The media witch-hunt of Justice Mogoeng cannot be justified

*by Fiona Snyckers*

Some recent attempts by the media to condemn Constitutional Court Justice
Mogoeng Mogoeng on the basis of certain carefully excerpted snippets from
his judgments have placed me in the parlous position of seeming to side with
those who would go easy on the perpetrators of violence against women and
children.

As a lifelong feminist, I find this a difficult position to sustain, but
nevertheless cannot sway from my belief that Justice Mogoeng has been
extremely unfairly treated by the media and various interest groups who have
taken it upon themselves to comment on his nomination for the position of
chief justice.

Justice Mogoeng’s judgments in the three cases of sexual abuse that have
been cited in the media need to be understood within the context of the
criminal justice system in South Africa. On the one hand, we have the
feminist agenda, which seeks to advance and protect the rights of women and
children, and which I support fully and without reservation.

On the other hand, we have the unique set of facts in every case of sexual
abuse, which judges are obliged to consider first in attempting to determine
the guilt or innocence of the accused, and then in deciding on an
appropriate sentence.

The two should not be confused. The feminist agenda holds that all rape is
traumatic to the victim. I would wholeheartedly agree with this. But the
judge presiding over a criminal trial is sometimes obliged to determine
precisely how traumatic a particular rape was to a particular victim, in
comparison to other rapes of other victims. In doing so, he or she may
consider whether the victim was injured or not, and if so, how severely.
This can be determined by the presence or absence of bruises or lacerations
on the victim’s body, and by sundry other medical evidence.

The judge also sometimes has the unenviable task of determining precisely
how traumatised the victim was by the rape, when comparing cases for the
purposes of deciding on an appropriate sentence. This may include
considering testimony about the victim’s demeanour after the incident, and
other similar evidence.

All rape cases are not created equal, and neither are all cases of child
abuse. We do not impose a single blanket sentence in South Africa for all
cases of sexual violence. Some feminists may disagree with me, but I do not
believe that we should. I don’t believe, for instance, that the sixteen
year-old boy who has sex with his fifteen year-old girlfriend should receive
the same sentence as the men who repeatedly gang-rape a woman and beat her
to a bloody pulp.

And between these two extreme examples of the same crime lie all the other
cases of sexual violence, with their own unique sets of facts, that judges
have to sift through in determining an appropriate sentence.

So while Justice Mogoeng’s statement that a fourteen year-old girl did not
appear distressed and was not limping after a rape may grate on the ear of
the sensitive layman, the fact remains that he was doing his conscientious
duty as a judge in taking these facts into consideration.

It has also been declared outrageous by the media that Justice Mogoeng took
the perpetrator’s personal circumstances and position in the community into
consideration when deciding on sentence. Again, if you believe this, you
have a problem with the law of South Africa, not with Justice Mogoeng.
Because judges are legally obliged to consider whether a person is a
first-time offender or not, whether he could potentially be rehabilitated,
and whether he has dependants who are relying on him for their sole support.

Second-guessing the judgments of a trial judge is a fool’s errand that is
best left to the courts of appeal. As someone who was not present in court,
observing the witnesses’ demeanour and hearing all the evidence, I am in a
very poor position to decide whether the judge’s decision was fair or not,
and so are you. We weren’t there and we don’t know what happened.

Furthermore, the fact that a judge has from time to time reduced an
offender’s sentence should be taken as evidence of his capacity for
compassion, rather than used as a tool to demonise him. The liberal agenda
is better served by a judge who is flexible in his application of his
sentencing powers than by a “flog ‘em and hang ‘em” hawk of the
law-and-order variety.

On the question of Justice Mogoeng’s membership of a church that openly
disapproves of homosexuality — if we were to apply that logic we should also
disqualify many observant Jews, Muslims and Christians from judicial office,
because every one of those faiths is arguably hostile to homosexuality. The
only people left to hold judicial office would be the bubbly-and-caviar
atheists, and God, most sincerely, preserve us from that fate.

Justice Mogoeng has also been accused of lacking the necessary experience to
hold the office of chief justice. But, as he points out in his submission to
the Judicial Service Commission, there are only two justices of the
Constitutional Court with more judicial experience than him, and he remains
the only justice with experience — seven years’ worth of it, moreover — as a
judge president.

