Madlanga inquiry orders review of Brown Mogotsi's 'useless' sick note

The morning session opened the way many official hearings do: with a soft exchange of greetings and the faint sense that everyone in the room knew the day’s proceedings mattered.

There were formalities to observe, names to acknowledge, and a rhythm that commissions follow when their work is governed by procedure rather than spectacle.

Yet beneath the routine politeness was a tension that had been quietly building for weeks.

The commission was running out of time.

Investigations of this scale rarely move quickly, and the delicate choreography of witnesses, evidence leaders, legal teams, and schedules leaves very little margin for disruption.

When a witness fails to appear, it is not just an inconvenience—it is a domino that knocks the entire timetable off balance.

Entire days can be lost.

Testimony that should unfold in a carefully structured sequence suddenly becomes fragmented.

Momentum disappears.

And that morning, the commissioners believed they were seeing the same problem again.

Another witness.

Another absence.

Another medical certificate.

At first glance, the document appeared legitimate enough.

It came from a doctor, carried the expected formatting, and stated that the individual was unfit to testify.

But the explanation inside the certificate was startlingly vague.

Just two words.

“Medical condition.”

Brown Mogotsi testifies at the Madlanga Commission Of Inquiry at... News  Photo - Getty Images

The commissioner presiding over the session leaned forward, his tone still measured but unmistakably irritated.

The problem, he explained, was not simply that a witness was ill.

Illness happens.

Emergencies happen.

No reasonable tribunal expects human bodies to obey the calendar of legal proceedings.

What troubled him was something else entirely.

The certificate, he said bluntly, told them nothing.

It offered no description, no indication of severity, no timeline.

From the commission’s perspective, it was little more than a blank statement disguised as an explanation.

And this, he warned, was becoming a pattern.

Too many witnesses were suddenly producing similarly vague documents at the last minute, forcing the commission to cancel hearings after schedules had already been finalized.

Time lost this way could never truly be recovered.

The frustration in the room began to sharpen.

He explained that the commission had already encountered this issue before.

In a previous instance, they had refused to accept a similarly vague certificate and demanded a revised document explaining the actual medical condition involved.

Only then, after insistence, had a more specific explanation been provided.

So when the current certificate arrived with the same empty wording, it triggered a deeper concern.

If the commission could not trust the explanations being submitted, it might have to take stronger steps.

The commissioner outlined two possibilities.

First, the commission could require the doctor who issued the certificate to privately explain the medical condition in detail.

Because medical confidentiality protects patients, such explanations might occur in closed sessions rather than public hearings.

Second, the certificate itself could be referred to the professional body that regulates doctors.

That council would then evaluate whether the wording on the certificate actually made sense medically and professionally.

Neither step was routine.

Both signaled growing impatience.

Then the commissioner turned toward the absent witness—who, despite the illness, had appeared in person that morning.

“Let me hear you,” he said.

The witness, Mr.Makodi, seemed visibly uneasy.

He began not with a defense, but with an apology.

He explained that he had always cooperated with the commission during preparations.

In fact, he insisted, it had been him who suggested the very date on which he was scheduled to testify.

Missing it had never been part of the plan.

But after returning from Cape Town several days earlier, something went wrong.

His voice lowered slightly as he tried to explain.

He had become sick—suddenly and severely.

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There was a moment where it seemed he might leave the explanation vague, hiding behind the same privacy that the medical certificate had invoked.

After all, illness can be personal, and public hearings rarely invite people to discuss the details of their digestive systems.

But the tension in the room was unmistakable.

So he continued.

He said he had been under intense physical distress—pressure in his stomach, severe discomfort, dizziness.

And then he spoke the words that no one had quite expected to hear in such a formal setting.

He had diarrhea.

The statement hung awkwardly in the air.

In the rigid environment of legal proceedings, where language is typically polished and clinical, the bluntness of the explanation felt almost surreal.

Yet it was also strangely human.

The illness that had triggered so much institutional frustration turned out to be something mundane, something painfully relatable.

An upset stomach.

Still, the witness insisted the situation had been serious enough to keep him from testifying.

He had gone to a doctor.

He had even pushed the doctor to prescribe medication that might allow him to recover quickly enough to appear before the commission by midweek.

He said he had tried.

But the illness had not cooperated.

Even as he spoke, he admitted he still wasn’t fully well.

The commissioner listened carefully.

The tone in the room softened slightly—not with sympathy exactly, but with the recognition that the conversation had moved beyond paperwork and into reality.

People get sick.

Bodies fail at inconvenient moments.

Still, procedure had to be maintained.

The commissioner asked a final question.

Would the witness have any objection if the medical certificate were referred to the professional council that regulates doctors?

The answer came quickly.

“No problem at all,” the witness said.

He emphasized that any interaction between the council and the doctor would remain confidential, preserving the privacy of the medical details involved.

The commissioner nodded.

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That, at least, resolved the immediate procedural concern.

But the larger problem remained unsolved.

Because even if the certificate was eventually verified, the commission could not recover the time already lost.

Another witness had been scheduled for the day, meaning Makodi’s testimony could not proceed regardless of the explanation.

Schedules had already shifted.

The commissioner cleared his throat.

Then he delivered the decision.

The hearing of the witness’s testimony would be postponed to a later date, one that had not yet been determined.

It was a simple administrative conclusion, yet the path leading to it had been anything but routine.

What began as a standard delay notice had unfolded into a tense exchange about accountability, professionalism, and the delicate balance between personal privacy and public responsibility.

For the commission, the moment served as a warning: vague medical certificates would no longer be accepted without scrutiny.

For the witness, it was a reminder that even the most ordinary illness can become an uncomfortable public discussion when it collides with the machinery of a national investigation.

And for everyone watching, it was a rare glimpse of the fragile intersection between bureaucracy and humanity—where legal procedure meets the unpredictable reality of the human body.

The chamber gradually settled back into its formal rhythm.

Papers moved.

Officials prepared for the next witness.

But the strange episode lingered in the air, a reminder that sometimes the smallest details—two simple words on a medical certificate—can derail an entire day of proceedings.

And sometimes, the explanation behind them is far more awkward than anyone expected.