Shamila Batohi
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shamila Batohi | |
|---|---|
Batohi in 2016 | |
| National Director of Public Prosecutions | |
| Assumed office 1 February 2019 | |
| President | Cyril Ramaphosa |
| Preceded by | Shaun Abrahams |
| Personal details | |
| Born | |
| Alma mater | University of Durban–Westville University of Natal |
Shamila Batohi is a South African prosecutor. She has led the National Prosecuting Authority as National Director of Public Prosecutions since February 2019. She was formerly an adviser to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court from 2009 to 2019. She was due to be replaced by advocate Andy Mothibi from 1 February 2026 upon her retirement.
Batohi was born in Durban in the former Natal Province.[1] She grew up in Clare Estate, an Indian suburb of Durban, and she matriculated at Burnwood Secondary School.[2][3] After high school, she completed a BA at the University of Durban–Westville and an LLB at the University of Natal's Durban campus.[1][3]
Legal career
After some time in private legal practice,[3] Batohi entered public service in 1986 as a junior prosecutor at the magistrate's court in Chatsworth, Natal.[4] She served continuously as a public prosecutor in Natal (later renamed KwaZulu-Natal) for the next 15 years.[3] By the end of apartheid, she was a member of the Natal Attorney-General's office, and in 1995 she was seconded to Frank Dutton's Investigation Task Unit, a multi-disciplinary law enforcement unit established by President Nelson Mandela; the unit investigated so-called "third force" political violence in Natal during the post-apartheid transition.[4][2]
Batohi went on to serve as a Director of Public Prosecutions in the KwaZulu-Natal branch of the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) from 2000 to 2009.[1] In 2000, she was the chief prosecutor and evidence leader at the King Commission, the high-profile commission of inquiry that, under the chairmanship of Edwin King, investigated the cricket match fixing scandal.[1][5] In that capacity she acquired public notoriety for her cross-examination of former Proteas captain Hansie Cronje, who was reduced to tears during his testimony.[6][7] Later in 2000, she was appointed to replace Chris MacAdam as the head of the KwaZulu-Natal branch of the Scorpions, an elite investigative unit of the National Prosecuting Authority.[8] After leaving the Scorpions, she became the provincial head of the NPA.[2]
In late 2009, Batohi left the NPA to move to the Hague, where she worked at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for the next decade. She entered the court on a one-year contract as senior legal adviser to the ICC prosecutor, Luis Moreno Acampo.[3] She held that job until she was appointed to the head of the NPA in 2019.[9]
