Barloworld South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Not in my Name International NPC and Others (2023/112452) [2026] ZAGPJHC 73 (6 February 2026)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Defamation — Final interdict — Social media publications alleging racism and sexism against corporate applicant — Publication admitted — Wrongfulness and intention presumed — Defences of truth, public interest, reasonable publication, and fair comment not established — Targeted defamatory communication justifying mandatory written retraction — Costs awarded on attorney-and-client scale.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns Part B of an application for final interdictory relief in a defamation matter. The applicant, Barloworld South Africa (Pty) Ltd, sought orders permanently restraining the respondents from publishing defamatory material about it and sought ancillary relief compelling a retraction of a specific letter sent to one of its customers. The dispute arose from social-media publications and targeted correspondence that accused the applicant of racism, sexism, unethical conduct, and abuse of black women in a professional environment.


The respondents were Not in My Name International NPC (a non-profit company) and its directors, Siyabulela Walter Jentile, Mpomelelo Ignatius Masango, and Themba Martin Masango. The applicant alleged that the second to fourth respondents were responsible for the conduct complained of.


Procedurally, an earlier interim interdict had already been granted in Part A on an urgent basis by Twala J on 8 November 2023, pending the determination of Part B. The present judgment determined whether that interim interdict should be confirmed and made final, whether a mandatory retraction should be ordered, and what costs order was appropriate. The court also dealt with the admissibility of two supplementary answering affidavits filed by the respondents.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the lawfulness of the respondents’ continued publication and dissemination of serious allegations against a corporate entity, including through direct engagement with the applicant’s customer base, and whether the respondents could rely on recognised defamation defences such as truth and public interest, reasonable publication, fair comment, and freedom of expression.


2. Material Facts


The material background included an earlier conflict involving the applicant and a third party. Following the termination of contractual arrangements between the applicant and Fisokuhle Multi Services CC, allegations of racism and abuse were made against the applicant by Ms Felicia Buthelezi, Fisokuhle’s sole member, including on social media. Those allegations were investigated by the applicant and became the subject of proceedings connected to the Equality Court framework. On 27 October 2022, a magistrate determined that the matter should not be referred to the Equality Court in terms of section 20(3)(a) of the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000.


In the interim (and separate from the present proceedings), the applicant had obtained urgent interdictory relief. On 26 October 2022, Dosio J granted an order interdicting Fisokuhle and Buthelezi, pending the determination of Part B of those proceedings, from publishing information concerning the applicant or its employees on social media or other public platforms.


The facts central to the present application concerned the respondents’ later conduct. During September and October 2023, the respondents published statements on social media platforms, including Twitter/X, accusing the applicant of racist and sexist conduct. The court treated it as undisputed that these statements were published by the respondents and disseminated on the first respondent’s account.


On 23 October 2023, the respondents escalated the matter beyond general social-media commentary by addressing a letter to Tharisa Minerals (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, described as a longstanding customer of the applicant. In that letter, the respondents repeated the allegations and invited scrutiny of the applicant’s business relationship with Tharisa Minerals.


After this, the applicant instituted urgent proceedings against the respondents. Part A resulted in an interim interdict on 8 November 2023, which restrained the respondents from publishing defamatory matter concerning the applicant regarding aspects of the dispute involving Fisokuhle/Buthelezi and also restrained them from contacting or engaging the applicant’s customers and employees about that dispute. The interim order further required the respondents to remove statements implying the applicant was racist, sexist, unethical, and/or unprofessional from their social-media platforms and websites.


In opposing Part B, the respondents filed answering affidavits and later delivered two supplementary answering affidavits. The supplementary affidavit dated 1 February 2024 was struck out as irrelevant and scandalous, substantially duplicative of the original answering affidavit, inadequately supported by the attached documents, and filed out of time without condonation. A later supplementary answering affidavit dated 26 September 2025 was admitted, accompanied by an application for condonation, in order to ensure determination on a fuller factual basis, with prejudice to the applicant to be addressed through the costs order.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the respondents had published defamatory statements about the applicant and, once publication and defamatory meaning were established, whether the respondents could rebut the presumptions of wrongfulness and intention by establishing a recognised defence.


