Dimanche 22 novembre 2009 7 22 /11 /2009 05:39
Edito : Particularly under the apartheid years, after the Nationalist government had introduced its oppressive laws, the Suppression of Communism Act, the 90 day (solitary confinement) and then the 180 day (solitary confinement) Acts, the Terrorism Act, the Incitement to Riot Act, among others, which were designed to prevent people from speaking out and organising politically, there were many who thought that the legal system in South Africa was a sham, exploited by the government to bolster its claim that South Africa was a democratic country. However men such as Bram Fisher,  Sydney Kentridge and George Bizos defended many eminent political figures, putting their careers and lives on the line.

Thanks again to Gisele Wulfoshn for this portrait of George Bizos. I never met him but his name was well known in South Africa. The article below the picture is from Wikipedia.






Early life

Bizos was the son of Antonios (known to his family and friends as "Antoni") Bizos, the mayor of the small village of Vasilitsi, south of Koroni and Kalamata on the Messinian peninsula of the Peloponese, Greece. In May 1941 at the age of thirteen, George Bizos and his father helped seven New Zealand soldiers (Don Gladding, Mick Karup, Peter Martin, John Lewis and three others) who where hiding in the hills to escape Nazi-occupied Greece to Crete. He says the escape did not go well and he was adrift for three days until he managed to attract the attention of crew on the British destroyer, HMS Kimberley, which was on its way to the Battle of Crete. After the battle HMS Kimberley dropped him off at Alexandria, Egypt.[1]

As a refugee he was sent to South Africa and landed in Durban. From there he went by train to Johannesburg. He disembarked at the Braamfontein railway station because it was feared that the Ossewabrandwag would have a demonstration at the central station. The Ossewabrandwag blamed Jan Smuts for bringing the vuilgoed (rubbish) of Europe to South Africa. The local Greek community helped integrate him into society. Bizos did not immediately go to school because he could not speak English or Afrikaans but by 1948 — the year that the National Party was voted into power — Bizos had managed to gain entry into the law faculty at the University of the Witwatersrand. It was here that he says he first became politically active.

[edit] Legal career

Bizos joined the Bar in Johannesburg in 1954.

He has been a senior member of the Johannesburg Bar since 1978. He is a member of the National Council of Lawyers for Human Rights, which he helped found in 1979. He is Senior Counsel at the Legal Resources Centre in Johannesburg in the Constitutional Litigation Unit. He was a judge on Botswana's Court of Appeal from 1985 to 1993.

In 1990 he became a member of the African National Congress' (ANC) Legal and Constitutional Committee, and at Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) he served as advisor to the negotiating teams and participated in drawing up the Interim Constitution. He was involved of the drafting of legislation, and particularly the Truth and Reconciliation Bill and amendments to the Criminal Procedures Act, to bring it into line with Chapter 3 of the constitution, guaranteeing fundamental human rights to all citizens of South Africa.

He was counsel to a wide range of well-known people - see list below. This included people such as Trevor Huddleston of Sophiatown in the 1950s, and since then has also been counsel to Nelson Mandela. He was part of the team that defended Mandela, Govan Mbeki and Walter Sisulu in the Rivonia Trial in 1963–64, in which the defendants were sentenced to life imprisonment, but spared the death penalty. Although it is sometimes said that he claims to have drafted Mandela's famous speech spoken at the trial, he says that his main contribution was to advise the use of the words "if needs be" before Mandela said that he was prepared to die. Bizos believes that this may have contributed to the avoidance of the death penalty by having Mandela not appear to seek martyrdom. This trial heralded the arrival of a group of tough human rights lawyers — Joel Joffe, Arthur Chaskalson and Harold Hanson.

Bizos was counsel at various inquests into the deaths people in detention.

In the Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings, he was the leader of the team that opposed applications for amnesty on behalf of the Biko, Hani, Goniwe, Calata, Mkonto, Mhlauli, Slovo and Schoon families. He was appointed by then President Mandela to the Judicial Services Commission which, in terms of the constitution, recommends candidates for appointment as judges and proposes reforms to the judicial system to erase its apartheid past. Bizos was the leader of the team for the South African Government to argue that the death penalty was unconstitutional, and counsel for the National Assembly in the Certification of the Constitution by the Constitutional Court.

In 2005, Bizos was legal advisor to Nelson Mandela in a bitter legal dispute with Mandela's former attorney, Ismail Ayob.[2][3][4][5]

[edit] List of well-known people he represented

Bizos represented the following people, among others:

[edit] Other activities

In the 1970s Bizos helped start a Greek school, called SAHETI.[7] It embraced Hellenism, yet was non-exclusionist, even during the heart of apartheid. It was here that people like Chris Hani's children were educated.[8]

[edit] Honors and Awards

[edit] Books

Bizos is the author of No One to Blame - In Pursuit of Justice in South Africa published in 1998.

His autobiography Odyssey to Freedom was published in early 2007 by Random House, and runs to more than 600 pages.

[edit] Family

Bizos is married to Arethe, known as "Rita", and has three sons, two of them surgeons and the other an engineer. He has seven grandchildren.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Media Challenge: Who and Where Are the Seven?". October 22, 2004. http://archive.ibanet.org/News/NewsItem.asp?newsID=160
  2. ^ Business Day - News Worth Knowing
  3. ^ SABCnews.com - south_africa/general
  4. ^ Poor Ismail Ayob : Mail & Guardian Online
  5. ^ Friday Khutbar - Ummah.com - Muslim Forum
  6. ^ Cape Times, 2 June 1982.
  7. ^ Saheti school website
  8. ^ "George Bizos". Odyssey - The World of Greece. http://www.odyssey.gr/article.asp?pagecode=02&entryid=1619. Retrieved 2007-04-03.

 


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