South Africans in Limpopo have a constitutional right to assemble, demonstrate, picket, and present petitions peacefully. Service delivery protests are a legitimate exercise of this right. However, there are legal requirements that must be followed to avoid criminal liability.
Step 1. Give the local municipality written notice at least 7 days before the planned gathering if you are the convener and more than 15 people will attend.
Step 2. If 7 days is not reasonably possible, give 24-hour notice. The notice must include: organiser details, date, time, route, and expected number of participants.
Step 3. The local authority may negotiate time, route, or venue but cannot ban a peaceful gathering.
Step 4. Ensure the protest remains peaceful and unarmed. Appoint marshals to maintain order.
Step 5. If police use force or arrest participants unlawfully during a peaceful protest, document everything and contact IPID and a human rights attorney.
Step 6. Simultaneously, submit a formal written memorandum of grievances to the municipality, Mayor's office, or relevant government department for a paper trail.
📋 CCMA: Polokwane CCMA (015 295 5300)
⚖️ Legal Aid SA: Legal Aid South Africa — Polokwane (015 291 2507)
🏛️ High Court: Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane (015 287 2000)
🏢 Magistrates' Courts: Polokwane, Tzaneen, Mokopane, Thohoyandou, and other magistrates' courts
🏠 Rental Housing Tribunal: Limpopo Rental Housing Tribunal (015 294 3000)
Limpopo has extensive rural land rights issues, ESTA disputes on farms, traditional authority land conflicts, and significant service delivery complaints in water and electricity access.