These are some of the big court cases to watch out for in 2025
Judge Thokozile Masipa delivers judgment in the murder trial of paralympian Oscar Pistorius at the High Court in Pretoria on Friday, 12 September 2014. Picture: Alon Skuy/Times Media Group/Pool
The Legal Resources Centre, Section27, and the Centre for Child Law said the wave of criticism directed at Masipa personally in relation to her judgment had resulted in her requiring police protection.
“Some of the remarks may even border on hate speech, defamation and contempt of court. These comments allege that Judge Masipa is corrupt, and or that her gender and or race rendered her incompetent in appropriately applying the law to the evidence presented,” the group said in a statement.
Masipa acquitted Pistorius of the murder of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp who he shot dead through a locked toilet door at his Pretoria home on Valentine’s Day last year.
He alleged to have mistaken her for an intruder.
Pistorius was instead found guilty of culpable homicide.
The legal organisations said while it was understandable that many people may disagree with the judgment, it condemned the attack on her which it labelled unacceptable and inappropriate.
“[The attacks] serve no purpose but to undermine her judicial capacity,” the groups said.
“Judge Masipa’s gender and or race should be an irrelevant consideration in opinions on her judgment of the Oscar Pistorius trial or any other cases she adjudicates. Her decision last week required a considered application of the law in relation to the evidence presented by both parties.
“Whether male or female, black or white, the process would have been the same. It was her decision to make and she made it.”
The three groups said threatening Masipa because she is black because she is female should not be tolerated in the current constitutional framework, where equality and non-discrimination are of paramount importance.
– Sapa
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.