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CHILD
RAPE & ABUSE
Child victims' case cries out for
Victims Fund by Sheila Camerer, ThoughtLeader blog, May 2008
Child victims’ case cries out for Victims Fund by Sheila Camerer
(Thoughtleader blog, May 2008)
No case
illustrates better the pressing need for a fund specifically to
compensate and assist victims of crime than that of nine township
children, allegedly sexually abused by German immigrant Werner Braun.
Braun fled the country via Namibia at the end of 2005 when police
investigations got too hot for him, leaving behind a house valued at
R3,7 Million and a BMW X5 worth a couple of hundred thousand rands.
These have since been attached and preserved by the National Prosecuting
Authority (NPA) as instruments of crime in terms of the Prevention of
Organised Crime Act (POCA) — both were used by Braun for his sexual acts
with the children. Six cases in terms of the Sexual Offenses Act
involving sex with the nine under age children from Khayelitsha and
Macassar are pending. The children have no legal representation and
their only status thus far before the courts is as complainants.
Should the attachment of Braun’s assets worth over R4 Million be made
final, they will go into the Criminal Assets Recovery Account (CARA).
Although the funds in the account can be applied for victims of crime
thus far a paltry R3,5 million out of approximately R200 million
deposited in CARA so far has been allocated for this purpose, and then
only through a transfer to the Department of Social Development. There
is no information as to what it was used for.
The Democratic Alliance (DA) has over the past seven years repeatedly
attempted to establish a fund for victims of crime, to be funded by the
proceeds of crime garnered through POCA, thus far to no avail. We have
handed in no less than three Private Members’ Bills establishing such a
fund — the latest in 2006 — but none has yet been pursued by Parliament
or government.
Significantly, the South African Law Reform Commission completed its
report on establishing a compensation fund for victims of crime in 2004.
The report, which was sent to the Minister of Justice, Brigitte
Mabandla, that year called for a fund to be established to develop
services for victims.
Repeated attempts by the DA and other parties to persuade the minister
to release the report or give access to it have failed. Presumably
Mabandla is unsure as to what to do with it. What is very clear is that
if the nine child sexual assault victims could have access to the Braun
assets once forfeited to the state, they would be able to employ a
lawyer or lawyers to act for them in any damages claim they might have
against Braun and his estate for his illegal actions.
It is not that there is no precedent internationally for this. In
Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and even the United States and the
United Kingdom, the civil claims of victims of crime against the
forfeited assets of the perpetrator are beginning to be acknowledged.
In South
Africa’s courts the principle that the proceeds of crime confiscated by
the NPA and paid into CARA can be used to pay back material goods, such
as money on shares stolen from victims, has been accepted and applied.
In the case of the nine child sexual assault victims it might be
difficult to quantify their damages, but if they were able to access the
forfeited Braun assets they would be in a position at least to retain a
lawyer to look after their interests. As it is, they are all dirt poor,
powerless and without legal representation, victims of beastly crimes
who will probably land up on the scrap heap of South Africa’s legal
system.
Child Protection Week started on the 26 May 2008. It is time again for
the DA to repeat its calls for a Fund for Victims of Crime that would
make all the difference in enabling victims such as these nine children
to secure their rights.
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