Dhaya Pillay | |
---|---|
Judge of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court | |
Assumed office 2010 | |
Nominated by | Judicial Service Commission |
Appointed by | President Jacob Zuma |
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa | |
Assumed office 2000 | |
Nominated by | Judicial Service Commission |
Appointed by | President Thabo Mbeki |
Personal details | |
Born | Durban, South Africa | 5 January 1958
Alma mater |
University of South Africa University of Natal |
Dhayanithie Pillay (born 5 January 1958) is a South African judge of the Labour Court and KwaZulu-Natal High Court. [1] [2]
Pillay was born in Durban in 1958 and completed her B.Proc at UNISA in 1982. [1] Early in her career as an attorney, she joined the firm of noted activist lawyer Yunus Mohamed, a founding member of the UDF and the instructing attorney in the Delmas Treason Trial. [2] Pillay became heavily involved in important political cases and effectively led the firm when Mohamed was in detention. [2] [3]
In the late 1980s, Pillay's practice moved towards labour law, in which she later became an expert, acquiring an LLM in the subject from the University of Natal in 1993. [2] Pillay was a drafter of the Labour Relations Act and later became a senior CCMA commissioner. She also served as an advisor to the drafters of the South African Constitution. [1]
Pillay was made a judge of the Labour Court in 2000 and of the KwaZulu-Natal High Court in 2010. [1] She supported Judge President Chiman Patel – now ousted amid suspicions that he fell out with the KwaZulu-Natal political establishment [4] – in the racial spat over his appointment. [2] [5]
In July 2015 she was interviewed and shortlisted by the Judicial Service Commission for appointment to the Constitutional Court of South Africa. [1] She was nominated by rights groups and former Constitutional Court judge Zak Yacoob [1] and was praised by commentators. [2]
Pillay is an extraordinary professor at the University of Pretoria and has been a visiting academic at the University of Seattle, New York University, the University of Oxford and the Open University. [1] She was recognised as a human rights defender by the Durban branch of Amnesty International in 2005. [2]