Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 200South Africa
S v Jantjies (CC42/20) [2022] ZAWCHC 200 (6 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
6 October 2022
Headnotes
in custody for approximately nine months, whereupon he was released on bail. Of the nine months he spent in custody, four were at the Malmesbury Correctional Services Facility awaiting trial section, and the remaining five months at the Pollsmoor Maximum Security Prison. At the outset, this court wishes to commend the prosecutor who referred the docket to the DPP, and the staff of that office who processed the docket, that led to the arraignment of both the accused and the child’s mother. Their timely intervention and foresight
Judgment
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## S v Jantjies (CC42/20) [2022] ZAWCHC 200 (6 October 2022)
S v Jantjies (CC42/20) [2022] ZAWCHC 200 (6 October 2022)
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sino date 6 October 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: CC42/20
In
the matter between:
THE
STATE
Respondent
and
GODFREY
DANVILLE
JANTJIES
Accused
Coram
:
Justice V C Saldanha
Heard
:
02 September 2022
Delivered
:
6 October 2022
JUDGMENT
SALDANHA
J
:
[1]
The three year old deceased, R[....] G[....], was born into the
close-knit
community of Moorreesburg, a farming and agri-industrial
town situated along the N7, approximately an hour and a half’s
drive
out of Cape Town. It is there where she grew up and
endeared herself to many of the local residents. Her mother, Ms
A[....] S[....], remained inconsolable, tearful and visibly
traumatised throughout the sentencing proceedings, due to the painful
circumstances surrounding the death of her young child. So,
too, was visible the pain and anguish experienced by members
of the
Moorreesburg community who attended the sentencing proceeding, both
young and old, women and men.
[2]
The history
of the matter dates back to that fateful day of Saturday 23 May 2015,
and into the early hours of the following morning,
in which the
deceased succumbed to various injuries in nothing less than
excruciating pain and helplessness. Neither the
accused, in
whose care she had been left for most of the day, nor her mother, had
taken the necessary steps to provide her with
the proper medical
attention that she so desperately needed and, as Doctor Sherman, the
pathologist, testified during the trial,
would have prevented her
untimely death. It appeared that the initial police
investigation into the unnatural and tragic
circumstances of the
death of the young child ended up in no more than an inquest docket.
Thereafter the docket literally
remained dormant for several months,
awaiting the holding of a formal inquest. Fortuitously, it was
picked up by the vigilance
and timely intervention of a prosecutor in
Moorreesburg, that led to the docket being referred to the office of
the Director of
Public Prosecutions in Cape Town for consideration of
a prosecution. As a result, and almost nine months after the
death
of the child, charges were proffered against the accused and Ms
S[....], for the contravention of section 305 (3) (
a
),
read together with section 305 (6) of the Children’s Act 38 of
2005 – Child Abuse or Neglect with an additional second
count
of murder, read together with various provisions of the
Criminal
Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and the minimum sentence legislation, were
proffered against the accused only. It appeared that Ms S[....]
entered into a
plea and sentence agreement with the State, as a
result of which she was convicted of the neglect of the child, and
sentenced,
in terms of
Section 276
(1) (
h
)
[1]
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, to
correctional supervision, and she
was ordered to serve a period of house arrest and perform community
service. The accused,
charged with murder and the contravention
of the Children’s Act, for child abuse or deliberate neglect,
pleaded not guilty
and the matter proceeded to trial on both counts.
[3]
When initially arrested, the accused was held in custody for
approximately
nine months, whereupon he was released on bail. Of
the nine months he spent in custody, four were at the Malmesbury
Correctional
Services Facility awaiting trial section, and the
remaining five months at the Pollsmoor Maximum Security Prison. At
the
outset, this court wishes to commend the prosecutor who referred
the docket to the DPP, and the staff of that office who processed
the
docket, that led to the arraignment of both the accused and the
child’s mother. Their timely intervention and foresight
has enabled those responsible for the tragic loss of the minor child
to be held accountable.
[4]
The accused’s trial commenced in the Cape High Court on 15
November
2021. The accused was eventually convicted, on 24
March 2022, of the contravention of the Children’s Act, in that
he
was found to have been deliberately negligent, which resulted in
the death of the young child. He was acquitted on the count
of
murder.
[5]
During the entire proceedings of the trial in the Cape High Court,
the
court noted that there was hardly any attendance by members of
the deceased’s family (other than when they testified), the
public and, in particular, members from the community of Moorreesburg
from which both the deceased and the accused hailed. However,
mostly present during the proceedings was an aunt of the accused, Ms
Maria Thys, who resides in Belhar, Cape Town. The circumstances
under which the death of the child occurred, and the account given by
various witnesses during the trial of their observations
of the
deceased literally days and weeks prior to her death, made the
absence of the community of Moorreesburg all the more significant
and
of particular concern to the court. After the conviction of the
accused, the court proposed to the State and the defence
that
consideration be given to the sentencing proceedings being held in
Moorreesburg, to provide accessibility to the deceased’s
family, the local community, and people from the surrounding areas
who had an interest in the proceedings. Both the State
and the
defence were in agreement, and as a result thereof the court obtained
the permission of the Judge President of the Division
for the
sentencing proceedings to be conducted at the Moorreesburg
Magistrates’ Court. The Chief Magistrate at the
Moorreesburg Court, Mr Mthimunye, kindly availed his only courtroom
for the sentencing proceedings. He also very helpfully
placed
his support staff at the disposal of the High Court and generously
accommodated all of the court officials involved in the
matter.
[6]
The court heard evidence, in mitigation and in aggravation of
sentence,
at Moorreesburg on two separate days. On both
occasions the court was filled to capacity with local members of the
community,
with gender and child anti-violence activists and
organisations also in attendance. Despite the Covid 19 pandemic
and social
distancing required in the courtroom, which would normally
have accommodated no more than 30 people, it brimmed to capacity,
with
members of the public also standing outside in the passageway
looking through the windows of the courtroom onto the proceedings.
Almost 100 people attended the proceedings on each day. The
demographics of the members of the community in attendance
ranged
from young to old, both women and men, including an elderly woman in
a wheelchair, all of whom remained stoically and patiently
in
attendance during the entire proceedings. Their visible assent
to what they agreed to in the evidence of the various witnesses,
and
their dissent or disapproval with others, was evident in the shaking
of their heads and with quiet murmuring and alarmed expressions.
Their attendance in the proceedings was of particular
significance, and more so since a High Court had apparently never
previously sat in the town of Moorreesburg. Moreover, their
presence was a clear demonstration to the court of their interest
in,
and concern about, the death of the young child, its impact on their
community, and for having literally waited several years
for
accountability for the incident. It was apparent that having
been unable to attend the trial proceedings in Cape Town,
they, with
great enthusiasm and acclaim, embraced the opportunity of attending
the sentencing proceedings in Moorreesburg.
[7]
In mitigation of sentence the court heard the evidence of a probation
officer, Ms Louise Petersen, a qualified social worker employed by
the Western Cape Department of Social Development, at Malmesbury.
Ms
Inga Silatsha, a Correctional Services officer employed in the Cape
Town Community Correction Services Office, also testified
with regard
to the consideration of correctional supervision as an appropriate
sentence for the accused. Their written reports
were handed
into evidence, with the consent of the State and the defence. The
accused tendered the evidence of his paternal
aunt, Ms Maria Thys,
and he himself also testified in mitigation. In aggravation of
sentence, the State handed into evidence
various letters from
community organisations, and a petition by the local community of
Moorreesburg, with regard to an appropriate
sentence. The State
also led the evidence of a representative of the family and the
broader community of Moorreesburg, an
elder, Ms Emmalene Mentoor.