The dispute required the court to determine issues of application of law to fact, rather than resolving contested factual disputes about publication itself. Publication was admitted or not in dispute, and the main controversy concerned whether defamation defences were available on the facts and evidentiary material put up by the respondents. The court also had to make a value judgment about the reasonableness of the respondents’ conduct in the context of asserted public-interest speech.


In addition, the court had to decide whether the requirements for a final interdict were met and whether an order compelling a mandatory written retraction was competent and justified as ancillary relief. A further issue concerned the appropriate costs order, including whether punitive costs on an attorney-and-client scale were warranted.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court applied established South African defamation principles. Defamation was described as the wrongful and intentional publication of a defamatory statement concerning another. Once the applicant proves the publication of a defamatory statement, the law presumes wrongfulness and intention, shifting the onus to the respondents to rebut one or both presumptions by establishing a recognised defence.


In determining whether the statements were defamatory, the court applied an objective test. It considered the meaning that a reasonable reader would attribute to the words in their proper context and whether that meaning tended to undermine reputation. The court noted that it was unnecessary to prove that readers in fact thought less of the applicant.


Applying this approach to the publications, the court found that the respondents’ social-media statements and their correspondence to the applicant’s customer alleged, expressly or by clear implication, that the applicant was racist, sexist, unethical, and abusive of black women in a professional environment. Although some statements were framed as “allegations” or “questions”, the court concluded that the ordinary reader would understand them, in context, as assertions of fact. The court therefore held that the statements were defamatory, and given that publication was not disputed, the presumptions of wrongfulness and intention operated against the respondents.


The court then assessed the respondents’ asserted defences, including reliance on public interest, reasonable publication, fair comment, and freedom of expression. The court accepted that South African law recognises a defence of reasonable publication in matters of public interest, as articulated by the Supreme Court of Appeal and endorsed within a constitutional balancing framework by the Constitutional Court. The relevant enquiry was framed as whether, having regard to the nature of the information, reliability of its source, steps taken to verify it, and the overall manner of publication, the defendants acted reasonably.


On the court’s assessment, those requirements were not met. The respondents did not place admissible evidence before the court establishing the truth of the allegations of racism and sexism. The court reasoned that, without proof of substantial truth, publication could not be justified on the basis of public interest. Beyond this, the court found that the evidence did not support a finding of reasonable publication, because the respondents’ correspondence and subsequent posts showed they had already reached a concluded view about the applicant’s culpability. The court highlighted features such as threats of protest action and statements indicating that no court order would deter them, which the court regarded as inconsistent with a measured, investigative approach.


The defence of fair comment was also rejected. The court held that the statements went beyond protected opinion because they rested on factual assertions that were not shown to be true or to constitute matters of public record. While the respondents invoked freedom of expression, the court held that constitutional protection does not extend to unsubstantiated defamatory allegations, especially where publications are directed at damaging existing commercial relationships.


Having concluded that the defences were not established, the court turned to the requirements for a final interdict. It found that the applicant had a clear right to its good name and reputation, that the injury was actual and reasonably apprehended given the respondents’ persistence despite warnings and court orders, and that there was no adequate alternative remedy because damages would not prevent continued publication and undertakings had proven ineffective. The court therefore held that final interdictory relief was justified.


On the question of retraction, the court emphasised that the letter to Tharisa Minerals was not mere general commentary but a targeted communication to a longstanding customer, repeating defamatory allegations and inviting reconsideration of the business relationship. The court reasoned that merely prohibiting future publication would not remedy the harm already caused. It held that a direction compelling an unconditional written retraction was proportionate and necessary to vindicate the applicant’s rights.


