Judge cleared of sexual harassment charge
Publish date: 02 February 2026
Issue Number: 1162
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: South Africa
The woman who accused a South African judge of sexual harassment has been labelled a liar by the tribunal handling her complaint – a stinging credibility finding experts say will make it difficult for her to take the case further. Eastern Cape Judge President Selby Mbenenge has been cleared of sexual harassment and gross misconduct by the Judicial Conduct Tribunal (JCT). The Sunday Times reports that a key finding in the 169-page report is that court secretary Andiswa Mengo omitted from her original complaint flirtatious and sexually suggestive messages she herself had sent the Judge President. What is more, an alleged in-person incident at the courthouse involving inappropriate behaviour on the part of Mbenenge could not be proved. Those findings, the tribunal said, undermined her claim that she was an unwilling participant in the exchanges. City Press reports that the case’s most dramatic revelation came when investigators discovered Mengo had committed perjury about seemingly procedural matters. She claimed under oath that she did not have access to a previous statement when preparing her second complaint, yet forensic analysis revealed both statements were ‘word-for-word identical’, including identical punctuation marks and typographical errors. The ruling saves Mbenenge from impeachment and clears the way for his return to the Bench today – after his having spent nearly two years on special leave. However, the findings have sparked a fierce backlash from activists and legal experts, who say the outcome sends a troubling signal about how the intersection of power, gender and workplace conduct is understood at the highest levels of the judiciary. ‘This case has highlighted the institutionalised patriarchy within our judicial system and the entitlement of men, including in some of the highest offices of the land, to treat women colleagues as worthy sexual conquests,’ said Professor Rachel Jewkes, a leading researcher on violence against women.
Mbenenge was hauled before the JCT after Mengo accused him of sexual harassment, based largely on a series of WhatsApp messages and allegations of inappropriate workplace conduct. She testified that the exchanges unfolded in the context of a power imbalance that made it difficult for her to refuse his advances. The Sunday Times reports that Mbenenge countered that the interactions were consensual and amounted to reciprocal flirtation. The JCT ultimately rejected the harassment claim, finding no proof of overt or covert coercion. It did, however, rule that Mbenenge committed lesser misconduct by initiating and maintaining a ‘flirtatious relationship’ with a subordinate during work hours – a breach of the judicial code of conduct.
While Mbenenge has been found not guilty of gross misconduct, he was found to have fallen short of standards expected of a member of the judiciary. The fact that Mbenenge had initiated and conducted a ‘flirtatious relationship’ with Mengo at her place of work and during work hours was also dishonourable, the tribunal found. The Daily Maverick reports that the Women’s Legal Centre, which represented Mengo at the tribunal, saidc‘we are currently supporting our client’, who needed time to process ‘both the outcome and the deeply disappointing language used in parts of the report’. The centre was awaiting instruction from Mengo and noted that she reserved her right to consider further legal recourse, ‘including the possibility of taking the tribunal’s findings on review’. It was ‘important’ that the tribunal had found Mbenenge guilty of misconduct or inappropriate conduct, the centre noted: ‘This finding affirms that the conduct complained of was unacceptable and improper, and that Ms Mengo’s complaint was not without merit’. The process was not yet concluded, added the centre, as the report now proceeded to the JSC, mandated to consider it in order to make a final determination.
Mbenenge told City Press that he has opened a case of crimen injuria against the secretary, adding that since he has been cleared, he will be ‘reporting for duty (today)’. When pressed to comment further on the case, Mbenenge referred City Press to his attorney, Thabo Kwinana, who said the Judge President plans to pursue criminal charges against his accuser. ‘He has always maintained that he is innocent,’ Kwinana said.