The State also read into the record victim impact reports,
prepared by the prosecution services,
in respect of the deceased’s
mother, Ms A[....] S[....], and the deceased’s aunt, Ms Sonetta
Esme Agulhas, who also
testified during the trial. After the
above evidence was dealt with in Moorreesburg, the court adjourned
the proceedings
back to Cape Town where the evidence of the
Correctional Services official Ms Inga Silatsha was led, and in
particular with regard
to the programmes available in Correctional
Services in respect of the rehabilitation of offenders, and the
content of the curricula
on social life skills training. After
Ms Silatsha testified, it was apparent to the court that the
interests of justice would
be better served by securing the expert
testimony of a witness with experience and expertise in the area of
Restorative Justice.
At the request of the court, a renowned
expert in the field, Mr Eldred De Klerk, generously made himself
available to testify.
Senior officials of Correctional
Services, and Ms Silatsha, were invited by the court to attend the
proceedings in which
Mr De Klerk would testify on the meaning and
role of Restorative Justice, its application in a broader context and
its impact on
the criminal justice system. Eight senior
officials of Correctional Services attended the proceedings,
including Ms Silatsha,
as an instructive exercise and also for their
professional interest as members of Correctional Services. The
court thereafter
heard submissions by both the defence and the State
in respect of an appropriate sentence to be considered by the court.
[8]
The proceedings reconvened at the Moorreesburg Magistrates’
Court for the handing down of sentence. Besides the proceedings
being accessible to the community of Moorreesburg, an important
development directly related to a restorative process began to emerge
in the sentencing proceedings between the accused, the family
of the
deceased, and the broader community of Moorreesburg that attended the
proceedings. In the context of the recommendations
of the
probation officer, Ms Petersen, and that of the Correctional Services
officer, Ms Silatsha, with regard to the sentencing
options that the
court could consider, the evidence of Mr Eldred De Klerk was all the
more significant in assisting the court with
an expert perspective on
the principals of Restorative Justice and whether it would be a
feasible and appropriate option in the
sentencing of the accused.
[9]
In the consideration of an appropriate sentence the court is guided
by
the oft-quoted authority and guidelines in
S v Zinn
1969
(2) SA 537
(A), at 540G, that it has to consider the commonly
referred to triad of factors such as the personal circumstances of
the offender,
the nature and seriousness of the offence, and the
interests of society. In the balancing of these considerations
the court
is also required to achieve the main objectives of
punishment, such as that of deterrence, prevention, rehabilitation
and retribution.
Moreover, the court is required to demonstrate
a measure of mercy. Importantly, the court was also faced with
an offence
involving a minor child, and has to remain astute to its
responsibility as upper guardian of all children, and its duty to
protect
them against the ravages of abuse, neglect and violent crime,
in the face of the ever growing prevalence and plague of the assault
of young children that has very often lead to their deaths, not only
the province of the Western Cape but throughout the country.
The
court must also be mindful that where sentences are imposed that fail
to properly deal with the seriousness and prevalence
of these
offences, local communities are spurred on, by utter frustration, to
resort to unlawful self-help and violent vigilantism.
It is for
this reason, and while not having to pander to the demands of
communities, that courts must properly and with care
consider the
broader interests of society in the sentencing process.
[10]
In respect of the offence of which the accused has been convicted,
the court is also directed
and constrained by the penalty provisions
in the Children’s Act, which provides in
Section 305
(6): ‘A
person convicted of an offence in terms of subsection (1), (2), (3),
(4) or (5) is liable to a fine or to imprisonment
for a period not
exceeding ten years, or to both a fine and such imprisonment.’
[11]
The
state pointed out that in
S
v JR
2015 (2) SACR 162
(GP) the appellants were similarly charged with the
contravention of
Section 305
(3) (
a
)
of the Children’s Act, and were sentenced to periods of 8 and 5
years’ imprisonment respectively, in circumstances
that
concerned a mother and her boyfriend who, amongst other charges,
neglected to attend to the injuries of a thirteen month old
child.
[2]
The child suffered serious injuries, for which they were found
to be responsible. Ranchod J (Mngqibisa-Thusi J concurring),
sitting as a court of appeal, made the following remarks:
‘
[51]
A misdirection could also flow from a misapplication or
misappreciation of a rule of law, whether arising from our
Constitution,
a statute, the common law or judicial precedent.
[52] In
S v Kekana
it was held:
“
Domestic
violence has become a scourge in our society and should not be
treated lightly. It has to be deplored and also severely
punished. Hardly a day passes without a report in the media of
a woman or a child being beaten, raped or even killed in this
country. Many women and children live in constant fear for
their lives. This is in some respects a negation of many
of
their fundamental rights such as equality, human dignity and bodily
integrity.”
Olivier JA held in
S v
P
:
“
The
rights of children are all too frequently and brutally trampled over
in our society. Abuse of children is sadly an all
too common
phenomenon. Those guilty of violating the innocence of children
must face the wrath of the courts.”’
(Internal
footnotes omitted.)
[12]
Mr Jantjies, the accused, testified about his personal circumstances,
which were also elaborated
on by both his paternal aunt, Ms Thys, and
Ms Petersen, the probation officer. Ms Petersen conducted an
extensive investigative
process into the accused’s
circumstances, interviewed a number of interested parties, including
his present partner, Ms Sylvia
Gordon, family members of the
deceased, the prosecutor and defence counsel in the matter, and
considered various of the court`s
documents.
[13]
The accused is 31 years old and, as indicated, was born in
Moorreesburg, is single but in a relationship
with Ms Gordon, from
which two children, aged 2 and 9 months, have been born. The
accused completed Grade 9 and was employed,
for the past 14 years, at
Overberg MKB as a forklift driver, for which he received in-house
training. The accused’s
biological mother died about two
months after his birth. He is one of two siblings and has
maintained a good relationship
with his elder sister, Ms Raynolene
Cisse. For the better part of his life, it appears that the
accused has been estranged
from his biological father, Mr Gert
Jantjies. Upon his mother’s death the accused and his
sister were taken in by their
paternal aunt, Ms Sarah Maarman, with
whom he resided in Moorreesburg and with whom he has literally spent
most of his life. When
his father remarried, the accused spent
approximately five years living with them, but it appeared that the
relationship between
him and his father was strained, as a result of
his father’s abuse of alcohol and alleged abuse of the accused.
The
accused apparently also experienced financial hardship
while living with his father. He returned to the home of his
aunt,
from where he attended the local school. Ms Petersen
records that the accused perceived his aunt as a positive role model
and that he had experienced stability within her household.
[14]
The accused entered into a relationship with Ms A[....] S[....]
during 2013, and they lived together
until approximately two months
after the deceased’s passing. It appeared that their
relationship originated while they
were still teenagers. As
indicated, during the course of trial it emerged that the accused had
an abusive relationship with
Ms S[....], in that both of them claimed
that when they were under the influence of alcohol the accused would
at times violently
assault Ms S[....]. Ms S[....], however, had
not proffered any charges against the accused for any assault, nor
were any
domestic violence proceedings instituted against him. The
deceased had been born of a prior relationship between Ms S[....]
and
a Mr R[....]2 G[....], and Ms S[....] had functioned as the
deceased’s primary caregiver. The accused assumed the
role of a father figure to the deceased during his relationship with
Ms S[....].
