• The Constitutional Court will hear Magudumana’s case on 14 May 2026, following her arrest in Tanzania alongside Thabo Bester.
  • She argues her return to South Africa was an unlawful disguised extradition and seeks release from detention.
  • The State maintains she was lawfully arrested and deported after being found in Tanzania illegally.

Nandipha Magudumana is taking her fight for freedom all the way to the Constitutional Court, in a case that stems directly from her arrest in Tanzania alongside convicted murderer and rapist Thabo Bester.

The matter will be heard on Thursday, 14 May 2026, and will put the State's conduct under the microscope. Magudumana has been held at Bizzah Makhate Correctional Centre in Kroonstad since her return in April 2023, shortly after she and Bester were tracked down in Arusha.

Their arrest drew a line under an intense international manhunt that had gripped South Africa and exposed serious questions about systemic failures in the country's correctional system. What happened after that arrest is now at the heart of a constitutional dispute over how she was removed from Tanzania and whether that process was ever legal.

The case she brings

Magudumana argues her return to South Africa was unlawful because it bypassed the formal extradition process. Her founding affidavit states, "A disguised extradition is unlawful under international law and South African law." She contends she was removed without a formal extradition request, without appearing before a court, and without the protections that international law requires.

In addition, she said she did not have an extradition hearing, and none of the procedures for extradition was followed. She also argues that the State cannot reach for alternative legal mechanisms to sidestep extradition safeguards, and that the way she was brought back renders her detention unlawful and strips the courts of jurisdiction over her.

Arrest in Tanzania

Magudumana was arrested in Arusha in April 2023 alongside Bester after the two left South Africa following his escape from custody. Their discovery triggered cooperation between Tanzanian and South African authorities. The facts are not in dispute. What is contested is their legal meaning.

Magudumana says she was handed over to South African officials without any judicial oversight. She was never brought before a court in Tanzania and was never given a chance to challenge her removal. She argues deportation was used as a cover for what was, in substance, an extradition, and that the absence of any formal process confirms the correct legal route was deliberately bypassed.

The State's response

The State insists everything was above board. Its answering affidavit states, "The Applicant was lawfully arrested and detained by the Tanzanian authorities because she was in the country illegally." Tanzanian authorities arrested Magudumana for immigration violations, declared her a prohibited immigrant, and deported her.

The State denies any abduction, saying South African authorities only took custody after Tanzania completed its own lawful process. It argues that deportation requires no extradition safeguards and that cross-border cooperation of this kind is routine and permissible.

Proceedings in the High Court and SCA

The High Court in the Free State acknowledged that the circumstances of Magudumana's return bore the hallmarks of a disguised extradition, but found that her consent to return to South Africa was enough to make the process lawful. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed her challenge.

Magudumana argues the SCA failed to grapple seriously with the constitutional dimensions of her case, particularly the unlawfulness of disguised extradition and what that means for her ongoing detention.

The legal fault line

Magudumana's argument is that substance must prevail over label. If deportation was used in circumstances that called for extradition, the whole process was unlawful regardless of what it was called. The State's counter is that deportation and extradition are fundamentally different legal tools, and that Tanzania acted independently within its own sovereign authority.

The legality of Magudumana's return, it argues, must be judged by Tanzanian law, not South African extradition law. This disagreement raises bigger questions about the limits of state power and whether legal safeguards can be bypassed through cross-border cooperation.

A final showdown

Magudumana is asking the court to grant leave to appeal and declare her return unlawful, which would directly affect the legality of her detention. The State is urging the court to refuse leave and let the SCA decision stand.

Conviction.co.za

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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