Pro Bono & Human Rights News
More newsInternational Women’s Day 2026 | Give to Gain – Women in law, leadership and the future
International Women’s Day (IWD) is celebrated on 8 March each year.
No person should be arbitrarily returned to a country to face persecution
In recent times the global refugees and forced displacement landscape has gained tremendous attention amid growing global uncertainty and evolving geopolitical dynamics. These issues and the general plight of asylum seekers and refugees has again recently occupied the spotlight at South Africa’s apex court. On 12 February 2026, the Constitutional Court heard the matter between Scalabrini Centre of Cape Town v Minister of Home Affairs CCT 126-25 to adjudicate and pronounce on the constitutionality of various provisions of the amended Refugees Act 130 of 1998 (Act).
High Court condones Minister of Police’s six-year delay in delivering his plea
Tuesday 25 November 2025 marked the beginning of the 16 Days of Activism for No Violence Against Women and Children (16 Days), a period in which we are all annually called to stand firmly against gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) and which spotlights the executive, legislative and judicial branches of Government’s crucial role in this ongoing fight. On the heels of GBVF being classified a national disaster, three High Court, Western Cape Division, judges – Thulare J, Fortuin J, and Adams AJ – marked the beginning of the 16 Days period by delivering their judgment in favour of the Minister of Police (Minister), effectively allowing the Minister’s feeble explanations for an astonishing six-year delay in the delivery of his plea in a matter that relates to the sexual abuse and rape of a then 18-year-old transgender woman while in police custody to pass judicial scrutiny. A period meant to mark renewed vigour, solidarity, and commitment to the collective fight against GBVF instead began with judicial disappointment.