South Africans have a constitutional right to peaceful assembly and protest. You must give 7 days' notice to the local authority. Here is what police can and cannot do.
FreeSouth African Law1 related guide
Direct Answer
Section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to peaceful and unarmed assembly, demonstration, picket, and petition. Under the Regulation of Gatherings Act, you must give written notice to the local authority at least 7 days before a public gathering of 15 or more people. Police may not disperse a peaceful, lawful gathering.
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“Everyone has the right, peacefully and unarmed, to assemble, to demonstrate, to picket and to present petitions.”
Regulation of Gatherings Act 205 of 1993
Section 3
“The convenor of a gathering must give notice to the responsible officer of the local authority of the time, place, and purpose of the gathering at least 7 days before it is to take place.”
Regulation of Gatherings Act 205 of 1993
Section 9
“A police officer may, after negotiation fails, order a gathering to be dispersed if it becomes violent or if a threat to public peace exists — but may not disperse a peaceful gathering.”
What to Do
Step-by-Step Guide
1Give 7 days' written notice to the municipality's responsible officer, stating the date, time, route, expected number of participants, and purpose of the gathering.
2Appoint a responsible convenor and peacekeepers. The convenor is legally responsible for ensuring the gathering remains peaceful.
3Police must negotiate with the convenor about conditions before any restriction. A gathering cannot simply be banned without good reason.
4A gathering can be prohibited or restricted only by court order or if there is a credible, specific threat of serious public violence. A blanket refusal without reason is unconstitutional.
5If unlawfully dispersed, document the police action, record badge numbers, and report to IPID (0800 587 584). You can also challenge an unlawful prohibition in the High Court.
What to Say
Exact Words to Use
“"We are exercising our constitutional right to peaceful assembly under Section 17 of the Constitution and have complied with the Regulation of Gatherings Act by giving the required notice. This is a lawful gathering. We will not disperse without a lawful order."”
Tone: To police at the scene — the convenor should say this clearly
Now practise saying it. The Advocate has a scenario that walks you through exactly this situation — phrase by phrase, with audio playback and a practice drill. Free to try.
The Regulation of Gatherings Act only requires notice for gatherings of 15 or more people. Smaller gatherings are still protected by Section 17 of the Constitution, but no formal notice process applies. The gathering must still remain peaceful.
Can police use rubber bullets on a peaceful crowd?
No. Rubber bullets and other less-lethal force may only be used as a last resort after warnings, and only in response to actual violence — not to disperse a peaceful crowd. Use of force against peaceful protesters is unlawful and reportable to IPID.
Knowing the law is step one. The Advocate has scenarios on Expression and Opinion — practise the exact words to use, with audio, law references, and Scripture. Free to start.