It is also nonsensical to cavil at his age, 50, when history is full of
chief justices all over the world who ascended to the position at an even
younger age.

It is difficult, in fact, to fathom precisely why there is such a hateful
campaign against Justice Mogoeng. Is it because he is not, and never will
be, Dikgang Moseneke — that darling of the white media? Is it because there
are better candidates for the job? There undoubtedly are, and if rumour is
to be believed, five of them turned down the job before Justice Mogoeng was
approached.

But even if Justice Mogoeng is not the best candidate for chief justice, he
remains an apparently conscientious and well-intentioned man.

The fact that he served as a prosecutor under Lucas Mangope in
Bophuthatswana makes him no different from judges who served in the
apartheid army, or judges who handed down death sentences under the
apartheid regime.

There is not a single judge in all the land who could stand up to having all
of his or her judgments scrutinised and selectively quoted from for the
purposes of making him or her look foolish or biased.

The law is a dirty business, and judges are forced to wade through muck
every day, particularly when they are presiding over criminal trials.

Every judge who has heard a number of rape cases has been obliged to
consider issues that make a feminist like me wince. But the fact remains
that the media has chosen to concentrate on the three sexual assault cases
in which Justice Mogoeng reduced the sentence, rather than the seven in
which he imposed heavy sentences.

One has to wonder where the bias really lies.
*Fiona Snyckers is a novelist and freelance journalist. She lives in
Johannesburg.*


On Sun, Sep 4, 2011 at 10:14 AM, Dominic Tweedie
<[email protected]>wrote:

>
> Cde Mthimkulu, with great respect,
>
> The COSATU statement was contentiously introduced and it is not taken as a
> submission. There were strong objections from the majority of the
> commissioners that the candidate was being ambushed in the middle of the
> interview, while it was in session, with new material.
>
> Therefore, although I could, I will not for the moment post that document.
>
> The interview is still being broadcast on the e-News channel (403).
>
>
> "VC"
>
>
>
> On 4 September 2011 10:03, Mthimkulu Mashiya <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> I just heard Moseneke announcing that COSATU made a late submission to the
>> JSC opposing Mogoeng's nomination.
>>
>> Can somebody post on this forum the full COSATU submission please.
>> Mthimkulu Mashiya
>> Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Bernard Makgaka <[email protected]>
>> Sender: [email protected]
>> Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2011 09:15:05
>> To: <[email protected]>
>> Reply-To: [email protected]
>> Subject: Re: [YCLSA Discussion] MOGOENG MOGOENG
>>
>> To a very large extent,I was disappointed by the quality of questions
>> posed to Mogoeng. They were mostly informed by emotions and anger that
>> Moseneke was not nominated by the President.
>>
>> Moseneke was also impartial as a chair of the session. He should have
>> recused himself.
>>
>> Mogoeng was firm and very clear but I was disappointed by his short
>> temper. He answered all questions posed to him very well.
>>
>> After what we saw yesterday,even the worst critic of Mogoeng would
>> agree that he will be equal to the task if appointed as Chief Justice.
>> He has more than enough experience.
>>
>> When he was appointed as a Judge of North West High Court,Judge
>> President of North West High Court,Labour Court Judge,Constitutional
>> Court Judge,he was interviewed by the same JSC and was proved to be
>> fit and proper for appointment. But shockingly,the same JSC is now
>> doubting his capacity
>>
>> On 9/4/11, Ndinisa Maviyo <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Our democracy is 17 years; constitutional court has been functioning for
>> 16
>> > years; Judge Mogoeng Mogoeng has been a judge for 14 years. Which
>> experience
>> > are they talking about? The experience to defend Apartheid?  I don’t
>> > remember any judge in South Africa judging against the apartheid
>> government
>> > . Therefore what do they know about the independence of the judiciary?
>> The
>> > intellectuals and legal expert failed to bring facts except the public
>> > perception and their personal feelings and emotions about Mogoeng
>> actually
>> > about president Zuma.Judges duty is to uphold the law and the
>> constitution,
>> > which they must apply impartially and without fear, favour or prejudice.
>> Can
>> > we trust a trust a judiciary which shows prejudice against one of their
>> own?
>> > Maviyo Ndinisa
>> >
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