| |
Back to Index
South
Africa: ''Constitutional crisis'' over ARVs
Giordano Stolley, South African Press Association (SAPA)
August
28, 2006
http://www.africafiles.org/article.asp?ID=12690
Dismissing
an appeal by the Department of Correctional Services against an
execution order expediting anti-retroviral (ARV) treatment at Durban's
Westville prison, Judge Chris Nicholson said: "If the government
of the Republic of South Africa has given such an instruction [not
to comply with the execution order] then we face a grave constitutional
crisis involving a serious threat to the doctrine of the separation
of powers.
"Should that continue the members of the judiciary will have to
consider whether their oath of office requires them to continue
on the bench."
In May, 15 inmates of Westville Prison and the Treatment Action
Campaign (TAC) represented by the Aids Law Project made an urgent
application to compel the department to speed up ARV treatment.
On June 22 judge Thumba Pillay ordered the department to speed up
ARV treatment to 15 inmates as well as all inmates at the prison
who required the treatment.
On July 25 the department was granted leave to appeal against the
order, but Pillay ordered that his original order to speed up the
provision of ARVs to all needy prisoners at Westville be implemented
pending the outcome of the appeal.
Nicholson said: "If the refusal to comply [with the execution order]
does not result from instructions from the first respondent, the
government of the republic of South Africa, then the remaining respondents
must be disciplined, either administratively or in an employment
context, for their delinquency."
The respondents are the government, the head of Westville correctional
centre, the minister and area commissioner of correctional services,
and the minister and KwaZulu-Natal MEC for health.
Nicholson gave the department until September 8 to show that it
was complying with the execution order. Meanwhile, the health department
said on Friday that the appeal was a "matter of principle".
"It is not about [government] refusing to give people treatment,"
said director-general of the health department Thamsanqa Mseleku.
He said the issue was whether a court should be able to determine
an aspect of government policy.
"Then what is the point of policy? If we find a facility does not
meet the criteria for implementation [of an ARV treatment site]
should we implement simply because a court says so?"
Mseleku said Westville prisoners had access to treatment at sites
such as King Edward Hospital. Addressing reporters, Mseleku explained
aspects of the government's response to HIV/Aids, denying claims
that South Africa did not have a plan.
He said the comprehensive plan aimed to provide for care, treatment
and prevention of HIV/Aids, while strengthening the national health
system.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|