SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Head of state and
government: Thabo
Mbeki
Death penalty:
abolitionist for all
crimes
UN Women's
Convention: ratified
Optional Protocol to UN
Women's Convention: not signed
Plans were announced to
strengthen delivery of nondiscriminatory health care for people
living with HIV/AIDS, but most of the estimated 5.3 million people
with HIV remained without access to appropriate care including
anti-retroviral drug therapy. Despite improvements in police and
prosecution responses in some areas, the number of reported rapes
of women and children remained at a high level. The government
began making reparation payments to victims of human rights
violations in the apartheid era. Investigations revealed
ill-treatment of prisoners by police and prison officials, and the
misuse of lethal force by the police.
Background
A Commission of Inquiry
headed by former Judge Joos Hefer was appointed in September to
examine allegations that the National Director of Public
Prosecutions had spied for the apartheid government and was abusing
the powers of the National Prosecuting Authority. The Commission
heard no evidence to support the allegations and concluded its
hearings in December.
It was expected to present
its findings to President Mbeki early in 2004.
Right to
health
On 19 November the government
announced an Operational Plan for Comprehensive Treatment and Care
for HIV and AIDS, "founded upon the principle of universal
access to care and treatment of all, irrespective of race, colour,
gender and economic status". It also announced details of the
plan's budget, which included provision for anti-retroviral
drug treatment, and of measures to strengthen the health care
infrastructure. Of the estimated 5.3 million people living with
HIV/AIDS, only a tiny proportion of those requiring anti-retroviral
drug therapy had access to it through private or company medical
schemes or services run by non-governmental organizations
(NGOs).
The Operational Plan
allocated resources for treatment to reduce the risk of HIV
transmission after sexual assault. Although the government had
promised such treatment in April 2002, there was still limited
access to anti-retroviral drug treatment, particularly for child
victims, by late 2003.
In July the government
removed a clause from the draft Criminal Law (Sexual Offences)
Amendment Bill which would have compelled the state to provide
nondiscriminatory access to care and treatment to survivors of
rape. The Department of Health national guidelines on care and
treatment for rape survivors had not been completed by the end of
the year. In December the Medical Research Council reported that
three-quarters of doctors and nurses who treated rape survivors
lacked proper training and that just under half of the health
centres did not have a private examination room for these
patients.
The provincial minister and
senior officials in the Department of Health in Mpumalanga province
were removed from their positions in August. They were under
investigation for corruption, including misappropriation of the
province's 19 million Rand HIV/AIDS budget.
The right of access for
orphaned HIV-positive children to anti-retroviral drug treatment
was improved by a Johannesburg High Court ruling in December. The
AIDS Law Project and paediatric doctors had challenged the law
preventing doctors from providing treatment to children without
parents or guardians.
Violence against
women
On 13 December, 21-year-old
Lorna Mlofana, a community educator for the Treatment Action
Campaign in Khayelitsha, Cape Town, was raped by a group of men who
then beat her to death after she disclosed that she was
HIV-positive. A woman friend, Nomava Mangisa, who intervened to
help her, sustained head injuries. Two men were later arrested and
appeared in the Khayelitsha magistrate's court on 22 December
in connection with murder and rape charges.
The police Annual Report for
the period ending March 2003 recorded a decrease of 5.7 per cent in
reported rapes. There were 52,425 officially reported rapes, a
third of the estimated actual number. More than 40 per cent of the
victims were aged 18 or younger. The conviction rate for rape
remained low, at an average of seven per cent.
The police and prosecution
services continued to implement programs to improve their response
to rape and other sexual offences. "Victim-friendly
facilities" were established at 78 police stations in the year
to March 2003, including at those stations where half of all rapes
were reported, according to police statistics. NGOs and the
organization Business Against Crime, however, continued to provide
support facilities in most cases. The National Prosecuting
Authority established 40 more specialized sexual offences courts
and dedicated regional courts during the year, working with NGOs to
minimize the trauma for rape survivors, especially children,
involved in court hearings.
The Independent Complaints
Directorate (ICD), the police oversight body, criticized police
management for a lack of commitment to ensuring that the police
fulfilled their obligations under the Domestic Violence
Act.
Reparations and
redress
On 29 January, the Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) settled a legal dispute with the
Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP). As a result, in March the TRC was able
to hand over to the President Volume 6 of its 1998
Report.
The TRC agreed to include in
Volume 6 a "schedule of changes and corrections" to its
findings against the IFP and to publish the IFP's objections to
the TRC process and findings. However, the settlement left intact
the TRC's core findings that the IFP, the former KwaZulu
homeland government and the KwaZulu police were responsible for
gross human rights violations.
Volume 6 also summarized the
work of the Amnesty Committee. The Committee heard evidence, in
amnesty applications from members of the state security forces,
which substantiated allegations of state complicity in political
violence in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The evidence confirmed
that the police had routinely tortured government
opponents.
