/ 14 October 2001

No plans to ban Pagad, Qibla yet

ANGELA QUINTAL, Johannesburg | Wednesday

THE Justice Department says there are no immediate plans to ban two Cape Town groups — People Against Gangsterism and Drugs and Qibla –classified as terror organisations by the United States.

Justice Department representative Kaizer Kganyago said the department was awaiting finalisation of anti-terrorism legislation.

”We are not targeting any organisation per se,” he said. It would therefore be premature to say that particular organisations would be banned at this stage.

Kganyago emphasised that the proposed anti-terror legislation predated the September 11 terror strikes in the US.

The date for public comment on the proposed legislation to the South African Law Commission had been extended to December, so new terror laws would not be on the statute books this year.

However, he did not rule out banning of organisations deemed to be terrorist when the new laws were finally enacted.

Kganyago was reacting to reported statements by Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Aziz Pahad who said legal advisers in the Department of Justice were studying all relevant resolutions on terrorism, including those of the UN Security Council.

”We must decide together how we will handle organisations which have been identified (by the US) as terrorist organisations. We must find out whether they are using our banks.

Whether they have to be banned will depend on the legal advice. A political decision will have to be taken on the advice of the legal experts,” Pahad reportedly said.

Action against Pagad and Qibla did not represent an attack on Islam, since the two groups represented an extremist minority, he said. – Sapa