logo
Edgar Lungu's family files papers for leave to appeal High Court judgement

Edgar Lungu's family files papers for leave to appeal High Court judgement

Eyewitness News4 days ago
JOHANNESBURG - The family of former Zambian President Edgar Lungu have filed papers for leave to appeal Friday's High Court judgement.
Earlier on Friday, Gauteng Judge President Aubrey Ledwaba delivered an order that Lungu's remains be repatriated to Lusaka for burial.
However, the family has filed papers on their intention to apply for leave to appeal the judgement in the supreme court.
It has been two months since the former Zambian head of State died in Johannesburg while receiving medical attention.
The court battle - which has taken place in the same time frame in South African courts - between the Zambian government and the Lungu family is far from over.
ALSO READ: Court orders Edgar Lungu's remains be repatriated back to Zambia
The Lungu family has approached the High Court for leave to appeal its judgement in the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA).
In its papers the family argues that the full bench, which heard the matter earlier this week, erred in granting the Zambian government its wish to repatriate president Lungu's body.
On Friday, the court agreed with the Zambian government that an agreement was reached between the State and the family in meeting in June for Lungu's remains to be repatriated and for a State funeral to be held for him in Lusaka.
But the family disputes this, saying the court failed to consider the full set of events between the parties in that meeting.
The High Court will now consider the Lungu family's application for leave to appeal and if granted the matter will be heard in the SCA.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police fire rubber bullets at Germiston residents in housing stand-off
Police fire rubber bullets at Germiston residents in housing stand-off

eNCA

time2 hours ago

  • eNCA

Police fire rubber bullets at Germiston residents in housing stand-off

EKURHULENI - Police fired rubber bullets at residents who tried to block the eviction of scores of houses in Germiston on Tuesday by throwing stones and torching a municipal building, officials said. After police gained access to the housing complex in Ekurhuleni, a squad of men moved in and hauled furniture and personal belongings out of the homes. Shocked residents accused the government of failing them amid South Africa's housing crisis, saying they believed the homes were part of a scheme to provide houses for black South Africans disadvantaged by the previous racist apartheid system. Two people were arrested for setting alight the nearby offices of the municipal home affairs department, police said, adding they were acting on a June court order to evict people from the complex, which was reportedly home to 450 families. "Unfortunately, the people got wind of the eviction and closed the road. Innocent people and the police were thrown with stones and we had to retaliate to ensure that we dispersed them," Major General Fred Kekana, the deputy provincial police commissioner, told AFP. "Somebody allegedly threw a petrol bomb at the Department of Home Affairs. Two arrests have been made so far," he said. Some residents insisted they had not been issued an eviction order and had been paying rent for years. "Our government is failing us. They are chasing us yet we have titles for these houses," 37-year-old resident Akhona Mbadi, a mother of four children, told AFP. After taking power following the end of white minority rule in 1994, the African National Congress-led government adopted a Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP) to provide subsidised housing and other services to black South Africans disadvantaged by apartheid. By 2017 nearly 14 percent of South African households lived in RDP or government-subsidised homes, according to government figures. However, homelessness has risen dramatically from 13,000 in 1996 to more than 55,700 in 2022, according to government statistics.

Steenhuisen: It's been tough to talk shop with US amid demands for concessions on a trade deal
Steenhuisen: It's been tough to talk shop with US amid demands for concessions on a trade deal

Eyewitness News

time3 hours ago

  • Eyewitness News

Steenhuisen: It's been tough to talk shop with US amid demands for concessions on a trade deal

JOHANNESBURG - Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen said it's been tough to talk shop with the US amid demands for concessions on a trade deal that he claims has been negotiated outside of economic parameters. Steenhusien joined Trade and Industry Minister Parks Tau at a joint media briefing in Tshwane on Tuesday after a revised offer was drafted for Washington's nod. Last week, South African trade officials failed to secure an agreement with the US administration before the implementation of punitive tariffs. ALSO READ: Tau confirms revised trade offer made to US Imports from South Africa into the US now carry a 30% duty. The Trump administration previously called for sa to relax import regulations on America's pork in exchange for them maintaining duty-free citrus from the country. But this sparked fears that SA's pig farms would be at risk of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome - a devastating and hard-to-contain disease. Regulations for poultry imports from the us - previously banned over a bird flu outbreak - have also been relaxed under the conditional self-ban and self-lifting system. "This will ensure that the us is able to leverage the tariff rate quota of 72,000 tons already agreed in 2016," said Trade and Industry Minister Parks Tau. With the US already set to ship containers of poultry and pork to South Africa in two weeks' time from Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, North Carolina and Alabama, SA said bio-security protocols are in place. While the technical aspects are still being negotiated, Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen had this to say about the process. 'It's obviously difficult negotiating when the issues you're negotiating are not only about trade and tariffs, and I think that's why we've had this particular situation.' The US administration previously demanded bee exemptions for us companies, including Elon Musk's Starlink, and sought to sway some of the country's foreign policy and domestic race laws demands SA maintains it won't concede to.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store