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    Home»Technology»Court showdown looms over COJ’s CCTV by-law
    Technology

    Court showdown looms over COJ’s CCTV by-law

    Chris AnuBy Chris AnuJuly 7, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    Court showdown looms over COJ’s CCTV by-law
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    The by-law applies to private and external CCTV cameras installed on the city’s land and infrastructure.


    The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (OUTA) is going to court to challenge the legality of the City of Johannesburg (COJ) new by-law on privately-owned closed-circuit television cameras (CCTV), which sets up convoluted rules requiring registration and City access to private data.

    This, after COJ, in February, approved the by-law to regulate CCTV cameras deployed in the city.

    According to the COJ, the aim of the by-law is to provide for regulation and registration of CCTV cameras in public spaces and private property with a view to public spaces within the city.

    In a statement, OUTA says its case is against the COJ and the city’s municipal manager and mayor, and was filed in the Johannesburg High Court on 18 June.

    Currently, the acting municipal manager is Tshepo Makola (since 17 January 2025) and the mayor is Dada Morero (since 16 August 2024).

    According to the civic organisation, the papers have been served, and OUTA is awaiting an indication of whether the city intends to oppose the action.

    The notice of motion calls for the court to declare the city’s privately-owned CCTV surveillance camera by-law invalid and unconstitutional, and set it aside.

    It also calls for the city to provide the records relating to the public participation, adoption and promulgation of the by-law.

    OUTA says this by-law was passed by the city council on 21 February 2025, with the meeting minutes showing support from 15 parties (including the ANC, ActionSA, EFF and PA) and dissent by two parties (the DA and ACDP).

    Limited public participation

    OUTA believes that the by-law is convoluted, irrational, places unreasonable burdens on private businesses and residents, raises privacy concerns, and is unworkable.

    Advocate Stefanie Fick, OUTA spokesperson, says: “Given the extent and impact of the by-law, it appears that limited public participation took place, alternatively, that there was insufficient community participation.”

    OUTA questions the legality of the by-law, arguing that the city’s powers are limited by the Constitution and the South African Police Services Act, and these do not appear to allow a municipality to exercise direct authority over private property such as privately-owned CCTV cameras.

    “The COJ may regulate its own CCTV camera systems as it deems fit, but it exceeds its powers by directly interfering with private property rights,” says Fick.

    “It would appear that the COJ is usurping policing functions by commandeering private CCTV camera systems aimed at ensuring the safety and security of individuals, communities and property within the city, which safety and security responsibility is primarily the function of national and provincial government. For this reason, the COJ is overstepping its executive and legislative authority.”

    OUTA says the city’s registration process is irrational, cumbersome and unimplementable.

    It points out that the by-law requires “prior written approval” from the city for installing, using or upgrading CCTV cameras, which include coverage of public space, to provide the city with plans and motivations for such cameras, get sign-off from a registered engineer, reapply each year, and pay fees to the city. It also allows the city to simply confiscate without a court order any equipment it deems to have overstepped the by-law, it adds.

    According to the civic organisation, the by-law also requires that each CCTV camera must record and store data for a minimum period but this is incoherently stated and effectively outlaws cameras that provide only real-time monitoring.

    The by-law blocks sharing of data with community policing forums or private security companies, restricting it to use by the SAPS and Johannesburg Metro Police Department (JMPD) only, it states.

    CCTV cameras must carry labels with owners’ names and contact details, which creates privacy issues, it says.

    Fick calls the demand for fees “nothing more than a scheme to secure additional revenue for the COJ, which is financially crippled”, and a double tax for owners who have already paid VAT and probably import duties on their CCTV equipment.

    Undermining community initiatives

    OUTA believes this by-law will undermine community safety initiatives, which means the by-law will effectively have the opposite effect of what is intended.

    It notes that the by-law appears to grant city officials the right to enter private property at any time to inspect the cameras, which is an invasion of privacy and open to abuse.

    Threats to confiscate unregistered cameras or those of which the city does not approve would be arbitrary deprivation or expropriation without compensation, says OUTA.

    The requirement that owners must simply hand over all data is unnecessary, as “far less intrusive alternatives” already exist in law, including the subpoena system for investigation and prosecution, or simply asking CCTV owners for help.

    Vumacam, a provider of camera-based technologies, also raised objections to critical provisions of the by-laws governing privately-owned CCTV cameras with a view of public spaces in the city.

    In March, Vumacam noted with concern that it sought to provide the city with legally founded insight regarding key aspects of the by-law prior to its approval and promulgation. However, it said the final version had not considered this input, and raises concerns about its impact on private CCTV users and security operations.

    In its capacity as a technology partner to the City of Johannesburg, public law enforcement and private security operators, Vumacam is part of an initiative which has seen surveillance technologies used to great effect in the fight against crime across the city.



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