/ 26 November 2008

ANC seeks urgent hearing on Cope name

The African National Congress (ANC) has filed an urgent high court application to stop a breakaway movement from using the name Congress of the People (Cope), Cope’s attorney, Deon Bouwer, confirmed on Wednesday.

He said the ANC had asked the head of the Pretoria High Court, Judge Jerry Shongwe, for a hearing in the week of December 8 to 12, only days ahead of Cope’s Bloemfontein founding conference.

Shongwe, he said, had asked all parties to meet at his office on December 2 to try to find a suitable date.

Bouwer said this could prove extremely difficult, as Cope’s counsel of choice were busy with other matters.

”One respects all parties’ rights to approach the court on an urgent basis, but I think presently this approach is not warranted,” he said.

”The ANC has created its own urgency.”

Bouwer said the ANC had also joined the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) as a respondent, seeking to prevent it from registering Cope as a party name.

He said the ANC had abandoned its claim that it held the sole right to the use of Congress of the People on the basis of its involvement in the 1955 gathering at Kliptown.

Now it was arguing that the name would lead to confusion between parties.

Cope, Bouwer said, disputed both the urgency and the factual basis of the ANC’s application, which meant evidence would have to be led.

It was busy drawing up replying papers.

He said the ANC was seeking a permanent rather than a temporary interdict, which meant it would have to prove it had no other satisfactory remedy, that there was a reasonable apprehension that it would suffer harm if the order was not granted, and that there was a clear right that was being infringed.

Bouwer said there was, in fact, an objection process under way in the IEC.

Though three members of the public had formally objected to Cope’s name, the ANC had chosen not to lodge an objection.

ANC spokesperson Jessie Duarte confirmed that the party served the papers on Cope and the IEC on Tuesday, and that it had asked for a hearing in the week of December 8. — Sapa