Mmegi

You may judge me with Matsheka’s case - CJ Ketlogetswe

On the judicial overhaul, CJ explained that the kind of judiciary that they envisage is the one that will be forward-looking PIC: KENNEDY RAMOKONE
On the judicial overhaul, CJ explained that the kind of judiciary that they envisage is the one that will be forward-looking PIC: KENNEDY RAMOKONE

Chief Justice (CJ), Gaolapelwe Ketlogetswe says as much as he has experienced unimaginable things in his life, he will never cower under pressure or approach his job with bias.

Justice Ketlogetswe, in a detailed speech touching base about his life experiences that also shaped his jurist future, like escaping a clear possibility of being a victim of ritual killing, explained that people may ask themselves if the experiences have affected how he approaches legal issues pertaining to cases allegedly associated with, or having resemblances of a ritual killing. “In short, do I look at those cases and I appear to be biased against those accused, either wrongly or rightly, of being suspected to be perpetrators? Do I forget my duty as a judge, to judge according to law and justly, following the law and my good conscience when dealing with such cases, because of my personal history? You be the judge on this one, but my answer is a big NO! Even under the most extreme of pressures I have never, and will never bend over when it comes to doing justice according to law,” he said. In his opening of the Legal Year remarks on Tuesday, Justice Ketlogetswe reminded the nation of his encounter with the case of former Lobatse legislator Thapelo Matsheka, whom he said in a reverse of fortunes, had appeared before him under circumstances that one, would not wish against a fellow mortal. He stated the sceptics would have expected him to keep him in prison for no reason and then today, they would be saying; okay now we understand. And, "I assure you my countrymen, the people of Botswana that you can trust me, and with me, trust your Judiciary to serve the people of Botswana with humility. Why have I given you this synoptic history of the person whom the President has appointed as your Chief Justice? Some people have also, rightly in my view, pointed to the history of my previous life as a student activist, and later in the political space, and sought to wonder as to why I had to traverse that path,” CJ said. He basked in the glory that God was preparing him for the moment that he was being chiselled out, moulded, shaped and refined into the persona that people see today and had to be an almost victim of crime, so that could, in his later exalted life, fully understand the plight and trauma of the poor and the underprivileged.

Justice Ketlogetswe noted that he had to be a politician, so that as head of the Judiciary, he should interact with the future role players in the political space of the divide. “I have been an accused in a court of law, so that I could understand what it means, in real terms to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. God was preparing me for this moment, I still say. But why so? I ask this question but only on your behalf, because some of you may be asking yourselves: Does a judge or judicial officer’s personal history and social class play any role on how they approach legal issues?” retorted the CJ. He concluded about his life experiences that he comes from the very humblest of the humble background and that he steeped in the traditions of humility and botho. Justice Ketlogetswe stated that people who may find him to be too humble, even to a point of meekness, it is not because he is a fool or stupid, but he grew up fearing God, and he still is, and will continue to be. “I belong to the poor and the weak, the vulnerable of our society,” he said.

Editor's Comment
BPF should get house in order

Speaker of the National Assembly, Dithapelo Keorapetse, has this week rightly washed his hands of the mess, refusing to wade into a party squabble that has no clear leadership and no single version of the truth.When a single party sends six different letters to the Speaker’s office, each claiming to be the authoritative voice, it is not just confusion, but an embarrassment.Keorapetse is correct to insist on institutional boundaries. Parliament...

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