Reforming the Appointment Process for SA’s National Director of Public Prosecutions…

Reforming the Appointment Process for SA’s National Director of Public Prosecutions…

With the impending retirement of National Director of Public Prosecutions (NDPP) Shamila Batohi, anticipated in early 2026, South Africa is presented with a pivotal juncture to overhaul the existing appointment mechanism for the nation’s chief prosecutor. The urgency to initiate the selection process for Batohi’s successor is underscored not only by the imperatives of continuity and institutional stability, but also by the necessity to fortify the legitimacy and public trust in this critical office.

The Imperative for Institutional Independence

South Africa’s ongoing struggle with endemic corruption, acute socio-economic disparities, and persistently high rates of violent crime accentuates the need for robust, independent public institutions. The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), vested with the authority to determine the prosecution of both elites and ordinary citizens, serves as a bulwark against impunity in concert with law enforcement agencies. Any erosion in the NPA’s credibility or operational effectiveness has profound ramifications, including diminished public confidence, the proliferation of criminality, and the unraveling of the social contract.

Historical Instability and the Need for Reform

Since its establishment in 1998, the NPA has been plagued by a disconcerting pattern of instability at the NDPP level. No permanent NDPP has completed a full ten-year term, and several appointments have been tainted by controversy or judicial invalidation. Notably, Vusi Pikoli’s suspension in 2007, following conflicts with executive authorities over high-profile prosecutions, and the Constitutional Court’s subsequent nullification of both Menzi Simelane’s (2012) and Shaun Abrahams’ (2018) appointments, underscore the vulnerability of the office to political interference and procedural irregularities.

This persistent leadership turnover has undermined the NPA’s institutional memory and long-term prosecutorial capacity, necessitating urgent reform of the appointment process to safeguard the integrity of the criminal justice system.

The Current Process: Centralization and Opacity

At present, the selection of the NDPP is characterized by opacity and excessive centralization within the Presidency, with minimal safeguards to ensure transparency or public accountability. Such concentration of power is fundamentally at odds with the constitutional imperative for prosecutorial independence.

Towards a Transparent and Participatory Appointment Mechanism

Recent developments and comparative precedents demonstrate that a more transparent, participatory, and constitutionally compliant appointment process is both feasible and desirable. For example, Parliament’s procedures for appointing heads of Chapter 9 institutions—such as the Public Protector and Auditor-General—are conducted openly, while the Judicial Service Commission exemplifies the value of diverse, merit-based selection panels.

The 2018 appointment of Shamila Batohi marked a modest improvement, with President Cyril Ramaphosa convening a multi-stakeholder panel and opening candidate interviews to the media in compliance with judicial directives. Nonetheless, the process remains insufficiently transparent and participatory.

International Norms and Best Practices

International instruments, including the United Nations Guidelines on the Role of Prosecutors, advocate for appointment procedures that are transparent, merit-based, and insulated from political meddling. The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Venice Commission similarly emphasize the necessity of public oversight and objective selection criteria.

Proposed Model for Reform

A reformed appointment process should commence with a public call for applications, articulating explicit eligibility requirements and evaluation benchmarks. Transparency must be the guiding principle at every stage: the identities of applicants, assessment methodologies, and the rationale for final selections should all be publicly disclosed.

Meaningful public participation is essential. Legal professional bodies, academic institutions, and civil society organizations should be invited to submit questions and commentary, and public interviews should become standard practice to enhance democratic legitimacy and deter unsuitable candidates.

Crucially, the process must be meritocratic, eschewing considerations of political loyalty or insider status. Candidates should be evaluated on their legal expertise, leadership acumen, independence, ethical standing, and vision for strengthening the NPA.

Independent Assessment and Executive Accountability

An independent panel—comprising legal practitioners, members of the judiciary, academics, and civil society representatives—should be entrusted with conducting comprehensive assessments, including background checks, public commentary, and interviews. Hearings must be accessible to the public and media to ensure transparency.

Given the broader challenges facing leadership within the justice sector, consideration should be given to establishing a standing, cross-sectoral panel of independent experts to oversee senior appointments across the justice system.

The panel would submit a ranked shortlist to the President, who would be required to appoint the NDPP from this list and provide written, reasoned justification grounded in the panel’s findings and public input. This approach does not diminish executive authority but rather anchors it within a credible, participatory framework.

Legislative Feasibility

Importantly, such reform does not necessitate constitutional amendment. While the Constitution vests appointment power in the President, the procedural framework can be regulated by ordinary legislation—specifically, through amendments to the National Prosecuting Authority Act, which requires only a simple parliamentary majority.

