Kobie Coetsee

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Hendrik Jacobus Coetsee
Minister of Justice
In office
7 October 1980 – 31 March 1993
Preceded byAlwyn Schlebusch
Succeeded byDullah Omar
Personal details
Born(1931-04-19)19 April 1931
University of the Orange Free State

Hendrik Jacobus Coetsee (19 April 1931 – 29 July 2000), known as Kobie Coetsee, was a South African lawyer, National Party politician and administrator as well as a negotiator during the country's transition to universal democracy.

Biography

Born 19 April 1931 in

Justice Minister
. The portfolio of Prisons was added to his responsibilities.

On 12 October 1978, Coetsee became Deputy Minister of Defence and National Security.[2]: 61  He reorganised National Intelligence after the Information Scandal and adjusted the national service to make sure that people would not suffer financial loss or travel unnecessarily while doing their military service. Coetsee was appointed as Minister of Justice on 7 October 1980.[2]: 61  He changed the legal system by introducing the small claims court and pioneering the Matrimonial Property Act in 1984. This act had an important effect on the status of married women and introduced the accrual system of sharing property between spouses. Coetsee also contributed to the process that made community service an alternative option to being jailed and did away with racially specific commissioners' courts. He was serious about legal reform and in April 1986, he asked for a legal commission to investigate the role of the courts in protecting group and individual rights, after which a report on human and group rights had to be drawn up. He also walked the Indemnity Act through parliament, ensuring that those who took part in political negotiations after the unbanning of the African National Congress (ANC) would receive temporary immunity.[3]

After the first non-racial democratic elections in South Africa in 1994, he was elected president of the Senate (which was later renamed the National Council of Provinces), although the ANC had a comfortable majority in this chamber of parliament as well. He kept that position until 1997.

Meetings with the ANC

A series of meetings between him and the imprisoned

defence portfolio from Roelf Meyer
until the elections of 1994.

A

was named after him.

Kobie Coetsee married Helena Elizabeth Malan on 6 October 1956 and was a father of two sons and three daughters.[2]: 61  He died of a heart attack 29 July 2000, in Bloemfontein.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "Harvard National Model United Nations" (PDF). Retrieved 29 January 2013.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ sahoboss (17 February 2011). "Hendrik Jacobus (Kobie) Coetsee". South African History Online. Retrieved 19 October 2018.
  4. ^ van der Vat, Dan (5 August 2000). "Kobie Coetsee". the Guardian. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
Political offices
Preceded by
Minister of Defence (South Africa)

1 April 1993 – 11 May 1994
Succeeded by