Pretoria court in limbo as workers protest over salaries
The Public Servants Association (PSA) is demanding a 6.5% salary increase as their members are feeling the effect of price increases for fuel, transport and food.
Cases were forced to be postponed at the Pretoria magistrate’s court yesterday as clerks and interpreters were on a labour strike.
The court operated partially on Thursday morning as cases were postponed. Only magistrates, lawyers and a few clerks were working.
Accused persons who were supposed to appear before court, remained detained in police trucks because of the protest. Accused in police custody that were supposed to apply for bail yesterday, had their cases postponed to later dates.
One advocate, whose client was supposed to appear, was unhappy about the situation. He told the court his client had been in custody for more than a month.

Cross-examination of an accused in the murder case of a 23-year-old University of Pretoria student was delayed yet again. The case was among those that had to be postponed.
Internal audit honours degree student Thapelo Menwe was robbed and killed in Grosvenor Street, Hatfield, as he walked home from a student bar in the early hours of September 10.
The accused, Bongani Sibiya and William Mokgaba, did not appear in court.
Evidence from the investigating officer was supposed to have been given yesterday but the officer waited to testify for hours in vain.
Makgoba’s lawyer, Nakedi Mamogobo, appeared on behalf of his client in absentia. The accused will be back in court on November 23.
The Public Servants Association (PSA) and Federation of Unions of South Africa (Fedusa) protested outside the National Treasury offices in Pretoria demanding a salary increase.
According to the association it represents about 235 000 members in the public service and the strike was expected to affect different departments including Home Affairs, Transport, and Border Control.
“The PSA issued the union’s strike notice on October 24 after a deadlock was reached in salary negotiations following the government’s offer of a 3% increase and discontinuation of the cash gratuity after March 31, 2023,” a PSA statement reads.
The association say they demand a 6.5% increase.
The association say government employees were feeling severe effects of price increases for fuel, transport, and food as well as interest rate hikes.
“Government’s decision to unilaterally implement the meagre increase for public servants’ salaries in November 2022 has angered the PSA,” the statement reads.
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