The TRC urged the government
to implement its 1998 recommendations for reparations and
rehabilitation programs for victims of gross human rights
violations.
The government announced in
April that it would pay final reparations to 22,000 such victims
identified by the TRC. Victim support groups and NGOs criticized
the offer as being far below the TRC's recommended amount. In
October the President assented to the Promotion of National Unity
and Reconciliation Amendment Act, which authorized use of the
President's Fund not only for reparations to individual victims
but also for "the rehabilitation of communities". In
November the government began one-off payments to individual
victims.
The new law also authorized
the government to establish a mechanism with the power to review
TRC decisions where required by court rulings. A 2001 court ruling
had ordered the government to review the TRC's refusal of
amnesty to former security police officer Gideon Nieuwoudt and two
others convicted of four murders in Port Elizabeth in 1989. The
delay in holding this review had affected the prosecution of
certain other apartheid era perpetrators.
In May the Supreme Court of
Appeals ruled that it could not hear the prosecution's case for
reviewing certain decisions made by the judge at the trial of Dr
Wouter Basson. Dr Basson, the former head of the military's
covert biological and chemical warfare program in the apartheid
era, had been acquitted in 2002 of 46 murder and other charges. The
trial judge had ruled, among other things, that certain charges
against Dr Basson relating to murders committed outside South
Africa should be excluded. In November the Constitutional Court
heard arguments on an appeal by the state against the Supreme Court
of Appeal's ruling; a decision was pending at the end of the
year.
Potential prosecutions in
other cases involving extraterritorial murders were delayed because
of the trial court's ruling in this case.
Ill-treatment and
excessive force
In November the National
Assembly passed the Protection of Constitutional Democracy against
Terrorism and Related Activities Bill. After criticism by NGOs,
including AI, the final version of the law increased safeguards
against arbitrary arrest and searches and infringements of freedoms
of expression, association and assembly. The authorities would also
be obliged to apply the protections under the ordinary law and the
Constitution to suspects under investigation or facing extradition
from South Africa at the request of a foreign state.
The Jali Commission continued
its hearings into corruption and abuses in prisons. In November a
warder at the C-MAX maximum security prison in Pretoria told the
Commission that a medical officer and section head had failed to
stop named warders stripping, punching and slapping newly arrived
prisoners, and torturing them with electric shocks. He alleged that
he had been threatened if he testified. The Commission requested
his transfer to another prison.
In Vryheid prison more than
80 prisoners were assaulted by warders in January when they
objected to a new form of body searches. Independent medical
evidence corroborated prisoners' allegations that, after being
stripped and forced to lie on the ground, they were beaten with
batons and stamped on. Civil proceedings were launched against the
Correctional Services authorities.
There were a number of
reports of excessive force by the new municipal police forces. In
Cape Town in December a City Police officer sprayed tear gas or
pepper spray at minibus taxi drivers held in the back of a patrol
van following arrest. One of the drivers became critically ill and
required hospital treatment. He later laid a charge of assault
against the City Police. The ICD also initiated an investigation.
During disciplinary proceedings, 18 officers signed affidavits
stating that they were not properly trained in the use of their
weapons, including stun guns, metal batons, pepper spray and
firearms.
Between April 2002 and March
2003 the ICD received 528 reports of deaths in custody and as a
result of police action. The police used lethal force while
conducting an arrest or stopping a suspect from fleeing in 189
cases, more than half of them in Gauteng and KwaZulu Natal
provinces. The ICD reported that, despite the Constitutional Court
ruling in 2002 against lethal force where there was no threat to
life, it had been used without justification. At the end of the
year the trial for murder was pending against a Vaalbank police
officer in connection with the death of 16-year-old Edward
Molokomme in September 2002. The boy and his 17- year-old friend,
Duncan Phiri, had been shot at by a police officer when they fled
into a forest to escape arrest for breaking bottles at the
roadside. Duncan Phiri survived.
In the year to March 2003 the
ICD also investigated 353 assaults with intent to commit grievous
bodily harm, 23 cases of torture and 16 rapes by police
officers.
Human rights
defenders
Journalists with the
independent African Eye News Servicein Nelspruit were harassed by
officials as a result of their investigations into alleged
corruption within the provincial government. In late 2003 police
officials in Pretoria instituted an investigation into the failure
by local police to act on complaints lodged by the journalists in
2002 of threats and attacks by known criminals.
AI country
reports/visits
Reports
• South Africa: Truth
and justice – Unfinished business in South Africa, joint
publication with Human Rights Watch (AI Index: AFR
53/001/2003)
• South Africa:
Submission to the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Justice and
Constitutional Development, Parliament of South Africa, on the
draft Criminal Law (Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill, 2003, from
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch (AI Index: AFR
53/006/2003) Visit AI delegates visited South Africa in April
and May.
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