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AP Erasmus, a long-serving employee, applied for a senior managerial post. Despite being shortlisted and recommended, he was not appointed. He alleged racial discrimination, arguing that his exclusion was based solely on his race. The Labour Court agreed, but the Appeal Court found that Eskom’s employment equity measures were lawful and rational.
This case provides important clarity on how affirmative action must be implemented under South African law:
The court applied the three-part test from SAPS v Barnard, confirming that restitution measures must:
Section 15(4) of the Employment Equity Act prohibits any policy or practice that creates an absolute barrier to employment or promotion for non-designated groups. The court found that Eskom’s pipelining did not amount to such a barrier, as white males were not categorically excluded.
The judgment reinforces that while numerical goals are permissible, quotas are not. Employers must avoid rigid numerical enforcement and instead apply EE measures with flexibility and discretion.
Although pipelining was not mentioned in Eskom’s EE plan, the court accepted it as a rational and known practice aligned with transformation objectives.
The judgment underscores the delicate balance between promoting transformation and ensuring fairness in recruitment. While affirmative action remains a constitutional imperative, it must be implemented with flexibility, transparency, and respect for all employees.
Employers must avoid rigid practices that amount to exclusion, and employees must understand their rights and the broader goals of employment equity. The judgment affirms that transformation is not about exclusion; it is about inclusion, redress and building a representative workforce for the future.