As to costs, the court considered the respondents’ persistence in publishing serious allegations without evidentiary substantiation and their stance toward the applicant’s attempts to resolve the dispute through legal channels. In these circumstances, the court held that punitive costs on the attorney-and-client scale were justified.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed and made final the interim interdict granted on 8 November 2023. The respondents were interdicted and restrained from publishing, causing to be published, or disseminating defamatory statements concerning the applicant, whether on social media platforms, in correspondence, or otherwise.


The respondents were directed, within 7 days, to deliver to the applicant’s attorneys an unconditional written retraction of the letter dated 23 October 2023 addressed to Tharisa Minerals (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd.


The respondents were ordered, jointly and severally, to pay the costs of the application on the attorney-and-client scale.


Cases Cited


Khumalo and Others v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 (CC)


Modiri v Minister of Safety and Security and Others 2011 (6) SA 370 (SCA)


National Media Ltd and Others v Bogoshi 1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA)


Reynolds v Times Newspapers Ltd and Others [2001] 2 AC 127 (HL)


Legislation Cited


Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000, section 20(3)(a)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the respondents’ social-media posts and their targeted letter to the applicant’s customer conveyed, to a reasonable reader, assertions that the applicant was racist, sexist, unethical, and abusive, and that these statements were defamatory. Because publication was not disputed, wrongfulness and intention were presumed, and the respondents failed to rebut those presumptions through recognised defences.


The court held that the respondents did not establish truth and public interest, reasonable publication, or fair comment on the evidence placed before the court, and that reliance on freedom of expression did not justify unsubstantiated defamatory allegations directed at harming commercial relationships.


The court held that the requirements for a final interdict were satisfied and that a mandatory unconditional retraction of the targeted customer letter was necessary and proportionate to remedy harm already caused. The court further held that punitive costs on the attorney-and-client scale were warranted due to the respondents’ conduct.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Defamation in South African law consists of the wrongful and intentional publication of a defamatory statement concerning another, and upon proof of publication of a defamatory statement, wrongfulness and intention are presumed, with the onus shifting to the defendant to establish a recognised defence.


The determination of whether a statement is defamatory is objective and depends on the meaning attributed by a reasonable reader in context and whether that meaning has a tendency to undermine reputation, without requiring proof of actual reputational harm in fact.


The defence of reasonable publication in matters of public interest requires an overall assessment of reasonableness, including the nature of the information, the reliability of its source, the steps taken to verify it, and the manner of publication, within a constitutional balance between dignity and freedom of expression.


Fair comment protects opinions rather than unproven factual assertions; where a publication conveys factual allegations not established as true or not shown to be matters of public record, the defence is not made out.


A final interdict requires proof of a clear right, an injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended, and the absence of any other satisfactory remedy; persistent publication and ineffective undertakings may support the conclusion that damages are not an adequate alternative remedy.


Where defamatory material has been communicated in a targeted manner to a third party such as a customer, an order compelling an unconditional written retraction may be granted as proportionate ancillary relief to vindicate the injured party’s rights, beyond merely restraining future publication.


Punitive costs on an attorney-and-client scale may be awarded where a party persists in serious allegations without evidentiary foundation and conducts litigation in a manner warranting censure.

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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA



IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

CASE NUMBER: 2023-112452



In the matter between:

BARLOWORLD SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD APPLICANT

And

NOT IN MY NAME INTERNATIONAL NPC FIRST RESPONDENT
SIYABULELA WALTER JENTILE SECOND RESPONDENT
MPOMELELO IGNATIUS MASANGO THIRD RESPONDENT
THEMBA MARTIN MASANGO FOURTH RESPONDENT

Heard: 14 October 2025
Delivered: 6 February 2026

(1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3) REVISED: YES / NO

6 February 2026 __________________________
DATE SIGNATURE

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Headnote: Defamation — Final interdict — Social-media publications and targeted
correspondence to customer alleging racism and sexism — Publication admitted —
Wrongfulness and intention presumed — Defences of truth and public interest,
reasonable publication, fair comment and freedom of expression not established —
Retraction — Targeted defamatory communication justifying mandatory written retraction
— Costs — Punitive costs on attorney-and-client scale warranted.


