President Robert Mugabe called for the lifting of "illegally imposed sanctions" on his
regime.
Gerber's crime claim fails
Article By:
Sat, 09 Aug 2008 09:00
Krugersdorp businessman Byron Gerber has failed in his bid to claim
damages from the police after he was seriously injured in an armed
robbery at his home.
Pretoria High Court Judge Ntsikelelo Poswa on Friday upheld
arguments put forward by the respondent, Safety and Security Minister
Charles Nqakula.
Poswa said the case law on which Gerber relied all concerned
instances where specific, direct acts had been undertaken.
Examples were incidents where a prisoner had escaped and caused
harm, or a plaintiff was raped while in police custody, and the SAPS
had failed to take action.
Gerber had not cited any specific police officials in his claim, and
simply sued the minister as political head of the police, Poswa said.
Gerber had also relied on "general" statements.
These included a contention that the minister employed illiterate
policemen in inadequate numbers and that there was no visible policing.
The judge said how these
general facts could have any bearing on
what had happened to Gerber that night eluded him.
"It's not about my lack of care. I don't want to join (counsel for
Gerber) who said all 48 million citizens are slaughtered in their
doors, but I accept there's a crisis," Poswa said.
"I'm aware there's a lot of crime that's rampant."
The judge said Gerber's allegations created a "painful" picture,
where a citizen was obliged to employ the services of a security
company for peace of mind.
He, nevertheless, became the victim of a brutal attack.
Gerber was shot in the chest and arm during an armed robbery at his
home in a security complex.
He spent three months in hospital, had to close down his tea garden
and was later diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder.
He said he was now virtually unemployable.
Gerber told reporters after the ruling that he intended carrying on
with his battle, despite being ordered to pay the
Minister's legal
costs.
He would now amend the particulars of his R5.6-million damages
claim, he said.
If that failed, he intended appealing against the judge's ruling.
Gerber claimed in court papers the police had neglected their duty
in terms of the Constitution and Police Act to protect the life, limb
and property of every citizen.