[15]
During the course of his testimony the accused indicated that his
employer, MKB, would release
him from their employment after the
sentencing proceedings. Significantly though, was the fact that
he had resumed his employment
after being released on bail, and even
after having been convicted. Counsel for the accused indicated
that the employer remained
in regular contact with him, had displayed
a particular interest in the development in the case, and also
displayed a keen interest
in the accused and the outcome of the
sentencing proceedings. Ms Petersen had also consulted with Mr
Handri Crous, the accused’s
supervisor at his place of
employment, who confirmed that the accused maintained a positive
intercollegiate relationship with his
fellow workers. He was
described as a responsible, dedicated and punctual employee, who had
not presented with any negative
behaviour.
[16]
The accused has, since the breakup with Ms S[....], resided with his
paternal aunt and his cousins,
and remained settled in Moorreesburg,
while his partner Ms Gordon and the two minor children reside with
her parents. The
accused earned a nett income of R5 100, of
which he contributed R1 000 towards the maintenance of his minor
children with Ms Gordon.
She is unemployed and appears to have
since applied for a state grant for the two children. In the
course of his testimony
the court raised with the accused his monthly
expenditure, from which he indicated that he contributed to the
household of Ms Maarman
and had also contributed to the monthly
schooling and other expenses for his minor children.
[17]
In his testimony he also indicated that he had spent a considerable
amount of his earnings on
what he referred to as ‘duur tekkies’
(expensive brand name leisure casual shoes). The court raised
its concern
about such unnecessary expenditure, in the face of the
maintenance of his minor children and his contribution towards the
household
expenses of his aunt Ms Maarman. Needless to say,
this wholly unnecessary expense of brand name ‘duur tekkies’
is all too prevalent, where parents and young men and women spend
unnecessarily large amounts of money on fashionable apparel at
the
expense of the livelihood of their families, and the education and
desperate needs of dependents. In respect of the social
cultural aspects of the accused, Ms Petersen noted that while he
embraced the Christian faith he did not participate in any religious
festivities or church services. She claimed that he consumed
alcohol socially, but that he had a history of substance abuse
which
included cannabis and methamphetamines (“tik”). Ms
Petersen claimed that the accused reported to her that
he has, since
2019, refrained from using substances. She was, however, unable
to confirm that he was free of substance abuse
during the
investigative process. The accused, for his part, claimed that
since this incident he has only consumed alcohol
socially, and has
significantly cut down since the birth of his children.
[18]
In respect of his interpersonal relationships, Ms Petersen noted that
the accused had not maintained
a healthy attachment with his
biological father, as he had not perceived him as a positive role
model during his upbringing. Counsel
for the accused informed
the court that, since the sentencing proceedings, the accused and his
father have begun a process of building
a relationship; significantly
the accused’s father also attended the court proceedings in
Moorreesburg. The accused’s
sister, Ms Cisse, experienced
him as a caring and a protective parent towards his own children, as
well as the deceased. Ms
Petersen further reported that none of
the accused’s family members complained about him and they
independently described
him as respectful, quiet and a person with
whom they all got along.
[19]
In her interview with Ms Petersen, Ms S[....] indicated that although
she had experienced the
accused as occasionally violent, she had not
seen the need for police or court intervention. Ms Petersen
also reported that
the accused does not socialise in clubs or other
places of gathering, and preferred to spend time with his family.
The accused
is not a member of any criminal gang. He also
appears to be in good health, with no mental health problems having
been reported
during the investigation. The accused does not
function as a primary caregiver of his two minor children, but it
appeared
that he has daily contact with them and assists Ms Gordon
with their care and supervision. As indicated, he contributes
towards
their financial wellbeing. In respect of the offence of
which the accused had been convicted, Ms Petersen reported that
during
her consultations with him he denied any physical abuse
towards the deceased, but claimed that he realised that he had failed
to
attend to her medical needs. He verbalised guilt to her, and
accepted that he had not acted in the best interests of the deceased
at the time. He claimed that he had been under the influence of
substances while supervising the deceased, which contributed
to his
negligent behaviour. It appeared to Ms Petersen that the
accused was remorseful and had showed insight into the seriousness
of
the offence. Ms S[....] also indicated that the accused had
supported her emotionally after the deceased’ death.
In
her interview with Ms Sonetta Agulhas, Ms Petersen recorded that she
recalled an incident where the deceased was allegedly
accidentally
hit with a kettle, by the accused, approximately two weeks prior to
her death. Ms Agulhas claimed that the deceased
had presented
with fearful behaviour after the incident. Ms Agulhas also
indicated that the deceased was always excited to
spend time with the
accused prior to that incident. Ms Petersen recorded that no
pattern of any violent behaviour by the
accused towards the deceased
could be confirmed during her investigation.
[20]
It appeared that for approximately two months after the deceased’s
death the accused and
Ms S[....] persisted in their abusive
relationship, as a result of the abuse of alcohol. Ms S[....]
had indicated in the
course of the trial that she at that stage
decided to leave the accused and their relationship thereupon
terminated. Ms S[....]
indicated to Ms Petersen that she
continued to experience trauma as a result of the death of her child
and did not support a community
based sentence for the accused.
[21]
Ms Petersen considered the risk and protective factors with regard to
an appropriate sentence
for the accused. In this regard she
assessed the risk that he posed to the community, his needs, and the
nature and seriousness
of the crime that he committed. The risk
factors were regarded as negative indicators in terms of possible
future offending
of the same nature, while protective factors were
characteristics associated with a likelihood of negative outcomes.
In respect
of the identified risk factors, the following were
considered in respect of the accused: a lack of conflict resolution
skills on
his part, the prevalence of neighbourhood crime, his
history of drug abuse and his history of violent behaviour, in
particular
towards Ms S[....]. In respect of the protective
factors the following were considered as significant: the support he
obtains
from his family and, in particular, his paternal aunts, he
has a stable housing environment, he has access to services and has
maintained steady employment for close on to 14 years with the same
employer. Ms Petersen noted that the accused was not previously
involved in any social programmes, but that he had indicated a
positive attitude towards a submission to such programmes and rules.
The social workers at ACVV Moorreesburg indicated that no
reports of domestic violence/abuse and neglect had been made to
their
offices in relation to the accused. In the consideration of,
and the recommendation to the court of, an appropriate
sentence, Ms
Petersen was of the view that direct imprisonment was not regarded as
a suitable option, given that he does not pose
a direct threat to the
safety of the community and that the punitive element of sentencing
could be accomplished by other means.
Likewise, a wholly
suspended sentence, considering the seriousness of the offence alone,
would be an understatement of the
offence.
[22]
Ms Petersen was of the view that a sentence of correctional
supervision, in terms of Section
276 (1) (
h
) of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, that
would provide for house arrest, the completion of
community service and other suitable programmes offered by the
Department of
Community Corrections, Malmesbury, may be an
appropriate sentence for consideration by the court. Ms
Petersen had also confirmed
with a Ms Lottering, at the Malmesbury
Community Corrections Centre, that the accused would be a suitable
candidate for correctional
supervision and that he would benefit from
the following programmes: parenting, substance abuse and anger
management, and programmes
relating to life skills and a
victim/offender dialogue and mediation.
[23]
Ms Silatsha, in her report and in her oral testimony, also referred
to the accused’s personal
circumstances, and also considered
whether correctional supervision was a viable sentence. She
considered the risk factors
as referred to by Ms Petersen and, given
his overall personal circumstances, supported the recommendation of
correctional supervision
as an appropriate sentence for consideration
by the court. In the course of her evidence she referred to the
compulsory programmes
available at Correctional Centres. To the
court’s surprise, no specific provision was made for crimes
relating to offences
against children, other than that generically
dealt with in respect of violence, assault, rape, gender-based
violence, and psychological
and emotionally related offences. The
programmes did, however, specifically relate to offences related to
drug and alcohol
related offences. Ms Silatsha very helpfully
provided the court with a copy of the course content of the various
models relating
to ‘Social Life Skills/Free to Grow’,
which contained a number of relevant modules that an offender such as
the accused
could benefit from, including that of the consequences of
alcohol and drug abuse, conflict resolution and the effects of
criminal
behaviour on the lives of persons related to an offender.
