Joint Press Statement | Prison torture in the spotlight as five respondents head back to court

Date: 17/02/2026


Today, 17 February 2026,  Lawyers for Human Rights (“LHR”) and Webber Wentzel will be in the Supreme Court of Appeal representing five respondents in an appeal brought by the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services. The appeal challenges the Johannesburg High Court judgment which found the Minister liable for the assault and torture of the respondents while they were incarcerated at Leeuwkop Correctional Centre.

In August 2014 the respondents, all of whom were incarcerated at Leeuwkop at the time, were brutally tortured by Department of Correctional Services officials. The torture included being stripped naked and electrocuted under water, being forced to squat, defecate, and do handstands for prolonged periods of time. Furthermore, the respondents had dogs set upon them and at one point, were instructed to lie down while an official walked on their necks and electrocuted their backs. Four of the five inmates were unlawfully placed into solitary confinement, shackled, and left without any bedding or medical treatment for the injuries they sustained. In 2015, the respondents instituted action against the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services (“the Minister”), in his capacity as the employer of prison officials at Leeuwkop for the extensive physical and psychological injuries and suffering caused by the torture carried out by DCS officials.

This matter involves consideration of intentional state conduct regarding the elements of the crime of torture under the Prevention of Combating and Torture of Persons Act, 2013. The case highlights the harrowing reality of “mob justice” within state institutions and the failure of the Department of Correctional Services to protect the fundamental rights of those in its care.

On 31 August 2023, Judge Ellem Francis handed down a significant judgment in favour of our clients, finding the Minister 100% liable for the respondents’ damages arising from acts of assault and torture under the Torture Act. In a scathing assessment of the state’s conduct, Judge Francis remarked:

It is rather sad and disturbing that some of the events that took place during the dark days of Apartheid continues to take place in our beloved country at correctional facilities where some of the people in charge have learnt from their former masters about how to treat inmates who do not toe the line. It is also shocking that some officials would gang together to come up with a version in an attempt to mislead the courts about what really happened at their facility… This case is a typical case of mob justice that still plagues our country only that in this case the officials wanted and had applied mob justice against the plaintiffs.”

The Minister has appealed this judgment to the Supreme Court of Appeal and the matter will be heard on 17 February 2026. REDRESS has been admitted as a friend of the Court.

LHR remains committed to ensuring that state officials are held accountable for human rights violations and that the prohibition against torture remains absolute and non-derogable within the South African legal system

 

For further information, please contact:

Tumelo Mogale (Lawyers for Human Rights)
Email: Tumelo@lhr.org.za
Tel: +27 11 339 1960

Matthew Ilsley (Webber Wentzel)
Email: Metthew.ilsley@webberwentzel.com
Tel: +27 11 530 5539

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