sign the CAB into law as he still had reservations on the constitutionality of some provisions. Notably, these reservations did not include clause 19D. The suspension period regarding the declaration of constitutional invalidity and the interim reading-in remedy issued by the Court in Blind SA I lapsed on 21 September 2024 without the promulgation of legislation to cure the defect. Therefore, the invalidity took effect, and persons whose rights were protected by the interim remedy could no longer benefit from it. On 8 October 2024, Blind SA approached this Court by way of an urgent application for direct access and sought an order resuscitating the section 13A reading-in remedy. On 14 October 2024, the President referred the reservations regarding the CAB and the Performers Protection Act Bill (PPAB) in terms of section 79B and 84(2)(c) of the Constitution for a determination of their constitutional validity. After the Court had initially consolidated both matters on 22 October 2024, Blind SA filed a supplementary affidavit stating that the matter was urgent, and that the President’s referral would delay the finalisation of the matter, by over a year. As a result, the Court separated the matters and heard the urgent application on 28 November 2024. On 13 December 2024, this Court issued an interim order reading in section 13A, pending the final determination of the matter. Blind SA submitted that the Court’s jurisdiction was engaged as it would supplement or vary its own order in Blind SA I. On urgency, it accepted that the applications to extend suspension periods generally arise close to the expiry of the suspension period, and not once the relief has lapsed. Blind SA submitted that if its urgent direct access application were refused, then persons with visual and print 3

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