Convicted murderer Thabo Bester's second court bid to overturn his transfer to eBongweni Super Maximum Prison in KwaZulu-Natal has been denied, following the dismissal of his initial application on procedural grounds. The rulings keep him at the high-security facility but granted brief courtroom time outside his cell. The case underscores persistent legal tactics delaying high-profile trials.
Convicted murderer and rapist Thabo Bester, transferred without notice from Kgosi Mampuru Prison in Pretoria to eBongweni Super Maximum Prison in KwaZulu-Natal, has now lost a second court application to reverse the move. His first urgent bid in Pretoria High Court was struck off the roll in late February for improper enrollment, allowing refiling. The subsequent application, filed on identical grounds alleging unlawful transfer and restricted legal access, was denied outright.
This second hearing provided Bester a few hours of relative freedom in court, away from his cell.
Similar delay tactics appear elsewhere: Vusimuzi “Cat” Matlala has filed repeated bail and transfer requests from eBongweni to Pretoria, while former president Jacob Zuma has launched numerous challenges contesting prosecutions and appointments, stalling his trial.
South Africa's legal system limits delays mainly by financial constraints; ordinary citizens cannot sustain such efforts, unlike well-resourced figures—Zuma and Matlala's funding is documented, though Bester's remains unclear. Judges have few tools beyond opting for written submissions over oral arguments, but must hear all applications.
Rooted in constitutional innocence presumptions and the Freedom Charter's anti-apartheid legacy, the framework lacks reforms like limits on pre-trial applications, penalties for frivolous ones, cost barriers, or lawyer ethics rules—despite parliamentary inaction.
These delays deny victims closure and public insight into divisive cases spanning decades, like Zuma's, eroding justice system trust and fueling vigilantism in some communities.