However, in the course of the court seeking clarity from Ms
Silatsha,
with regard to the principles and underlying role of
Restorative Justice in the community based programmes, it appeared
that she
had received very little, if any, training thereon. The
introduction by the legislature of community based programmes, and
in
particular that under
Sections 276
(1) (
h
)
and (
i
)
[3]
,
appeared to have infused the principles of Restorative Justice into
the criminal justice sentencing regime, and in particular
where it
could be an appropriate sentencing approach in respect of certain
offences. See Hiemstra on the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
page 28-33. It is for that reason that the court sought a
clearer exposition on the role of Restorative Justice in the context
of the sentence options recommended by both Ms Petersen and Ms
Silatsha. I revert to that evidence later.
[24]
The defence also called the accused’s paternal aunt, Ms Maria
Thys. In her testimony
she confirmed the background information
in respect of the accused, his upbringing, and also highlighted the
lack of a paternal
figure, in the form of the accused’s father,
in his life. She referred to the breakdown in the relationship
between
him and his biological father, and the role that her sister,
Ms Maarman, had played as the central figure in the accused’s
life and in his upbringing. Ms Thys is a qualified teacher and
lives in Belhar in Cape Town. The accused had often
visited her
over weekends, and during vacations had developed a close and fond
relationship with her and her children. She
extolled the
positive features of the family relationship with the accused, and
committed herself to providing accommodation and
housing to the
accused if the court found it appropriate to place him under house
arrest in Belhar. The court raised with
her, though, that the
social circumstances in Belhar, of gangsterism and the widespread
abuse of alcohol and drugs, were equally
as prevalent to that in
Moorreesburg.
[25]
The township in Moorreesburg, as with most townships in the Western
Cape and that around the
country, is plagued by the social scourges
that arise from poverty: unemployment, the abuse of alcohol and the
prevalence of drugs,
and ever-increasing crime rates.
[26]
This court has already highlighted the nature and seriousness of the
offence of which the accused
has been convicted. It bears
repeating, though, the remarks made by Dr Sherman, that the deceased
must have endured considerable
pain as a result of the internal
injuries that she suffered. No doubt her resilience as a child
had mitigated the outward
manifestations of her internal injuries.
Nonetheless, the deceased had displayed visible signs of pain
and illness during
the course of the Saturday morning already,
whereupon Ms S[....] administered nothing more than pain medication
to her. The
deceased’s repeated vomiting and her
inability to hold down food were undoubtedly clear signs that the
deceased was not well.
Those signs were simply ignored by both
the accused and Ms S[....], who as early as the Saturday morning
could and should
have sought medical attention for her, through an
ambulance or the local police station to assist them. Her
condition deteriorated
throughout the day and well into the night,
where she persisted in displaying symptoms of pain, fever and
listlessness to the accused.
The accused simply failed to pay
any heed thereto, but continued to consume alcohol and use drugs with
his visiting friends.
Regretfully, neither of them intervened
when they could quite clearly have observed the deceased’s
condition, as she
repeatedly came into the living room where the
accused was to seek his attention and comfort. The bruise marks
on the deceased’s
body were patently visible from the
photographs handed into evidence. The blotch marking that
resulted from the internal
scarring was distinguishable from the
bruising that would have emanated from injuries. As stated in
the judgment of the court
on conviction, there remained a suspicion
with regard to the accused’s conduct in respect of the injuries
sustained by the
deceased. However, there was insufficient
evidence to sustain a finding of any direct physical assault, on the
part of the
accused, which may have led to her death. It is
important therefore to record that the accused is not being sentenced
for
any suspicions harboured by either the court or the State, nor,
for that matter, suspicions held by members of the community of
Moorreesburg. Importantly too, was the admission by the accused
during his cross-examination by the State during the trial
that, in
retrospect, and given the condition that he was in on the night of
the incident, he would not have left his own children
in his care.
[27]
When considering the interests of the community in the sentencing
process, the court had particular
regard to the victim impact reports
that the State read into the record in respect of both Ms A[....]
S[....], and the deceased’s
maternal aunt Ms Sonetta Agulhas.
It was apparent from the report in respect of Ms S[....], the
ongoing and deep pain and
trauma she continued to experience as a
result of the death of her child. She spoke vividly of her
tearful state, sleepless
nights, recurring questions as to why it was
her young child that was the victim and subject of the neglect, both
at her own hands
and that of the accused and was no doubt burdened
with a deep sense of guilt. She also referred to her ideation
of suicide,
which is a desperate and direct call for urgent
psychological and, if necessary, psychiatric intervention and
assistance with her
trauma. She described with deep pain the
loss of the child in her life, that the child would not be there to
live the typical
milestones of a young girl attending school, living
a full life and the role she as a mother would play in the life of
her daughter.
It appeared that she has strong feelings of
self-recrimination in respect of her own conduct that contributed to
the death
of her child, which compounded both her agony and trauma.
[28]
Also clear was the ongoing trauma, loss and pain experienced by Ms
Agulhas and her family, in
particular her children, who enjoyed a
close and familial relationship with the deceased. She recounts
the deceased’s
lively and loving personality, being well-loved
by members of the close-knit community. The deceased was known
for her love
of posing and childlike modelling for the camera in
fun-filled performances, with an exuberance for life and laughter in
her engagement
with people around her. Ms Agulhas likewise
laments her failure to have been more vigilant and alert to what she
may have
suspected as signs of abuse of the child. It was
evident that Ms Agulhas and her family would also have to be part of
any
process of healing that is needed in the deceased’s family.
[29]
As indicated, the State tendered the oral testimony of the community
elder, Ms Emmalene Mentoor,
affectionately known as ‘Aunty
Poppie’ in the community, who provided the court with a fuller
and visceral picture
of the deceased, the meaning and love that she
brought into the lives of those with whom she was closely associated.
Ms Mentoor
is a senior family member of the deceased, and
described her own relationship with the young child for whom she
displayed an immense
fondness and passion. The deceased would
often and playfully remark to her that she was not ‘a flerrie’
in an
impish tone, and with the mirth that only young children are
able to display in their innocence. Ms Mentoor also described
and pointed out the social afflictions rampant in the community of
Moorreesburg, such as the abuse of alcohol and illicit drugs,
and the
prevalence of unlawful shebeens and taverns and their impact on the
small farming town. She spoke with the wisdom
of an elder who
had lived through the adversities of a community ravaged by poverty,
unemployment and its myriad of dysfunctionalities.
However, she
remained positive about a spirit of caring that remained in the
community, which harboured a genuine concern
for its young children
and those vulnerable, especially women. Her views were not that
of hopelessness and despair, but pointed
firmly to a better future
for the community of Moorreesburg, of which she was visibly proud of
being a part. The court is
grateful to her for having been so
honest and open about what the community of Moorreesburg offers, its
challenges and hopes, in
particular for its young children.
