Thursday, January 21, 2010

South African Law: Modern and Customary

Bound by the bill of rights

NOLUTHANDO NTLOKWANA | JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - Jan 20 2010 14:15

Recognising our rich cultural diversity, the Constitution provides for and protects the freedom to participate in the cultural life of one’s choice, but only in a manner that is consistent with it. It accords parity of esteem to all our cultures and enjoins the courts to interpret and develop customary law in a manner that promotes the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights.

Underpinning both the imperative to recognise constitutionally compliant cultural practices and to develop unconstitutional practices in such a manner as to render them constitutionally compliant, and thus of equal force, is a call for cultural tolerance.

Three contrasting examples in recent months show what the constitutional imperative, on the one hand, to respect cultural diversity and, on the other, to interpret and develop customary law in a manner that promotes the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights means in reality.

The first example arose in the recent KwaZulu-Natal High Court matter of Stephanus Smit, NO and Others v His Majesty King Goodwill Zwelithini Kabhekuzulu and is a clear illustration of what is meant by cultural tolerance and respect.

This matter dealt with the Zulu practice of ukweshwama, which is a traditional thanksgiving observed by Zulus and is celebrated before the harvesting of crops. The ritual involves killing a bull with bare hands. Animal Rights Africa sought an interdict against the killing of the bull, saying that the way the bull is killed constitutes cruelty to animals.

No interdict

The court did not grant the interdict sought because expert evidence satisfied it that the cultural practice did not in fact constitute cruelty to animals. The court held that the applicant’s uncritical acceptance of rumours about the true practice was symptomatic of an intolerance of cultural diversity.

Viewed in a historic perspective, it was indicative of a historical desire to inflict mainstream cultures of Western society on African cultures. This attitude was premised on a misguided belief that the applicant had a right to interfere with the religious and cultural practices of others that they found intolerable to their own beliefs.

The second example illustrates an instance where society should not tolerate a cultural practice that can never be rendered constitutionally compliant. It involves the ukuthwala (“abduction”) practice, which involves abducting girls as young as 12 and forcing them to marry men who are old enough to be their grandfathers.

This practice is unconstitutional and unlawful, and no amount of development will permit it to pass constitutional muster. It violates the right to dignity, the right to education and the right to freedom and security of the person, and it is not in the best interest of the child. The third example arose in a settlement reached by the Congress of Traditional Leaders of South Africa (Contralesa) in the Equality Court regarding initiation and illustrates how practices that violate provisions of the Bill of Rights can nonetheless be developed in such a manner that they pass constitutional muster while retaining the core of the ­custom.

Dignity undermined

The case involved Justice Alliance South Africa and Others v Yamani and Others. In his application, young Bonani Yamani said that by being forced to go through traditional circumcision, his human dignity was seriously undermined.

In terms of the settlement, which was made an order of court, Contralesa accepted the right of adult males to choose whether to attend traditional circumcision schools according to their religious beliefs. In delivering the order, Judge Yusuf Ebrahim emphasised that consent was essential if the practice was to be both lawful and pass constitutional muster. The case was not about declaring traditional circumcision unlawful; instead, it developed it to bring it in line with the Constitution.

The settlement reached with Contralesa is of great significance. For although the Constitution requires that the courts develop customary law in a way that promotes the Bill of Rights, this body is arguably better placed to do so. This is so because of the complex nature of many customs such as ukweshwama, which in most instances involve invoking ancestral spirits.

Since the members of this tribunal are themselves immersed in those spirits, it would be better placed to interpret and develop customs in a manner that aligns them with the Constitution while retaining their spiritual and other essences. It is thus appropriate that the Constitution does not only enjoin the courts to develop customs, but also binds tribunals and other forums to do so.

Noluthando Ntlokwana is assistant director of the Centre for Constitutional Rights

Source: Mail & Guardian Online
Web Address: http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-01-20-bound-by-the-bill-of-rights


By force of law

TEMBEKA NCUKAITOBI | JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA - Jan 20 2010 13:58

What is the role of traditional authorities in a modern and democratic setting? Framing the question in these terms might obscure rather than reveal the fundamental question raised by a case the Constitutional Court will hear in March: what is the role of customary law in a democratic setting?

Recasting the question is not an exercise in semantics. It situates traditional authorities as institutions that administer a given set of rules or regulations contained in an overarching body of law -- African customary law.