Conclusion

The forthcoming appointment of the NDPP represents more than a procedural matter; it is a test of principle. In a society grappling with pervasive inequality and deficient accountability, the selection of the chief prosecutor must be conducted with the utmost transparency and integrity. South Africans are entitled to an NDPP chosen for their independence, probity, and unwavering commitment to justice—not for their allegiance to political power.

Recent Developments (May 2025):
As Batohi’s retirement approaches, civil society organizations and legal scholars have intensified calls for reform. According to recent reports in the Mail & Guardian and News24, Parliament is considering draft amendments to the NPA Act to formalize an open, public-facing appointment process. These reforms, if enacted, could set a new standard for prosecutorial independence and public trust in South Africa’s justice system.


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The Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation: A Legacy Reborn

June 11, 2025 – 249 years ago, on this very date, history pivoted on the axis of human possibility.

June 11, 1776. The Continental Congress, meeting in the hallowed chambers of Independence Hall, appointed five extraordinary visionaries to a committee that would forever alter the trajectory of human civilization. Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman, and Robert R. Livingston—men of profound intellect and unwavering conviction—were entrusted with the sacred task of drafting the Declaration of Independence. In that momentous decision, they established not merely a political document, but a philosophical foundation upon which the principles of liberty, self-governance, and human dignity would rest for generations yet unborn.

Today, We Stand at Another Threshold

On June 11, 2025—exactly 249 years later—the Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation emerges to carry forward the luminous torch of those founding principles into the complexities of our modern age. Just as Jefferson and his fellow committee members understood that true independence required both visionary thinking and strategic action, the Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation recognizes that preserving and advancing liberty in the 21st century demands sophisticated analysis, bold leadership, and unwavering commitment to the fundamental values that define human flourishing.

A Foundation Built on Timeless Principles

The parallels between then and now are profound:

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In the shadow of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley, where the Mursi people etch resilience into their skin through lip plates and the Hamar tribe’s bull-jumping rites forge indomitable courage, a new chapter in the global fight for liberty begins. The Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation (LVS Foundation) launches today as a vanguard of 21st-century research, merging scholarly rigor with actionable strategy through its revolutionary Cohesive Research Ecosystem (CORE). Founded by Dr. Fundji Benedict—a scholar whose lineage intertwines Afrikaner grit, Ethiopian sovereignty, and Jewish perseverance—this institution embodies a legacy of defiance inherited from history’s most audacious truth-seekers, from Zora Neale Hurston to the warrior women of Ethiopia. This duality—scholarship as sword and shield—mirrors Dr. Benedict’s own journey. For 10+ years, she navigated bureaucratic inertia and geopolitical minefields, her resolve hardened by the Ethiopian women warriors who once defied Italian fascism.

 

 

I. The Hurston Imperative: Truth as a Weapon

Zora Neale Hurston, the Harlem Renaissance icon who “broke through racial barriers” and declared, “Truth is a letter from courage,” is the Foundation’s spiritual lodestar. Like Hurston, who documented Black life under Jim Crow with unflinching authenticity, the LVS Foundation wields research as both shield and scalpel. BRAVE, its human rights arm, intervenes in crises with the precision Hurston brought to folklore studies, transforming marginalized voices into policy. When Somali warlords displace the Gabra people or Ethiopian officials seize tribal lands, BRAVE acts with the urgency of Hurston’s anthropological missions, ensuring that “truth-telling becomes liberation”.

Dr. Benedict’s decade-long journey mirrors Hurston’s defiance. “My ancestors did not bow. I will not bow,” she asserts, her cadence echoing the Omo Valley’s ceremonial chants. This ethos permeates the Foundation’s CORE model, where BRAVE, COMPASS, and STRIDE operate in symphonic unity. “CORE is our answer to siloed thinking,” Dr. Benedict explains. “Through this cohesive ecosystem, BRAVE, COMPASS, and STRIDE work in concert—breaking down

barriers between academic research, fieldwork, and strategic action. This enables us to develop innovative solutions and stride toward lasting change”.

 

II. Necropolitics and the Battle for Human Dignity

The Foundation’s research agenda confronts necropolitics—a term coined by Achille Mbembe to describe regimes that decide “who may live and who must die”. In Somalia, where Al-Shabaab turns villages into killing fields, and South Africa, where post-apartheid politics increasingly marginalize minorities, the LVS Foundation exposes systemic dehumanization. STRIDE, now correctly positioned as the bulwark against terrorism and antisemitism, dismantles networks fueled by Qatari financing and ideological venom. COMPASS, the geopolitical hub, maps Qatar’s $6 billion influence campaigns, revealing how Doha’s alliances with Islamist groups destabilize democracies from Sahel to Paris, France.