[30]
Counsel for the State informed the court that various community
organisations had approached
the State and provided letters, and a
petition, which they wished to be placed before the court. A
petition headed ‘In
Support of Direct Imprisonment of the
Accused’ was signed by in excess of 380 members of the
community, in which they stated
that they looked to the court as the
upper guardian of children, and in particular the deceased, and also
petitioned the court
to uphold its constitutional responsibility, as
well as its obligations under the Declaration on the Rights of the
Child, the African
Charter and other instruments relating to the
health and rights of children recognised in the Declaration of Human
Rights. In
this regard they were of the view that the
aggravating factors in the case outweighed the personal circumstances
of the accused
and that a sentence of direct imprisonment was
appropriate. The State also handed into evidence a letter from
an organisation
headed the ‘Voice of the Voiceless’, in
which they sought ‘Justice for Robin-Lee’. They
noted the
ever-increasing violence against women and children, and
their sense that the justice system was failing victims. They
also
pointed out that it was important that the life of the deceased
not be silenced forever, and that her memory remain alive in the
community. They claimed that the accused had simply moved on
with his life without displaying any remorse. They also
sought
a sentence of direct imprisonment. The State further handed in
a letter from an organisation called ‘The Total
Shutdown
International Women’s Movement-My Body-Not Your Crime Scene’.
The organisation pointed out that the
court needed to send a
strong message to the community with regard to violence against
children, and that such violence would not
be tolerated. They
also referred to the declaration by the government of the Republic,
in 2019, that gender-based violence
and femicide was a national
crisis, as was the ongoing perpetration of violent crimes against
children. They pointed out
that the community of Moorreesburg
rejected the recommendations of the probation officer, of
correctional supervision, and claimed
that a large number of ‘child
murders are perpetrated by parolees’. They stated that
they stood by the community
of Moorreesburg in calling for justice
for the deceased, R[....]. These letters, and the strong
sentiments expressed therein,
were entered into evidence and has
appropriately weighed as an important consideration by the court in
the sentencing process.
The State had also proved no previous
convictions against the accused.
[31]
It is in the very context of the nature and seriousness of the
offence of which the accused has
been convicted, his own personal
circumstances and challenges, the poor choices that he made, his past
afflictions of drug and
alcohol abuse, and his recognisable
strengths, together with the broader interests of society and, more
specifically the community
of Moorreesburg, including the desperate
need for healing by both the mother and biological father of the
deceased child, and that
of the broader family, that the court had to
consider the recommendations of the probation officer as to whether a
sentence of
correctional supervision under the
Criminal Procedure Act
was
an appropriate and viable sentence for the accused.
[32]
Mr De Klerk, a highly acclaimed expert, both here in South Africa and
internationally, on policing
and criminal justice, provided the court
with his deep insights and knowledge in the area of Restorative
Justice, its origins,
meaning and implications as a sentencing
approach for the court to consider. With modesty he placed on
record his extensive
qualifications and experience as an analyst,
facilitator and social conflict specialist. He is a graduate in
Social Work
from the University of the Western Cape; has extensive
post graduate qualifications; a Masters in Comparative Policing and
Social
Conflict from the University of Leicester, UK; studied at the
Austrian Study Centre for Peace and Conflict Resolution; attended
post graduate programmes in Human Rights Monitoring and Protection in
Austria and Preventative Diplomacy and Peace Building, amongst
others. He has worked on policing, community conflict, has
provided training at the European Centre for Electoral Support,
the
Ministry of Police, South Africa, the African Centre for Security and
Intelligence Praxis, Cape Town, the Austrian Study Centre
for Peace
and Conflict Resolution, and institutions in West Africa, Ghana and
the Centre for Conflict Resolution, Cape Town, the
Commonwealth
Secretariat, the Maldives and Sri Lanka. He has also conducted
extensive research and written on human rights,
the rule of law,
justice, safety and security, and public participation.
[33]
Although he is a graduate social worker, he claimed never to have
practiced in that field, but
has used the skills required therein in
the work that he does. He teaches at various universities,
including the Peace University
and also in The Hague, has also been
attached to the Ministry of Police as an expert, and is generally
regarded as an expert in
the area of policing techniques and is often
quoted both locally in newsprint and on television.
[34]
Mr De Klerk described the notion of Restorative Justice, from a
policing perspective, as a process
of engagement in working with
persons who commit offences, listening to voices of communities and,
most importantly, that of the
victims, that must be taken into
account in arriving at a process of ‘truth telling’. The
process is aimed primarily
at the healing of communities and in
particular between the victims of crime and their perpetrators.
Central to the notion
of Restorative Justice, is the critical
issue of ‘attaining personhood and a realisation on the part of
individuals and,
in the context of perpetrators, of the part that
they play in communities and the impact of their actions in society
at large’.
He emphasised that the concept of Restorative
Justice was based on the foundational principle of the age-old
African value
system of Ubuntu. Such value system is not
peculiar to South Africa but is prevalent throughout the continent,
and its philosophy
cuts across large linguistic groups, all of who
believe that an individual is squarely rooted in the context of a
community. In
that context the idea of personhood takes form in
which good is strived for.
[35]
The concept of Ubuntu has been variously described and in this regard
significantly by the now
retired Justices Mokgoro and Sachs, and
other judges of the Constitutional Court, in its jurisprudence. In
this regard Sachs
J in
Dikoko v Mokhatla
2006 (6) SA 235
(CC)
remarked:
[113]
Ubuntu
- botho
is more than a phrase to be invoked from time to time to add a
gracious and affirmative gloss to a legal finding already arrived
at. It is intrinsic to and constitutive of our constitutional
culture. Historically it was foundational to the spirit
of
reconciliation and bridge-building that enabled our deeply
traumatised society to overcome and transcend the divisions of the
past.
[4]
In present day terms it has an enduring and creative character,
representing the element of human solidarity that binds together
liberty and equality to create an affirmative and mutually supportive
triad of central constitutional values. It feeds pervasively
into and enriches the fundamental rights enshrined in the
Constitution. As this Court said in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers:
[5]
. . .
[114]
Ubuntu
- botho
is highly consonant with rapidly evolving international notions of
restorative justice. Deeply rooted in our society, it
links up
with worldwide striving to develop restorative systems of justice
based on reparative rather than purely punitive principles.
The
key elements of restorative justice have been identified as
encounter, reparation, reintegration and participation.
[6]
Encounter (dialogue) enables the victims and offenders to talk about
the hurt caused and how the parties are to get on in
future.
Reparation focuses on repairing the harm that has been done rather
than on doling out punishment. Reintegration
into the community
depends upon the achievement of mutual respect for and mutual
commitment to one another. And participation
presupposes a less
formal encounter between the parties that allows other people close
to them to participate. These concepts
harmonise well with
processes well known to traditional forms of dispute resolution in
our country, processes that have long been,
and continue to be,
underpinned by the philosophy of
ubuntu
- botho
.
[115] Like the principles
of restorative justice, the philosophy of
ubuntu
- botho
has usually been invoked in relation to criminal law, and especially
with reference to child justice. Yet there is no reason
why it
should be restricted to those areas. It has already influenced
our jurisprudence in respect of such widely divergent
issues as
capital punishment
[7]
and the
manner in which the courts should deal with persons threatened with
eviction from rudimentary shelters on land unlawfully
occupied.
[8]
Recently it was applied in creative fashion in the High Court to
combine a suspended custodial sentence in a homicide case
with an
apology from a senior representative of the family of the accused, as
requested and acknowledged by the mother of the deceased.
[9]
’
(Original text footnotes retained.)
[36]
Central to our emerging jurisprudence, and in social and academic
debate in South Africa, has
been the embodiment in our constitutional
discourse of the value of Ubuntu.
[10]
In this regard, the State is obliged to use its resources to
fulfil its duties under the Constitution, but at the same time
recognise the role of individuals who exist not for themselves only,
but within a broader community. Mr De Klerk pointed
out that
the values of Restorative Justice require of the State, society at
large, and individuals, a shared responsibility to
ensure social
cohesion, to restore harmony, safety to all communities and to
members of society.
