and was involved in founding the SA Legal Defence Fund.

 

Constitutional Court

 

Langa was part of the African National Congress’s constitutional committee and acted as an adviser during the so-called “talks about talks” at Groote Schuur and in Pretoria in the early 1990s.

 

He was a founder member of the Release Mandela Committee, and a member of the reception committees which worked to secure the release of other political prisoners.

 

He became a senior counsel in 1994, which was also the year newly-elected president Nelson Mandela appointed him to the Bench of the Constitutional Court.

 

In 1997, Langa became deputy president of the Constitutional Court, before the top positions at the court and the office of the chief justice merged a few years later.

 

The following year, he headed a commission formed by the Southern African Development Community to probe the general elections in Lesotho which sparked violence and a South African military intervention.

 

In 2000 he served as the Commonwealth’s special envoy to assist the Fiji Islands’ return to democracy.

 

He also formed part of constitutional review commissions in Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, and Tanzania.

 

He was Chancellor of the University of Natal and of the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University.

 

Awards

 

Langa was given several awards for advancing justice and human rights, including the 2004 Justice Prize, with Chaskalson, by the Peter Gruber Foundation in the United States.

 

In 2008, Mbeki awarded him the Order of the Supreme Counsellor of the Baobab.

 

His brother Benjamin Langa was killed in 1984 by an Umkhonto we Sizwe operative on suspicion of being an informer.

 

Langa was married to Thandikile from 1966. She died in August 2009 at the age of 64. The couple had six children and many grandchildren.

 

Langa was the older brother of respected poet and author Mandla Langa.\

 

His interests were listed by the court as walking, jogging, listening to music, reading and watching sport.

SAPA

Resolve Marikana Funding- SAHRC


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Johannesburg – The SA Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) on Tuesday called on government to find a speedy solution in getting funding for lawyers representing people at the Farlam Commission of Inquiry.

Spokesperson Isaac Mangena said while the court had determined that neither the state nor Legal Aid Board was obliged to pay for the legal representation of those injured and arrested, the presidency, department of justice and the board had the discretion to do so.

 

“The presidency, the department of justice, and the Legal Aid Board should urgently consider exercising that discretion to allow the work of the commission to continue in an inclusive, responsive manner,” Mangena said.

 

Not doing so would exclude those most affected by the Marikana shooting from the inquiry.

 

“Their exclusion hampers the ability of the commission to fulfil its terms of reference.”

 

About 300 miners wounded in or arrested after last year’s Marikana shooting had so far failed to get state funding for their legal representation in the commission.

 

Government had so far spent about R6.7m on legal representation for police.

 

The commission is investigating the deaths of 44 people killed during strike-related unrest at Lonmin’s mine at Marikana, North West, in August.

 

Police shot dead 34 mineworkers on 16 August. Ten people, including two police officers, were killed in the preceding week.

 

Dali Mpofu, representing the wounded and arrested miners, is trying to get government to pay his team’s fees.

 

Obtaining funds

 

On Monday, commission chairperson, retired Judge Ian Farlam, said there was a reasonable possibility that interim funding could be obtained for the lawyers.

 

Mpofu asked that the commission be postponed until 19 August, as he wanted to approach the Constitutional Court in his quest to for state funding.

 

The North Gauteng High Court in Pretoria turned down his application for funding last week. Mpofu has the support of other lawyers taking part in the commission.

 

The commission would resume on Thursday, when Farlam was expected to decide whether to grant the lengthy postponement.

 

Mangena said government and all parties involved should use the break to find a funding solution.

 

Earlier, United Democratic Movement (UDM) Secretary General Bongani Msomi expressed concern over what he described as imbalances in funding for the commission.

 

“Without funding for the miners, the grounds will remain uneven, and there will be no objectivity nor credibility of the outcome of the Farlam Commission.”

 

He called on institutions such as the Legal Aid Board to help.

 

SAPA