15.4 C
Cape Town
Friday, April 17, 2026

Dispute between WCED and Wesley Neumann supporters intensifies after Labour Court proceedings

Published on

 

A dispute over the future of Heathfield High School principal Wesley Neumann has intensified, with sharply differing accounts emerging from education activists and the Western Cape Education Department (WCED) following Labour Court proceedings on 30 January 2026.

 

The Special Action Committee – Education (SAC-E), speaking on behalf of Neumann, said a ruling had gone against the WCED, claiming the department’s legal objections had been dismissed and accusing it of using technical tactics to delay the enforcement of a previous Labour Court order, reinstating Neumann.

 

However, the WCED has rejected that version of events.

 

Western Cape Education MEC David Maynier said the court process on the day in question involved an application brought by Neumann, not the department, and that the matter was postponed rather than decided.

 

The WCED is appealing the initial Labour Court ruling, which reinstated Neumann.

 

“In terms of section 18(1) of the Superior Courts Act, the Labour Court judgment is suspended, which means the order to reinstate is suspended,” Maynier said.

 

“He has now applied for an exception to this rule, and the judge has postponed the matter because Mr Neumann’s attorney bungled their application. So he will not be able to return to his position next week.”

 

Maynier said the WCED’s priority was the well-being of learners at Heathfield High School and expressed concern about the actions by Neumann’s supporters at the school on Friday morning.

 

“We are deeply concerned that a group of Wesley Neumann’s supporters handed out pamphlets to learners announcing his return to the school. The group’s actions caused distress and disruption, and clearly demonstrate that they don’t care about the best interests of learners.”

 

The MEC said a complaint will be laid with the South African Police Service, and counselling support has been arranged for affected learners and staff.

 

“The school is recovering and flourishing, and we will not tolerate the disruption of teaching and learning at Heathfield High School,” Maynier added.

 

The WCED emphasised that no judgment dismissing an application had been handed down on 30 January, and that the matter had been postponed until mid-February for further proceedings.

 

SAC-E, meanwhile, maintains that the department has a pattern of resisting court processes related to Neumann’s case and says it will continue to support him. The dispute is now set to return to the Labour Court next month, where the legal questions around enforcement and reinstatement are expected to be argued further.

Liesl Smit
Liesl Smit
Liesl is the Smile 90.4FM News Manager. She has been at Smile since 2016, with nearly 20 years experience in the radio industry, including reading news, field reporting and producing. In 2008 she won the Vodacom Journalist of the Year Award, Western Cape region. liesl@smile904.fm

Latest articles

Diesel price could hit R40 per litre in looming fuel hike

 South Africans should brace for another steep fuel price increase in May. According to mid-month data from the Central Energy Fund, the under-recovery on petrol...

Trump faces backlash after attack on Pope Leo

 Reaction is still pouring in from around the world after Donald Trump's latest unhinged rhetoric, this time his attack on Pope Leo in a...

WATCH: City defends “informal” Muizenberg fitness exercise with US Marines

 The City of Cape Town has defended an “informal” engagement between Metro Police cadets and US Marines at Muizenberg Beach, describing it as a...
error: Content is protected !!