- The Equality Court found that a patient committed hate speech after calling a nurse the K-word during a hospital visit at Mediclinic Cape Town.
- The court ruled that repeated verbal abuse, including sexual and gendered insults, amounted to unlawful harassment under equality law.
- The patient was ordered to pay costs, with a further hearing to determine the appropriate remedy for the nurse.
What should have been an ordinary medical assessment turned into a humiliating ordeal for an emergency nurse at Mediclinic Cape Town, after a patient unleashed a stream of racial and gender-based abuse during a triage consultation.
In a strongly worded ruling, the Equality Court in Cape Town found that the words directed at nurse Agreement Funeka Mayongo were not merely insults, but unlawful hate speech and harassment prohibited by the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act.
The court held that the verbal attack did not occur in some abstract place of conflict, but inside a hospital triage room where care, dignity, and trust are meant to be protected. Instead, Mayongo was subjected to racist language, obscene insults, and sexualised threats while performing her duties.
The judge described the encounter as a collapse of basic respect, and a misuse of power by a patient who believed he should bypass normal procedures because he felt “superior” to those around him.
‘This was not a shock, but entitlement’
In rejecting the patient’s defence that his behaviour was caused by pain and panic, the court drew a clear line between stress and discrimination. Judge DM Thulare did not accept that anger justified racial abuse, particularly after finding that the wound was not urgent and the patient had deliberately entered the emergency unit to force priority treatment.
The judgment was blunt in its assessment of the patient’s conduct and motive. The court found that he tried to create drama to command attention and bypass others in the queue, resorting to abuse when the nurse refused to yield.
“The respondent went to the hospital driven by a superiority complex,” Judge Thulare wrote. “He approached the hospital with a feeling that he deserved privileges and special treatment.”
The judge rejected outright the version that the patient had been profusely bleeding, stating that medical evidence showed otherwise. “One does not need to be a medical practitioner to conclude that the respondent did not bleed profusely, and in fact, did not bleed at all,” the court held.
Instead, the judge found that the patient exaggerated his injury to force immediate treatment, and when this did not work, he turned his rage on the nurse.
“His exaggerated feeling of being better than others caused him to act in a manner that could cause urgent attention to a general medical condition which did not require emergency care,” the judgment read.
When a racial slur becomes hate speech
The court made it clear that the use of the k-word by a white patient against a black nurse was not simply offensive, but legally actionable hate speech. Applying Constitutional Court authority, the judge emphasised that context matters, and hospitals are not spaces where dignity can be suspended.
“When a white person called an African person a k***, it propounds the racial superiority of the white and the inferiority of the African,” Judge Thulare ruled. The judge concluded that a reasonable person would see the slur as racially motivated and harmful.
“I find that a reasonable person would regard the respondent calling the complainant a k-word as a remark based on the prohibited ground of race and intended to incite harm and propagate hatred,” the court held.
Alongside hate speech, the verbal abuse was also found to constitute harassment. The repeated use of gendered insults, sexualised threats, and attacks on the nurse’s dignity created what the judge described as a hostile and degrading environment.
“The use of the words ‘p***’ and ‘f***’ were meant to, and in fact did, demean and humiliate her,” the court found.
‘Racists have a fragile ego’
One of the most striking passages of the judgment came near the end, where the judge reflected on the behaviour pattern revealed during the trial. The court rejected the accused’s attempt to paint himself as the real victim, describing his version as a fabrication meant to escape accountability.
“Racists have a fragile ego,” Judge Thulare wrote. “Where their flaws are exposed, they blame their victims to maintain their image and avoid shame.” The judge went further, finding that the patient deliberately constructed a false reality in court. “The respondent’s version is on a balance of probabilities false. It is what English law has called a ‘cock and bull story’.”
The court stated plainly that the nurse’s testimony was credible, corroborated, and supported by independent evidence from hospital staff. It found that she did not embellish her version, and that her distress was immediate, visible, and genuine.
“She was attacked and embarrassed in front of her colleagues and patients,” the court noted. “It caused her trauma, self-doubt, and emotional harm.”
Accountability beyond the hospital walls
In addition to ruling that the conduct amounted to hate speech and harassment, the court ordered the respondent to pay legal costs and wasted costs caused by previous delays. The matter will return to court for a further hearing to determine an appropriate remedy, which may include damages, an apology, or restorative justice measures.
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