[11]
[37]
Mr De Klerk emphasised that the process of Restorative Justice was
singularly dependent on the
commitment of the individual, and the
voluntariness of the process. No state can ordain or compel a
healing process without
the complete and fullest commitment of those
involved in it. Importantly, he emphasised that a Restorative
Justice process
does not preclude punishment, and it is not simply an
acknowledgment of wrong or simply a question of forgiveness and
contrition.
It is necessary for a perpetrator to accept
responsibility for his or her actions, and in the context of
Restorative Justice
to demonstrate remorse in a meaningful way, and
accept that incarceration may also best serve the interests of a
community and
society at large as part of the healing process.
However, once incarcerated and in the custody of the state, the
Department
of Correctional Services assumes important
responsibilities in providing an environment of rehabilitation and
healing. In
this regard he was particularly mindful of the
limited resources in the Department of Correctional Services, the
incessant challenge
of overcrowding, and what may at times be
perceived as being a lack of commitment. He nonetheless and
importantly acknowledged
the role of Correctional Services officers
in the process, and emphasised the importance of each of them
becoming advocates in
their own cause and not simply to lament
problems and espousing a sense of despair and hopelessness.
[38]
Mr De Klerk described what he referred to as the three crucial
components of the Restorative
Justice process, and the set of skills
and competencies that are required to implement the process. He
described it with
reference to the points on a triangle, the first of
which, in the criminal justice system, is referred to as the
‘substantive’
part. In this context it relates to
the investigative processes and the trial proceedings on the merits
of a case, with outcomes
being substantially fair and just in
accordance with the law and the Constitution. The second
relates to the ‘procedural’
aspects of the criminal
justice system, that provide for access to courts, proper legal
representation and procedurally fair remedies
and processes. In
this regard, he noted that the community, Correctional Services,
prosecutorial services, legal defence
and the accessibility of courts
all fulfil a very specific role in the procedural aspects, and each
carry out discreet functions
that enable the voices of all people
concerned and affected by the crime to be expressed and heard. The
third area (point
in the triangle) of the process is what is
described as the ‘affective’ side, which relates to the
emotional expression
of victims, survivors, communities and also that
of perpetrators. It is in this delicate context that healing
and the raw
end of emotion is given expression to.
[39]
In respect of the accused, Mr De Klerk testified that he had
considered the various reports and,
in particular, that of the
probation officer, which he noted had not dealt fully with the social
context of the community in Moorreesburg
and the criminogenic factors
associated therewith, such as the structural and systemic problems in
the community, cultures of abusive
relationships and obfuscation,
fear of reporting violence and abuse, and the stigma attached
thereto. In this regard he also
noted the lack of a
psycho-social investigation and report into the accused, which would
have helped the court to appreciate and
understand the psychological
condition and the impetus of the accused that may have impacted on
his conduct and choices. Mr
De Klerk was mindful of the
situation being that the mother of the deceased had also been held
criminally responsible for the death
her child, and her own feelings
of guilt that required its own context, healing and therapeutic
attention.
[40]
Mr De Klerk suggested that perpetrators such as the accused may
benefit from being removed from
the milieu of criminogenic
circumstances in which they live, to enable them to reflect on their
conduct and its impact in a structured
environment, to obtain the
necessary counselling and assistance to deal with afflictions such as
drug and alcohol abuse, anger
management, and to attain a measure of
insight into choices and conduct in respect of the offence and its
impact on the family
of the deceased and the broader community, of
which both he and the deceased and her family are integral parts. He
also referred
to what is regarded as a ‘conciliatory phase’,
that enables not only the accused but also the mother of the deceased
and her family, and the community at large, to emotionally prepare
themselves and to arrive at a state in which they are able and
ready
to engage with one another. In this regard, when expressions of
remorse are made too early, they may be regarded as
opportunistic,
while at the same time if offered too late, could also be regarded
with a fair amount of suspicion. This process
of conciliation
is one supported, moderated and mediated through appropriate support
systems, such as within Correctional Services
and through counselling
that Ms S[....] and her family must receive.
[41]
In the course of his testimony the court pointed to what it regarded
as a significant moment
in the sentencing process that emerged in
Moorreesburg. After the accused’s evidence was led in
chief by his legal
representative, the court asked him if there was
anything else that he wished to say prior to his cross-examination by
the state.
He indicated that as a result of this bail
conditions he had not as yet had the opportunity of expressing his
remorse, and
to ask forgiveness from the deceased’s mother. Ms
S[....] and the deceased’s biological father, Mr R[....]2
G[....],
were then asked by the court to come forward, whereupon the
accused addressed them directly in expressing his regret and asked of
them their forgiveness for what he had done. At the prompting
of the court, he thereafter turned to the members of the community
of
Moorreesburg present in court, and likewise expressed his regret and
asked their forgiveness. So, too, did he address
his paternal
aunts and other family members who were present in court, by
apologising to them for the embarrassment and pain that
he had caused
them and also asked for their forgiveness. It appeared to the
court the expressions by the accused in an open
court, were no more
than the very first steps by him, the deceased’s family and the
community, of entering into a process
of healing. The accused
had also for the very first time, as observed by the court, displayed
any visible sign of emotion.
Throughout the proceedings, during
the Covid 19 period, he was masked and when masks were eventually
removed, the court noted
that his face remained inscrutable and
expressionless. When the accused expressed his regret to the
deceased’s family,
the community and his own family, it
appeared to the court to be the first time that the accused had
displayed any emotion, and
he appeared tearful for the very first
time in the proceedings. Mr De Klerk commented on the
significance of such expressions
and agreed that it was no more than
the beginning of a lengthy and very difficult process of healing and
restoration between the
accused and the victims of his crime.
[42]
Counsel for the State, in cross-examination of Mr De Klerk, invited
him to comment on the State’s
position that it would suggest to
the court that it consider a sentence of correctional supervision
under Section 276 (1) (
i
) of the
Criminal Procedure Act, that
would require of the accused to serve a period of a custodial
sentence, and thereafter and at the discretion of the Commissioner
of
Correctional Services be considered and released to serve a portion
of his sentence under community supervision. Mr De
Klerk
cautiously noted that it was really a decision for the court to make,
but that in the context of the matter it would not
be an
inappropriate sentence, given the importance of its custodial
element, and at the same time would give the accused the opportunity,
if qualified and considered to be released back into the community,
to carry out community service on various conditions as part
of his
sentence.
[43]
In questions to Mr De Klerk, counsel for the defence sought clarity
with regard to the notion
of preparedness for a process of
Restorative Justice, to which he answered that a victim and offender
interaction can take place
at any stage in a continuum of the
process, depending, of course, on the preparedness and readiness of
the parties to engage with
one another. Counsel for the accused
also pointed out that at the time of the commission of the offence,
the accused had
been under the influence of both alcohol and drugs.
He had also a history of substance abuse. Mr De Klerk
pointed out,
and correctly so, that the use of alcohol and substances
could hardly be regarded, in the circumstances of the offence, as an
excuse.
Nonetheless, the accused would have the opportunity of
entering into a rehabilitation program for his use and dependency on
alcohol and drugs, but more importantly he himself would have to
commit to such a programme and would literally have to commit
himself
to abstinence for the rest of his life. Counsel for the accused
also confirmed that the accused had not been able
to approach the
deceased’s family prior to the court proceedings to offer any
verbal expression of remorse and seek their
forgiveness, as a result
of his bail conditions.
[44]
The officials from the Department of Correctional Services present in
court were invited by the
court (rather unconventionally) to engage
with Mr De Klerk on any questions of clarity or comments that they
wished to put to him.