JUDGMENT

WINDELL J:
Introduction
[1] This is Part B of an application in which the applicant, Barloworld South Africa (Pty)
Ltd, seeks final interdictory relief restraining the respondents from publishing defamatory
material concerning it. The applicant also seeks ancillary relief directing the respondents
to retract a letter addressed to one of its longstanding customers.
[2] The applicant is a large corporate entity operating nationally. The first respondent,
Not in My Name International NPC, is a non -profit company. The second to fourth
respondents are directors of the first respondent and were at all material times
responsible for the conduct complained of.
[3] The factual background is set out in detail in the founding affidavit and the joint
practice note and need not be repeated in full. The salient facts are the following.

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[4] Following the termination of contractual arrangements between the applicant and
an entity known as Fisokuhle Multi Services CC (“ Fisokuhle”), allegations of racism and
abuse were made against the applicant by Ms Felicia Buthelezi (“Buthelezi”), the sole
member and representative of Fisokuhle, including on various social media platforms .
Those allegations were investigated by the applicant and subsequently formed the
subject of litigation before the Equality Court. On 27 October 2022, after considering the
evidence, the presiding magistrate determined that the matter should not be referred to
the Equality Court in terms of section 20(3)(a) of the Promotion of Equality and Prevention
of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000.
[5] In the interim, the applicant approached the urgent court for interdictory relief. On
26 October 2022, Dosio J, under case number 2022-032755, granted an order interdicting
Fisokuhle and Buthelezi, pending the determination of Part B of those proceedings, from
publishing information concerning the applicant or its employees on social media or other
public platforms (“the Dosio order”).
[6] Thereafter, during September and October 2023, the respondents published
statements on social media platforms, including Twitter/X, accusing the applicant of racist
and sexist conduct. Despite being placed on terms by the applicant’s attorneys, the
respondents persisted in publishing such statements. On 22 October 2023 the applicant
launched urgent proceedings to hold Fisokuhle and Buthelezi in contempt of the Dosio
order.
[7] The following day, o n 23 October 2023 , the respondents addressed a letter to
Tharisa Minerals (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd (Tharisa Minerals), a longstanding customer of

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the applicant, in which those allegations were repeated and the applicant’s business
relationship with that entity was invited to be scrutinized.
[8] On 27 October 2023 the applicant launched urgent proceedings against the
respondents. Part A was heard on an urgent basis and, on 8 November 2023, an interim
interdict (per Twala J) was granted pending the determination of Part B in the following
terms:
"Pending the determination of Part B, the Respondents are interdicted and restrained
from:
5.1.1. publishing defamatory matter of or concerning the applicant, regarding any aspect
of the ongoing dispute between the applicant, on the one hand, and Fisokuhle Multi
Services CC and/or Ms Felicia Buthelezi, on the other, whether on a social media platform
or in any other manner.
5.1.2. contacting, corresponding with or engaging any of the applicant's customers and/or
employees, regarding any aspect of the ongoing dispute between the applicant, on the
one hand, and Fisokuhle Multi Services CC and/or Ms Felicia Buthelezi, on the other.
5.2 The respondents shall remove, within 24 hours of this order being granted , all
statements and/or allegations that state or imply that the a pplicant is racist, sexist,
unethical and/or unprofessional, from all their social media platforms and/or websites."
[9] The matter now serves before this Court for the final determination of the relief
sought. The applicant seeks confirmation of the interim interdict restraining the
respondents from publishing defamatory matter concerning the applicant in relation to

