Every person in Gauteng has the constitutional right to peacefully and unarmed assemble, demonstrate, picket, and present petitions. The Regulation of Gatherings Act requires notice — not a permit — and protects lawful protesters from unlawful police action.
Give 72 hours' written notice to the local authority's responsible officer and police before the gathering. This is notice — not a permit application.
Ensure the gathering is peaceful and unarmed. The right is to peaceful and unarmed demonstration — weapons or violence lose the protection.
Know your rights at the protest. Police cannot demand you disperse a lawful gathering. They may only act if violence occurs or the gathering is unlawful.
If arrested, exercise your rights — remain silent, ask for a lawyer, ask for bail. Contact Legal Aid SA or a human rights organisation immediately.
📋 CCMA: Johannesburg CCMA (011 377 6650) or Pretoria CCMA (012 843 1000)
⚖️ Legal Aid SA: Legal Aid South Africa — Johannesburg (011 877 2000) or Pretoria (012 325 1726)
🏛️ High Court: Gauteng Division of the High Court (Johannesburg: 011 335 0082 | Pretoria: 012 315 0868)
🏢 Magistrates' Courts: Johannesburg, Pretoria, Randburg, Soweto, Midrand, and other magistrates' courts
🏠 Rental Housing Tribunal: Gauteng Rental Housing Tribunal (011 355 4000)
Gauteng has the highest volume of labour disputes, housing evictions, and consumer complaints in the country. Multiple CCMA regional offices serve the province.