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Master’s Offices rescue plan shows little progress
Cape Argus
|April 11, 2025
MORE than a year after the ambitious rescue plan for South Africa’s Master's Offices was approved, mounting frustrations among legal practitioners and industry stakeholders highlight the slow progress being made to address long-standing issues. Approved in November 2023, the rescue plan aimed to tackle significant backlogs and inefficiencies plaguing the Master's Offices.
Its objectives included enhancing digitisation, upgrading technology, boosting human resource capacity, standardising processes, promoting transparency, implementing anti-corruption measures, and fostering public and legal community engagement.
Hussan Goga, chairperson of the Law Society of South Africa (LSSA) Deceased Estates, Trusts and Planning Committee, said the LSSA is deeply concerned with the continued dysfunction at the Master's Offices across the country.
“Despite numerous efforts over the past three months to secure a meeting with the Master's Office, the LSSA has made no progress. This lack of engagement remains a serious concern, as it directly impacts the efficiency and quality of instructions provided to legal practitioners,’ he said.
He said during the LSSAs Annual General Meeting in April 2024, the Acting Chief Master, Kanyane Mathibe, addressed the legal profession and expressed a willingness to collaborate with the LSSA through a proposed pilot project aimed to involve attorneys in assisting with the resolution of persistent backlogs at various Master's Offices.
This story is from the April 11, 2025 edition of Cape Argus.
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