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any aspect of the dispute between the applicant, on the one hand, and Fisokuhle and/or
Buthelezi, on the other; interdicting them from contacting, corresponding with, or
engaging any of the applicant’s customers or employees regarding that dispute; directing
them to deliver an unconditional retraction of the letter dated 23 October 2023 addressed
to Tharisa Minerals; and ordering them to pay the costs of the application on the attorney-
and-client scale.
[10] The respondents oppose the application through answering affidavits deposed to
by the third respondent, Mpomelelo Ignatius Masango, and the fourth respondent,
Themba Martin Masango. They thereafter delivered supplementary answering affidavits
on 1 February 2024 and 26 September 2025.
[11] The supplementary affidavit dated 1 February 2024 falls to be struck out. It is, in
substance, identical to the original answering affidavit and merely refers to letters
purportedly marked “Annexure NIMNI01”, which are said to confirm that the applicant’s
employee was found guilty of racial offences. However, although correspondence is
attached, it is not marked as “Annexure NIMNI01”, the affidavit does not identify the
portions relied upon, and the documents themselves do not state that any employee was
found guilty of racial offences. The affidavit was furthermore filed out of time and was not
accompanied by any application for condonation. It is accordingly irrelevant and
scandalous and falls to be struck from the record.
[12] By contrast, the supplementary answering affidavit delivered on 26 September
2025 was accompanied by an application for condonation and is admitted in the interests

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of ensuring that the matter is determined on a full and complete factual conspectus, any
prejudice to the applicant being appropriately addressed in the costs order.
Legal principles applicable to defamation
[13] Defamation consists of the wrongful and intentional publication of a defamatory
statement concerning another. 1 Once the applicant establishes publication of a
defamatory statement, wrongfulness and intention are presumed, and the onus shifts to
the respondent to rebut one or both by establishing a recognised defence.2
[14] The test in determining whether a statement is defamatory is objective.3 The Court
must determine the meaning that a reasonable reader would attribute to the words used
in their proper context, and whether that meaning is defamatory. A statement is
defamatory if it has the tendency to undermine reputation; proof that readers i n fact
thought less of the applicant is not required.4
The publications
[15] The respondents published statements on social media and addressed
correspondence to a longstanding customer of the applicant alleging, expressly or by
clear implication, that the applicant is racist, sexist, unethical and abusive of black women
in a professional environment.

1 Khumalo & Others v Holomisa 2002 (5) SA 401 para 18.
2 Ibid.
3 Modiri v Minister of Safety and Security and Others 2011 (6) SA 370 (SCA) para [13]
4 Ibid.

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[16] Publication of the various sta tements is not in dispute. The statements were
disseminated on the first respondent’s Twitter/X account and directly communicated to
Tharisa Minerals.
[17] Although some statements are framed as “allegations” or “questions”, the ordinary
reader would understand them, in context, as assertions of fact. The repeated references
to racist slurs and unethical conduct convey a clear and damaging meaning. It follows
that the statements complained of are defamatory of the applicant.
[18] Publication of defamatory matter concerning the applicant having been
established, wrongfulness and intention are presumed. The onus shifts to the
respondents to rebut one or both by establishing a recognised defence in law.
Defences
[19] The respondents’ opposition proceeds on several bases. They contend that the
posts and correspondence complained of were justified in light of what they describe as
the applicant’s failure to adequately address allegations of racism and abuse; that the
publications were made in the public interest, particularly in relation to the empowerment
of women and black -owned businesses; that reasonable steps were taken to verify the
allegations, and that certain s tatements in the letter to Tharisa Minerals were framed as
questions or expressions of opinion rather than assertions of fact.
[20] They further submit that the statements are not false, alternatively that they are
protected by considerations of public interest and freedom of expression, emphasising
that similar allegations had previously been reported in a City Press article published in
November 2022 and that the applicant did not seek urgent relief at that time. The

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respondents also contend that the order granted by Dosio J on 26 October 2022 does not
preclude complaints to third parties and that they are not affiliated with Fisokuhle or
Buthelezi. In addition, they argue that the dismissal of proceedings in the Equality Court
is of limited relevance and rely instead on correspondence said to reflect that an
employee’s conduct was inconsistent with the applicant’s internal policies.
[21] In argument, the respondents rely on authority dealing with reasonable
publication, public interest, and freedom of expression, including National Media Ltd and
Others v Bogoshi (Bogoshi)5 and Reynolds v Times Newspapers Ltd and Others
(Reynolds).6 They invoke these authorities in support of the proposition that a public -
interest organisation is entitled to interrogate and expose the conduct of a large corporate
entity.
[22] The defence of reasonable publication in matters of public interest was firmly
recognised by the Supreme Court of Appeal in Bogoshi. That approach was
subsequently endorsed and constitutionally grounded by the Constitutional Court in
Khumalo and Others v Holomisa,7 which located the enquiry within the balance between
the rights to dignity and freedom of expression. +The ultimate question remains whether,
having regard to the nature of the information, the reliability of its source, the steps taken
to verify it, and the overall manner of publication, the defendants acted reasonably.