Two members availed themselves of the
opportunity. Ms Bernadette Kent, a senior officer,
re-emphasised the importance
of the underlying processes of
Restorative Justice being entirely voluntary, and the need for an
unqualified commitment by a perpetrator
to the healing process. Mr
Gerrit Fielies, the Regional Co-ordinator for Social Reintegration,
under whom the Restorative
Justice Programme falls and under who
correctional supervisors work, pointed to the challenges of
over-crowding in the various
prisons in the Western Cape, and its
impact of their ability to provide full rehabilitative services.
They were nonetheless
mindful of the case of the accused, and
that he had already made contact with the relevant Correctional
Services supervisor at
the Malmesbury Centre, who was fully prepared
to provide the necessary correctional supervision processes should
the court consider
making such an order in terms of the
Criminal
Procedure Act.
[45
]
The accused’s elderly paternal aunts were also present in court
during the evidence of Mr
De Klerk, and were also invited by the
court to put any questions of clarity to him. Both Ms Maarman
and Ms Thys pointed
out the strained relationship between their
families and that of the deceased, but that they nonetheless remained
committed to
a healing process between them. They also
committed themselves to their ongoing support for the deceased’s
mother,
Ms S[....], for who Ms Thys very sympathetically underscored
the need for her to receive the appropriate counselling and
therapeutic
support. For their part, as a family, they also
remained committed to not only supporting the deceased’s
family, but
also the accused in respect of whatever sentence the
court may consider to impose and in particular if he was to be
incarcerated.
[46]
The State and the defence thereupon addressed the court with regard
to an appropriate sentence.
Of particular significance in their
address was that both the defence and the State were in full
agreement that a custodial
sentence for the accused would be
appropriate in the circumstances of the offence. They were also
in agreement that court
may consider, as an appropriate sentence,
that of correctional supervision in terms of
Section 276
(1) (
i
)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, in
which the accused should serve a
portion of the sentence in custody and only be released on the
recommendation of the Commissioner
of Correctional Services to serve
a period of correctional supervision in the community. The
State was also of the view that
the court should consider adding a
further suspended sentence, coupled with that of the correctional
supervision, as a further
deterrent upon the accused. The court
is mindful, though, of
S v Slabbert
1998 (1) SACR 646
(SCA),
at 648E-F, per Schutz JA, where it was held that a court cannot
impose a suspended sentence in addition to a sentence under
Section
276
(1) (
i
) that would cumulatively exceed a period of 5
years’ imprisonment, contrary to the provisions of
Section 276A
(2) (
b
).
[47]
The court has given thorough consideration to all of the evidence
presented, both in mitigation
and in aggravation of sentence. While
the court is mindful of the suggestions by the probation officer Ms
Petersen, and that
of Ms Inga Silatsha of Correctional Services, the
court considers a sentence of correctional supervision under
Section
276
(1) (
h
) as not an appropriate, sentence given the nature
and seriousness of the offence, in which a young child aged three
lost her life
while in the care of the accused. The court need
not repeat the circumstances in which the offence occurred, save to
reiterate
that the life of the child could and should have been saved
by the accused and her mother, Ms S[....]. The court has also
carefully considered the expert testimony of Mr Eldred De Klerk.
There are important considerations raised in this matter
of the
appropriateness of a sentence that involves a Restorative Justice
process. It is apparent that there is a desperate
need for
healing in the lives of all the persons affected by the tragic death
of the deceased. In that process, not only
the parents and
family of the deceased, the accused and his family, but also the
broader community of Moorreesburg should be involved.
Needless
to say the various community based organisations in Moorreesburg,
some of whom were present in the sentencing process
and participated
in it, through letters to the court and in organising the petition,
could in close consultation with the deceased’s
family consider
devising community based programmes and events to assist with the
process of healing and in remembering the deceased.
[48]
For all of the reasons as set out in the evidence of this matter, I
am persuaded that the appropriate
sentence would be one that begins
to restore the accused, not only to the deceased’s family, but
also to the broader community,
and which would provide him with an
opportunity for reflection, to obtain a deeper insight into his
conduct, choices and actions.
The sentence must also vindicate
the life of a young child that was lost in circumstances that were
absolutely unnecessary.
The young men and women of Moorreesburg
should also suffer no illusions about their responsibilities as young
parents, and
the impact of the choices that they make on a daily
basis, which this tragic case so vividly demonstrates. The use
of alcohol
and drugs remains no excuse for such choices, especially
in conduct that leads to injury and the death of anybody in the
community,
and more particularly those in vulnerable circumstances
such as young children and women. This case demonstrates all
too
clearly the sordid realities that exist in very many of the
communities in not only the Western Cape, but throughout this
country.
This case and its tragic story, however, presents the
community, the deceased’s family and the accused with an
opportunity
for all, in a structured and in community based
processes, of working towards a healing of relationships and the
building of a
personhood, that Mr De Klerk so articulately
highlighted in his evidence, in the process of accountability. Far
too many
years have already elapsed since the deceased’s death
and it was visibly clear to the court that the community desperately
needed to be engaged in a process of healing for the loss of the
young child, who had meant so much to all of them, and no less
each
and every other young child in the community of Moorreesburg. This
case also provided an opportunity for reflection
on the part of the
community and, more importantly, by each individual on how they can
and must intervene when necessary to save
the lives of those living
in vulnerable circumstances and in abusive relationships wherever
that is evident, and in particular
those in desperate need of a voice
and in need of social and preventative measures. The community
can no longer be silent
in the face of abuse or blind to tell-tale
signs of violence, nor for that matter to the scourge of illicit
sales of drugs and
alcohol. The community is duty bound to use
the processes of law enforcement, social services and, where
necessary, the courts,
to assist it in protecting itself and, more
importantly, its children and the young people who succumb to the
consequence of abuse.
[49]
I have already indicated that it is necessary that Ms A[....] S[....]
receive the necessary psychological
and, if necessary, psychiatric
counselling. Counsel for the State is therefore directed to
ensure that such services are
provided to Ms S[....], and those
members of her immediate family affected by the death of the child,
and on a regular basis to
monitor its provision. By way of
conclusion, the court notes that this has been a long trial and an
equally lengthy sentencing
process. It is incumbent on this
court to express its appreciation, firstly, to the Chief Magistrate
of Moorreesburg, Mr
Mthimunye, who has provided the High Court access
to the people of Moorreesburg. The court also wishes to express
its thanks
and appreciation to every member of the community who
attended these proceedings, and who with extreme discipline and
patience
listened to all of the evidence presented. Equally,
the court wishes to express its appreciation to the legal
representatives,
the counsel for the defence who made the necessary
arrangements with the Department of Correctional Services and Social
Services
for the provision of the reports, and the attendance by the
officials of Correctional Services at the hearings in Cape Town. In
particular, the court also wishes to thank counsel for the State for
all of the arrangements that he has made with regard to the
court
being able to sit in Moorreesburg, and his constant and constructive
liaising with the community and interest groups of Moorreesburg.
He
has facilitated their participation in these proceedings in a most
effective way. The court also wishes to commend
the
investigating officer in the matter, the support team of police
officials, the emergency services of Moorreesburg, and the
pathologist, Dr Sherman, the probation officer Ms Petersen, and Ms
Silatsha, and the Correctional Service officers and, in particular,
Mr Eldred De Klerk, for his insightful expertise and generosity in
assisting the court, and all others for their kind helpfulness
and
hospitality to the court. Lastly, the court wishes to note with
appreciation, the conduct of the accused throughout the
trial, his
assiduous compliance with his bail conditions of reporting on a
regular basis at the police station, and more importantly
the court
wishes him well as he confronts the sentence of this court and its
impact on his life.
