Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 12 December 2025
📘 Source: The Citizen

The Gauteng High Court has dismissed the Information Regulator’s bid to halt the publication of the 2025 matric results, upholding an appeal by the Department of Basic Education. The crushing judgment in the matter was handed down on Friday. The court dismissed the regulator’s arguments as “fanciful” and likened its stance to “a poorly constructed thought experiment”.

The judgment is the latest in an ongoing battle over whether the National Senior Certificate (NSC) results could be published in newspapers using pupils’ examination numbers. “The regulator’s stance does not reflect events in the real world. It would be a very unusual learner who, having prepared for examinations, having spent weeks sitting for various papers, and having spent weeks awaiting results, would care to recall who sat next to the learner during examinations, work out from the sequence of examination numbers, and then have thoughts about how that other learner performed in the examinations,” Judge Mark Morgan ruled.

Morgan said the Popia Act is concerned with preserving privacy interests. “It is unnecessary to consider the various other issues raised in the application. That is because I hold that the manner of publication of the results does not constitute the processing of personally identifiable information.

📖 Continue Reading
This is a preview of the full article. To read the complete story, click the button below.

Read Full Article on The Citizen

AllZimNews aggregates content from various trusted sources to keep you informed.

[paywall]

The question of infringement of the right to privacy does not arise. The other issues raised in the application are incidental to whether the students’ right to privacy was infringed. It is therefore unnecessary to address those other issues, given our holding,” Morgan said.

The Information Regulator filed an urgent application to block the release of the NSC examination results in newspapers, citing concerns about the violation of students’ privacy under the Protection of Personal Information Act (Popia). However,the DBE opposed the application, with AfriForum joining the case as an interested party. Despite the Information Regulator’s enforcement notice issued in November last year and a potentialR5 million fine, the DBE planned to announce the results.

[/paywall]

📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by The Citizen • December 12, 2025

Powered by
AllZimNews

By Hope