5 National Media Ltd and Others v Bogoshi 1998 (4) SA 1196 (SCA).
6 Reynolds v Times Newspapers Ltd and Others [2001] 2 AC 127 (HL).
7 Supra.

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[23] On the facts of the present matter, those requirements are not satisfied. The
respondents did not place before the Court admissible evidence establishing the truth of
the allegations of racism and sexism advanced. Absent proof of substantial truth,
publication cannot be justified on the basis of public interest. Nor does the evidence
support reasonable publication. The correspondence and subsequent posts demonstrate
that the respondents had already formed a concluded view regarding the applicant’s
culpability, accompanied by threats of protest action and statements indicating that no
court order would deter them. Such conduct is inconsistent with an investigative or
measured approach.
[24] The defence of fair comment likewise fails. The statements complained of go
beyond protected opinion and rest upon factual assertions not shown to be true or to
constitute matters of public record. Although the respondents invoke the constitutional
importance of freedom of expression, that right does not extend to the unsubstantiated
publication of defamatory allegations, particularly where such allegations are directed at
damaging existing commercial relationships.
[25] In these circumstances, none of the pleaded defences avail the respondents.
Final Interdict
[26] The applicant has established a clear right to its good name and reputation. The
injury is both actual and reasonably apprehended. The respondents have persisted in
publication despite warnings and court orders and have targeted the applicant’s
commercial relationships.

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[27] There is no adequate alternative remedy. Damages would not prevent continued
publication, and undertakings have proven ineffective. The requirements for a final
interdict are satisfied.
Retraction
[28] The letter addressed to Tharisa Minerals was not a general commentary but a
targeted communication to a longstanding customer of the applicant, repeating
defamatory allegations and inviting reconsideration of its business relationship with the
applicant.
[29] A prohibition on future publication does not, on its own, remedy the harm already
occasioned by that communication. In the circumstances, a direction compelling an
unconditional written retraction is both proportionate and necessary to vindicate the
applicant’s rights.
[30] In the result, the applicant has established the requirements for final interdictory
relief and the ancillary relief sought.
Costs
[31] The respondents persisted in publishing serious allegations without placing before
the Court evidence capable of justifying them. They ridiculed the applicant’s attempts to
resolve the dispute through legal channels and escalated the matter.
[32] The applicant was accordingly compelled to approach the Court to protect its
reputation and commercial interests.

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[33] In these circumstances, costs should follow the result. The respondents’ conduct
justifies an award of costs on the attorney-and-client scale.
[34] In the result the following order is made:
1. The interim interdict granted on 8 November 2023 is confirmed and made final.
2. The respondents are interdicted and restrained from publishing, causing to be
published, or disseminating defamatory statements concerning the applicant,
whether on social media platforms, in correspondence, or otherwise.
3. The respondents are directed, within 7 days , to deliver to the applicant’s
attorneys an unconditional written retraction of the letter dated 23 October
2023 addressed to Tharisa Minerals (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd.
4. The respondents are ordered, jointly and severally, to pay the costs of the
application on attorney and client scale.

_
L WINDELL
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to the Parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand down is deemed to be 6 February 2026.

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Appearances
For the applicant: L Nkosi
Instructed by: NSC Inc.
For the respondents: K Masupye
Instructed by: The Deborah’s 972 Legal Clinic.
Date of Hearing: 14 October 2025
Date of Judgment: 6 February 2026