Open Access
SHOULD THE FLAG FIT, OR MUST WE ACQUIT?
Author(s) -
Nicholas Herd
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
pretoria student law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1998-0280
DOI - 10.29053/pslr.v13i.1867
Subject(s) - flag (linear algebra) , declaration , law , constitutional court , political science , foundation (evidence) , constitution , mathematics , pure mathematics , algebra over a field
This paper is written in response to recent litigation before the Equality Court concerning the old South African flag.3 Following alleged gratuitous displays of the flag, the Nelson Mandela Foundation in February 2018 announced that it had made an application to the Equality Court for an order declaring the flag’s gratuitous display as, inter alia, hate speech.4 The declaration sought would arguably make for a limitation on one’s right to freedom of expression. Accordingly, I assess the relief sought by the Nelson Mandela Foundation by evaluating: (1) whether conceptually hate speech prohibitions are legitimate; (2) whether section 10 of PEPUDA passes constitutional muster; and (3) whether the flag can be outright classified as hate speech under PEPUDA.