DEPUTY MINISTER’S SPEECH AT THE LAUNCH OF DEAT ENFORCEMENT WORK PROGRAMME AND THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE NATIONAL PROSECUTOR AWARD

Environmental Panorama
Johannesburg – South Africa
February of 2006

 

ADDRESS BY THE DEPUTY MINISTER OF ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS AND TOURISM Ms REJOICE MABUDAFHASI, AT THE 1st ENVIRONMENTAL ENFORCEMENT CONFERENCE.

WEDNESDAY, 22 FEBRUARY 2006:

Your Excellency the British High Commissioner for South Africa, the Right Honourable Mr Boateng,
Director-General of the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism,
Heads of Provincial Departments,
Partners from the Environment Agency of England and Wales,
Distinguished guests, Ladies and Gentlemen

It is with great pleasure that I address you on this auspicious occasion of our first Environmental Enforcement Conference. Enforcement of our environmental legislation is of great importance not only to us as the department, but to the country as a whole. On many occasions I have witnessed rocks graffited, trees cut, rotten egg smell from industries that pollute our air and other environmental problems. These environmental crimes damage our people’s quality of life.

I am sure you are aware of Thor Chemicals and the unfortunate incidences that resulted in the loss of lives, deterioration of health of our people and many other ailments. Many people who live and work in air pollution hotspots also face the same problems. I am sure that this conference and many other efforts by government to put our environmental enforcement regime on par with international standards will liberate our people out of the conditions they found themselves in.

The successful prosecution of the Mandara case is a classical example, and I am informed that the department through our tip off hotline has received a lot of complaints and officials in the Enforcement Unit are following on them.

However, Programme Director, we could not have done this alone. Since 2003, the Department has developed a partnership with the Environment Agency in the U.K. This partnership has now been formalised into a three-year work programme. The work programme is funded by the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office, represented here today by his Excellency the British High Commissioner, and we are very thankful for that High Commissioner.

The work programme is supportive of the capacity-building work done by the Department’s Environmental Management Inspectorate. In particular, Environment Agency officials have worked closely with officials from the Department to develop the Environmental Management Inspectors Bridging Training course currently being rolled out.

To this extent, they have shared their experience of both enforcement, and training, and two officials from the Environment Agency participated in two of the training sessions held previously in Pretoria and Johannesburg.

In addition to the Agency’s support for this Conference and the Environmental Enforcement Communications Workshop that takes place on Friday, a prosecutor from the Environment Agency will also participate in a workshop for magistrates on environmental crimes which will take place soon. I am reliably informed that Agency officials also share their expertise with our officials on a weekly basis on a range of issues.

I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge the important role of support that the Environment Agency has played in our capacity-building programme. I can only hope that this partnership will continue to our mutual benefit, and the benefit of the environment in South Africa.

Programme Director, In July 2005, at the start of our first prosecutor training course, I announced an annual award of excellence for an outstanding contribution by a prosecutor of environmental crimes. A call for nominations was published in December 2005.

The published criteria for this award are the following:

the successful prosecution of a significant, precedent-setting environmental case in the past year;
a track record of successful prosecution of several smaller environmental cases over the past three years;
a track record of a high prosecution success rate in environmental cases over the past three years;
obtaining a significant or particularly innovative sentence in the prosecution of an environmental crime in the past year; and/or
a long-term commitment to capacity-building for the successful prosecution of environmental crimes, including relationship-building with investigators, Environmental Management Inspectors and any other law enforcement agencies involved with environmental enforcement.
Our department received nominations of eight prosecutors for this award. The nominations were evaluated by a panel consisting of the Deputy National Director of Public Prosecutions, Dr Silas Ramaite; the Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Law of the University of Kwazulu-Natal, Prof Michael Kidd; and our Director of Enforcement in the Department, Melissa Fourie.

The recipient of the 2005 Annual Award of Excellence for an Outstanding Contribution to the Prosecution of Environmental Crimes received no less than three separate nominations: from the Senior Public Prosecutor at the Durban Magistrates’ Court, from Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife and from the KZN provincial SAPS. He has made an extraordinary contribution to the prosecution of environmental crimes, particularly wildlife crimes, over the past ten years.

More specifically, the recipient holds the astonishing record of a 100% prosecution success rate over the past 10 years. He has a convincing track record on a series of successful environmental prosecutions, and has led the prosecutions of several successful precedent-setting environmental cases.

The evaluation panel was provided with evidence of a number of innovative sentences, and a passionate commitment to building relationships and supporting all role players in the prosecution of environmental crimes, including magistrates, other prosecutors and investigators.

Programme Director I am now happy to announce the name of, Mr Robert Mortassagne , prosecutor at the Durban Magistrate’s Court as our inaugural winner of the annual award of excellence for an outstanding contribution by a prosecutor of environmental crimes.

To you we say congratulations and well done. May we learn from you and continue to make this country of ours worth living in.

Thank you.

 
 

Source: South African Environmental (http://www.environment.gov.za)
Press consultantship (JP Louw)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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