Friday, 1 July 2011

JUDGE TO SUE CHIEF JUSTICE FOR LIBEL

Exclusive

By Manqoba Nxumalo

The Judge who is alleged to have been in an ‘illicit’ relationship with suspended Judge, Thomas Masuku, has filed a defamation lawsuit of an undisclosed amount against Swaziland’s Chief Justice Michaeal Ramodibedi and the entire Judicial Service Commission (JSC).


High Court Judge Thomas Masuku was suspended on Wednesday (29 June 2011) and slapped with 12 charges one of which includes being in an ‘illicit’ relationship with a female judge. Even though local newspapers did not reveal who the judge is, it has been exclusively gathered that the judge in question is Ghananian born Judge, Mabel Agyemang.


Agyemang had previously worked in The Gambia through the Commonwealth Fund for Technical Co-operation (CFTC) and was appointed to the High Court of Swaziland in October 2008 for a two-year assignment to help strengthen the judiciary.


Our investigations have revealed that Agyemang received news that she was implicated in Masuku’s charges with alarm and disbelief and immediately contacted senior lawyer S’dumo Mdladla to institute a lawsuit against the Chief Justice and JSC for defamation.


Agyemang is married in her native country.


Masuku was suspended by the controversially-appointed Chief Justice Michael Ramodibedi who alleged in the charges that Masuku was having an illicit relationship with a female judge, from amongst other charges.


He was also accused of ‘associated with those who want to bring about unlawful change to the regime’.


However, Masuku has denied such accusations instead argued that his conscious was clear in all this mess.


A highly reliable source said that Agyemang had instituted defamation suits against the JSC and is in the country to ensure that the case goes through.


“She came to the country with her husband,” said the source.


Civil society members have reacted with outrage to reports that Masuku has been arrested. Coordinator of the Swaziland Coalition of Concerned Civic Organisations (SCCCO) Musa Hlophe said in a statement that civil Society would support Justice Masuku’s defense in the light of what he called ‘laughable charges’ and that they that his victory would spell the end to a style and an era of judicial leadership that can only be considered as a democratic aberration.

Compiled by Marble News Agency
ncobasnxu@yahoo.com

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