issues > about the crime > reporting and conviction rates Reporting and conviction ratesLisa Vetten (manager of the Gender Unit at the
Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation in South
Africa) outlines the many hurdles
a survivor of sexual assault faces when she wants to achieve
legal justice:
1. The person at the counter of the police station may say something
that discourages her
2. Depending on the detective’s workload and experience,
he/she may make a judgment about how much investigation time
is allocated and often it’s insufficient
3. A doctor may make mistakes during the medical examination
for a variety of reasons – lack of experience, poor training,
isn’t interested, doesn’t care, it’s late at
night or he/she wants to go home
4. People may not be willing to be witnesses
5. The case may be postponed (adjourned) at the request of the
prosecution so many times that the judge will insist it is withdrawn
6. The survivor may not ‘perform’ under cross-examination
7. The prosecutor may not know how to interpret the medical evidence
‘It’s all those hurdles and barriers and filters
along the way, that’s why I think so few cases result in
conviction. Never mind of course the fact that you still have
I think magistrates who may themselves subscribe to a whole host
of stereotypes around rape. Some years ago they did drop the
cautionary rule around sexual assault which stated that the evidence
presented by women or girls who had been raped had to be treated
with extra caution because women are known to make up stories
and to tell lies due to a whole range of reasons – neurosis
and spite, to use some of the words that they did.’
‘A tactic that [is used] is to just delay and delay and
delay and eventually it wears you out completely and you do give
up because after three, four, five years and the trial has still
not started or the endless postponements, you don’t have
the energy to continue any more.’
‘Other women I think can sometimes be left feeling quite
bitter and betrayed that a system which says “Break the
silence. Speak out. Come forward” does not reward you in
any way for doing that and the sense that justice has been done
[is not accorded].’
If the criminal justice system is not
going to assist a woman or child who has been sexually assaulted,
what else could be
done to help them come to terms with the attack and find another
sense of justice?
Find out more... South African response
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