The Constitutional Court case concerns the constitutional validity of the Communal Land Rights Act.

The case is brought by four rural communities in Limpopo, and concerns the scope and powers of traditional authorities over rural communities, particularly regarding the administration of land and allocation of resources.

The characterisation of a custom as law distinguishes it from ordinary cultural practices or traditions. Law imposes obligation (the absence of choice) and consequences (punitive and otherwise) for non-compliance.

Royal conviction

Recently, the king of the abaThembu, Buyelekhaya Dalindyebo, was convicted of serious crimes, including assault, murder and arson. The judgment is remarkable because the crimes were committed by the king himself, the very embodiment of ubuThembu

The crimes were also committed against the abaThembu, the people whose name is used to explain the source and justification of Dalindyebo’s power.

As someone who was raised in the Transkei, where customary law was widely practised, I asked myself whether I ought to be horrified at the conduct of the king; and whether in fact Dalindyebo’s conduct was a manifestation of a deeper problem with an unelected, unregulated and ultimately unaccountable institution.

I concluded that the conduct of the king should come as no surprise; we have been here before. Kaizer Matanzima was a traditional leader, even though of lesser seniority than he claimed. His notorious abuses of power are too numerous to mention.

However, Matanzima’s excesses could be explained by the illegitimacy of the system that produced and granted him power -- apartheid. By contrast, apartheid cannot explain Dalindyebo’s crimes. In both cases, however, obligation is imposed on the subjects and there are severe, even deadly, consequences for non-compliance with decisions of customary authorities.

Modernity and tradition

The existence of obligation exposes a tension inherent in a legal system that prizes a plurality of legal systems. Legal systems shape human conduct and behaviour. The co-existence of different legal systems creates a tension between modernity and tradition.

Contemporaries often claim that cultural practices such as polygamy signify a return to the Dark Ages. What they ignore is the reality that 20-million South Africans observe a customary law system in one form or another.

These people do not live in the Dark Ages; they live in contemporary South Africa. Their use of traditional systems within an overarching constitutional system shows that what is often presented as a choice between modernity and tradition is in fact a false choice. Modernity and tradition are not mutually exclusive. They intersect, collide and overlap in a number of dazzling ways.

But I am running ahead of myself. Dalindyebo’s abuse of traditional authority reflects a manifest deficit in the theorisation of customary law and authority.

As a consequence, the law is often confused with the institutions designed for its implementation. This confusion does not apply uniquely to customary law: police are often confused with the law, and so too are judges, lawyers, prosecutors and so on.

The separation of customary law from its institutions requires us to engage in a challenging exercise of finding meaning in customary law. That process does not occur in a legal vacuum: it occurs in a context set by the Constitution. The fact of the explicit recognition of customary law by the Constitution places its existence and legal effect beyond dispute.

But that is as far as it goes: setting the base, not the limit. What exactly is the limit? The limit lies in recognising that there is in fact no single system of customary law — customary law cannot exclusively be found in ossified codes or pronouncements of traditional leaders. It is a multiplicity of different systems of laws.

Nuanced approaches

Groups of the amaMpondomise may, for instance, share similar geographic areas with the amaMpondo, but follow different customs. Over time, such customs mutate into law. However, they remain different and require nuanced approaches in application.

Second, customary law is neither old nor static. In fact, customary law is modern and dynamic. It changes with the social context. In the 2008 case of Nwamita, it was argued that the customary law prevented a woman from being appointed as a Hosi, or chief. The Constitutional Court found that customary law, when interpreted in the light of the Constitution, did not countenance gender discrimination. Accordingly, a woman could, under customary law, assume the position of chief.

Third, customary law can be found by observing the social practices of the people affected by it. Those practices occur in the present, not the past. In short, customary law is living law.

If customary law is living law, a question of broader significance emerges. What is its relationship with the Constitution? The Constitution explicitly answers this. The Constitution is the supreme law of the country and any law inconsistent with it is invalid.
Customary law, therefore, has no life separate and distinct from the Constitution. Its existence, authority and force are drawn from the Constitution. In application, therefore, customary law must be suffused with the values of dignity, equality and freedom -- values that are central to the country’s project of constitutionalism.

Tembeka Ngcukaitobi is the director of the Constitutional Litigation Unit of the Legal Resources Centre. He writes in his personal capacity

Source: Mail & Guardian Online
Web Address: http://www.mg.co.za/article/2010-01-20-by-force-of-law

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