“Qatar hides behind diplomatic immunity while funding mass murder,” Dr. Benedict states, citing Israeli intelligence linking Qatari funds to Hamas’s October 7 massacre. Meanwhile, BRAVE echoes fieldwork in Ethiopia’s Babille Elephant Sanctuary—where Dr. Benedict has studied bee barriers to resolve human-wildlife conflict—and epitomizes the Foundation’s ethos: “We turned conflict into cooperation, just as our ancestors turned adversity into art”.

 

III. The Ethiopian Woman Warrior: A Blueprint for Ferocity

The Foundation’s DNA is steeped in the legacy of Ethiopian women who weaponized intellect and audacity. Woizero Shewareged Gedle, who orchestrated prison breaks and ammunition heist during Italy’s occupation, finds her echo in STRIDE’s Intelligence operations. She struck an Italian officer mid-interrogation and declared, “You may imprison me, but you will not insult me”. Her defiance lives in STRIDE’s intelligence operations and BRAVE’s land-rights advocacy for all minorities like the Hamar, who endure ritual whipping to cement bonds of loyalty – a fight as visceral as it is cerebral -, but also the tribes or the Afrikaners in South Africa who face expropriation of their property without compensation. Dr. Benedict’s leadership rejects the false binary between academia and activism: “Research is not abstraction—it is alchemy. We transmute data into justice”.

 

IV. Conclusion: Lighting the Torch for Generations

The Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation stands as more than an institution—it is a living testament to the unyielding spirit of those who refuse to let darkness prevail. In a world where necropolitics reduces human lives to chess pieces and terrorism metastasizes in the shadows, the Foundation’s CORE research ecosystem illuminates a different path: one where rigorous scholarship becomes the catalyst for liberation. Every report published, every policy advocated, and every community defended is a reaffirmation of democracy’s most sacred tenet—that every life holds irreducible value.

Dr. Benedict’s vision transcends academic abstraction: BRAVE’s defense of pastoralist communities, COMPASS’s geopolitical cartography, and STRIDE’s dismantling of hate networks are not isolated acts but threads in a tapestry woven with the same audacity that Zora Neale Hurston brought to anthropology and Woizero Shewareged Gedle to resistance. The Foundation’s decade-long gestation mirrors the patience of Ethiopian honey hunters who wait years for the perfect hive—a reminder that enduring change demands both urgency and perseverance.

As a beacon for liberty, the LVS Foundation invites collaboration across borders and disciplines. To governments grappling with Qatar’s influence campaigns, to activists documenting human rights abuses, to citizens weary of complacency, the Foundation offers not just data but a blueprint for courage and defiance. Its research ecosystem—dynamic, interconnected, and unapologetically action-oriented—proves that knowledge, when wielded with integrity, can dismantle even the most entrenched systems of oppression.

 

The Torch Burns Bright

Over the past decade, Dr Benedict has combined rigorous academic work with on-the-ground engagement, building the knowledge and networks required to create this institution. Now, as the Foundation opens its doors, it stands as a testament to principled scholarship and action. In the legacy of Zora Neale Hurston’s fearless truth-telling, the LVS Foundation embraces the

power of knowledge guided by values. Crucially, the LVS Foundation maintains strict independence from any partisan or governmental funding. This non-partisanship is a cornerstone of its identity. “From day one, we refuse to be anyone’s instrument – no government, no party. Our independence guarantees that our voice remains unbiased and our research uncompromised,” Dr. Benedict emphasizes. “We owe that to the truth we seek. Hurston taught us about authenticity and courage; in that spirit, we will not pander or censor ourselves. We will ask the hard questions and pursue answers – wherever they lead – in service of liberty and human dignity.”

The revolution Dr. Benedict ignited is not hers alone. It belongs to every individual who dares to believe that democracy can be defended, that integrity can be restored, and that liberty is worth every sacrifice. Zora Neale Hurston once wrote, “There are years that ask questions and years that answer.” For the LVS Foundation, this is the year of answers and a responsibility to honor Hurston’s legacy by ensuring truth is not just spoken but lived. Those seeking to support Liberty Values & Strategy Foundation—through funding, fieldwork, or amplification—are welcomed at [email protected] or [email protected].