Page:Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act 2007.pdf/10

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18 No. 30599
Government Gazette, 14 December 2007

Act No. 32, 2007
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act, 2007

(i)

the use of force or intimidation by A (the accused person) against B, C (a third person) or D (another person) or against the property of B, C or D; or

(ii)

a threat of harm by A against B, C or D or against the property of B, C or D;

(b)

where there is an abuse of power or authority by A to the extent that B is inhibited from indicating his or her unwillingness or resistance to the sexual act, or unwillingness to participate in such a sexual act;

(c)

where the sexual act is committed under false pretences or by fraudulent means, including where B is led to believe by A that—

(i)

B is committing such a sexual act with a particular person who is in fact a different person; or

(ii)

such a sexual act is something other than that act; or

(d)

where B is incapable in law of appreciating the nature of the sexual act, including where B is, at the time of the commission of such sexual act—

(i)

asleep;

(ii)

unconscious;

(iii)

in an altered state of consciousness, including under the influence of any medicine, drug, alcohol or other substance, to the extent that B's consciousness or judgement is adversely affected;

(iv)

a child below the age of 12 years; or

(v)

a person who is mentally disabled.


Objects

2. The objects of this Act are to afford complainants of sexual offences the maximum and least traumatising protection that the law can provide, to introduce measures which seek to enable the relevant organs of state to give full effect to the provisions of this Act and to combat and, ultimately, eradicate the relatively high incidence of sexual offences committed in the Republic by:

(a)

Enacting all matters relating to sexual offences in a single statute;

(b)

criminalising all forms of sexual abuse or exploitation;

(c)

repealing certain common law sexual offences and replacing them with new and, in some instances, expanded or extended statutory sexual offences, irrespective of gender;

(d)

protecting complainants of sexual offences and their families from secondary victimisation and trauma by establishing a co-operative response between all government departments involved in implementing an effective, responsive and sensitive criminal justice system relating to sexual offences;

(e)

promoting the spirit of batho pele (“the people first”) in respect of service delivery in the criminal justice system dealing with sexual offences by—

(i)

ensuring more effective and efficient investigation and prosecution of perpetrators of sexual offences by clearly defining existing offences, and creating new offences;

(ii)

giving proper recognition to the needs of victims of sexual offences through timeous, effective and non-discriminatory investigation and prosecution;

(iii)

facilitating a uniform and co-ordinated approach by relevant Government departments in dealing with sexual offences;

(iv)

entrenching accountability of government officials; and

(v)

minimising disparities in the provision of services to victims of sexual offences;

(f)

providing certain services to victims of sexual offences, including affording victims of sexual offences the right to receive Post Exposure Prophylaxis in certain circumstances; and

(g)

establishing a National Register for Sex Offenders in order to establish a record of persons who are or have been convicted of sexual offences against children and persons who are mentally disabled so as to prohibit such persons