[50]
The court directs that a copy of the judgment and sentence be made
available to the Department
of Correctional Services, Malmesbury (or
any other facility) in whose custody the accused will resort to in
the sentence. More
so, to enable the Commissioner of
Correctional Services to be fully appraised of the nature and
seriousness of the offence of which
the accused has been convicted,
the circumstances in which it was committed and the considerations
which the court has taken into
account in arriving at the sentence.
[51]
In the result the following sentence is imposed on the accused:
(i)
The accused is sentenced in terms of
Section 276
(1) (
i
) to a
term of imprisonment of 5 years.
(iii)
The accused is found unsuitable to work with children in terms of
Section 120
(1 (b) of the Children’s Act 38 of 2005.
(iv)
The Registrar of this Court must, in terms of Section 122 (1) of the
Children’s Act 38 of 2005, notify
the Director-General,
Department of Social Development, in writing of the findings of this
court made in terms of Section 120 of
the Children’s Act and
that the accused is unsuitable to work with children and the
Director-General is to enter the name
of the accused, as contemplated
in Section 122, in Part B of the register.
VC
SALDANHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
[1]
‘
276
Nature of punishments
(1)
Subject to the provisions of this Act and any other law and of the
common law, the following sentences may be passed upon
a person
convicted of an offence, namely-
(a)
. . .
(h)
correctional supervision; . . .’
[2]
The appellants had also been charged with and convicted of two
further counts, (i) assault with the intent to do grievous bodily
harm, and (ii) the rape of the child, in contravention section 3 of
Act 32 of 2007.
[3]
‘
imprisonment
from which such a person may be placed under correctional
supervision in the discretion of the Commissioner or a
parole
board’.
[4]
‘See the Epilogue to the interim Constitution, extensively
discussed in
Azanian
Peoples Organisation (AZAPO) and Others v President of the Republic
of South Africa and Others
[1996] ZACC 16
;
1996 (4) SA 671
(CC)
(1996 (8) BCLR 1015)
at para
[48]
.’
[5]
‘2005 (1) SA 217 (CC) (2004 (12) BCLR 1268).’
[6]
‘See the discussion by Skelton
The
Influence of the Theory and Practice of Restorative Justice in South
Africa, with Special Reference to Child Justice
(unpublished doctoral thesis, Pretoria University, 2006) at 18-21.’
[7]
‘
S
v Makwanyane and Another
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC)
(1995 (2) SACR 1
;
1995 (6) BCLR 665).
See Langa
J at para [227] in which he held that:
“
It
was against a background of the loss of respect for human life and
the inherent dignity which attaches to every person that
a
spontaneous call has arisen among sections of the community for a
return to
ubuntu
. A number of references to
ubuntu
have already been made in various texts, but largely without
explanation of the concept. It has, however, always been
mentioned in the context of it being something to be desired, a
commendable attribute which the nation should strive for.”
See
Madala J at para [237] in which he held that:
“
The
concept of
ubuntu
appears for the first time in the
post-amble, but it is a concept that permeates the Constitution
generally, and more particularly
ch 3, which embodies the entrenched
fundamental human rights. The concept carries in it the ideas
of humaneness, social
justice and fairness.”
See
Mahomed J at para [263] in which held that:
“‘
The
need for
ubuntu
’ expresses the ethos of an instinctive
capacity for and enjoyment of love towards our fellow men and women;
the joy and
the fulfilment involved in recognising their innate
humanity; the reciprocity this generates in interaction within the
collective
community; the richness of the creative emotions which it
engenders and the moral energies which it releases both in the
givers
and the society which they serve and are served by.”
See
Mokgoro J at para [308] in which she held that:
“
Generally,
ubuntu
translates as ‘humaneness’. In its
most fundamental sense it translates as ‘personhood’ and
‘morality’.
Metaphorically, it expresses itself in
umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu
, describing the significance of
group solidarity on survival issues so central to the survival of
communities. While it
envelops the key values of group
solidarity, compassion, respect, human dignity, conformity to basic
norms and collective unity,
in its fundamental sense it denotes
humanity and morality. Its spirit emphasises respect for human
dignity, marking a shift
from confrontation to conciliation.
In South Africa
ubuntu
has become a notion with particular
resonance in the building of a democracy. It is part of our
rainbow
heritage, though it might have operated and still
operates differently in diverse community settings. In the
Western cultural
heritage, respect and the value for life,
manifested in the all-embracing concepts of ‘humanity’
and ‘menswaardigheid’,
are also highly prized. It
is values like these that s 35 requires to be promoted. They
give meaning and texture
to the principles of a society based on
freedom and equality.”
And
see Sachs J at para [374].’
[8]
‘
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
above n 2 [2005 (1) SA 217 (CC) (2004 (12) BCLR 1268)].’
[9]
‘See
S
v Joyce Maluleke and Others
(TPD case No 83/04, 13 June 2006) as yet unreported. Stressing
the need for circumspection in this area, Bertelsmann J
in a
judgment on sentencing discusses the advantages of drawing upon
traditional African legal processes so as to achieve reconciliation
and closure, showing how they fit in with developing notions of
restorative justice in various international jurisdictions.
He
cites Bosielo J (Shongwe J concurring) as calling for innovative and
proactive presiding officers to seek alternatives to
imprisonment
that are based on restorative justice principles (
S
v Shilubane
[2005] JOL 15671 (T)).’
[10]
For
a wider reading on the debates and principles of Restorative Justice
and the principles of Ubuntu, see the following useful
articles and
contributions: (i)
Law
and Revolution in South Africa: Ubuntu, Dignity and the Struggle for
Constitutional Transformation
,
Just Ideas - Transformative Ideals of Justice in Ethical and
Political Thought, Series Editors Cornell & Berkowitz, Fordham
University Press, New York, 2014; (ii)
The
South African Constitutional Court’s restorative justice
jurisprudence
,
Ann Skelton, University of Pretoria, 2013; (iii)
W(h)ither
Restorative justice in South Africa, An Updated Status Review
,
Mike Batley and Ann Skelton, Restorative Justice Centre, University
of Pretoria, 2019; (iv)
Restorative
Justice: Principles and Practice
,
Prison Fellowship International, Jonathan Derby; (v)
Social
justice and retributive justice
,
Lucy Allais, Social Dynamics - A journal of African studies, Vol 34,
2008; (vi)
The
unfinished business of the TRC
,
Tymon, New Frame, 16 November 2020.
[11]
The very connotation of ‘Restorative’ is likewise the
subject of a very interesting debate, with some commentators
expressing the view that the connotation of ‘Transformative
Justice’ may be a more appropriate conception of the
process
that essentially seeks to facilitate the healing, truth telling and
reconciliation of the persons involved both individually
and
collectively. By way of background, and for the edification of the
members of the Department of Correctional Services who
graciously
attended the sentencing proceedings, Mr De Klerk referred to the
national policy document, The National Framework
on Restorative
Justice, and the cross-cutting involvement of various state
departments such as Social Development, Justice, Correctional
Services, Police and the National Prosecutorial Services. He
commented that none of these departments are separately able
to
achieve the objectives of the framework, but must do so coherently
in dealing with the complex challenges of crime, violence,
restitution and punishment in a broader social and legal context.
He emphasised what he regarded as the lack of coherence
across
various state departments, and their commitment to achieving the
objectives of the Framework, which required proper attention.
He noted, though, that very often such lack of coherence was not
only as a result of a lack of resources, but also a lack of
skills
and capabilities in the persons charged with the responsibility of
implementing the Framework. In this regard he
referred to the
ever increasing loss of skills that the democratic state was
confronted with, and the challenges for the future
in building the
capacity to deal with the challenges of the Restorative Justice
commitments.
sino noindex
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