a) (i) The records of the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development reflects that the following number of rape cases were heard in courts during the financial years requested:
FINANCIAL YEAR |
REGIONAL COURT |
2018/2019 |
5 720 |
2019/2020 |
5 616 |
2020/2021 |
3 863 |
2021/2022 |
3 640 |
(ii) The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) extracted information from the
Electronic Case Management System (ECMS).
As at 31 March 2023, the extracted information indicates that the number of verdicts for the financial years requested, as well as convictions and acquittals during each of the financial years, is depicted in the Table below:
Financial Year |
No. of Convictions (Per Charge) |
No. of Verdicts (Per Case) |
No. of Convictions (Per Case) |
No. of Acquittals (Per Case) |
2018/19 |
3 055 |
4 215 |
2 820 |
1 395 |
2019/20 |
2 910 |
3 984 |
2 684 |
1 300 |
2020/21* |
777 |
1 045 |
724 |
321 |
2021/22 |
1 979 |
2 826 |
1 841 |
985 |
Total |
8 721 |
12 064 |
8 066 |
3 998 |
Statistics of prosecuted cases regarding matters reported at the Thuthuzela Care Centres (TCCs) for the financial years as requested are reflected in the table below:
Financial Years |
Conviction rate and actual number of all TCC sexual offence cases prosecuted |
Number of Rape charges – conviction versus acquittal |
Percentage of rape charges in TCC sexual offence cases prosecuted |
2018/19 |
73.5% (1636 / 2225) |
1914 (1328 / 586) |
86% |
2019/20 |
74.9% (1408 / 1881) |
1628 (1156 / 472) |
86.5% |
2020/21* |
73.9% (734 / 993) |
858 (604 / 254) |
86.4% |
2021/22 |
76.7% (1033 / 1346) |
1080 (789 / 291) |
80.2% |
*The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic resulted in less court hours and less cases prosecuted due to Disaster Management Act restrictions which limited the courts in their operations. However, the 2021/22 financial year returned an increase of 35.5% in court performance compared to the previous year regarding the number of TCC-cases being finalised in court.
b) Various factors are taken into account collectively by the court and thus no list can be regarded as a finite list because the acquittal of cases depends on these various factors based on the impact and consideration by the court of the importance of each of such factors which can seldom if ever, be quantified.
c) On a broad level, below are the possible reasons that will result in an acquittal of these cases in court:
(i) Credibility of witnesses, that include cases where the court is unable to rely on the evidence presented; and
(ii) Furthermore, in most of these cases the State relies on a single witness and/or solely on circumstantial evidence, this present challenges in court which may lead to an acquittal. This will specifically be the position in the absence of any other substantial or corroborating evidence.