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The Right and the Real: The South African Police Service’s (SAPS) Implementation of the 1998 Domestic Violence Act and the reintroduction of the Family Violence Child Protection and Sexual Offences (FCS) Units Lisa Vetten
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Sources of information Medium Term Strategic Framework (MTSF) or annual plan (where available), Annual reports and performance reports Minutes compiled by the Parliamentary Monitoring Group (PMG), departments’ presentations and replies to parliamentarians’ questions. –All 2008/09 to 2009/10. Budget votes 2008/09 – 2010/11. Requests for further information submitted in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA). Analysed in terms of four themes: compliance with legislative mandate; budget; training; and access to justice
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SAPS commitment VAW a policing priority since 1996 NCPS Presidency’s MTSF for 2009 – 2014 JCPS priority SAPS’ Annual Performance Plan 2008/09, Strategic Plan 2010 – 2014 Budget votes 2008/09 to 2010/11 all state that crimes against women are a policing priority.
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SAPS legislative mandate Derives from DVA and SAPS National Instructions 7/1999. Of two sorts: administrative and provision of services Reporting misconduct to the ICD and instituting disciplinary proceedings submit reports to Parliament every six months. ICD: monitoring compliance with subsection (4)(a) of the DVA and the SAPS National Instructions; receiving complaints where the police have not complied with these obligations; making recommendations to the police around addressing such failures; and submitting 6-monthly reports to Parliament
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Stations visitedPeriod100% compliant 245 stations Jan – June 20062% Jul – Dec 2006 30% 395 stations Jan – June 200757% Jul – Dec 200728% 434 stations Jan – June 200814% Jul – Dec 200813% 522 stations Jan – June 200911% July – Dec 20098% Consequences for Firearms Control Act, 2000
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ICD reports for 2001 to 2008 collated 1 121 complaints disciplinary action recommended in 928 (or 82.8%) complaints – instituted in 48 (5.1%) cases. In more than two-thirds of cases (68.2%) either very little or no response to the ICD. Police’s ability to disregard the ICD strengthened by the removal of the regulation obliging the station commissioner to provide reasons for rejecting ICD recommendations.
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3 DVA reports submitted to parliament in 10 years (out of a possible 20) –2 in 2007, 1 in 2008 Auditor-General (2009), the SAPS, the ICD and parliament (Oct ‘07; June and August ‘08): DVA training is inadequate –3 626 trained in 2008/09 (182 754) –3 181 trained in 2009/10 (190 199) No budget
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Women’s access to justice Reduce contact crimes by 4 – 7% annually Confuses reporting to the police with a charge being laid; and incidence of a crime with its reporting rate 1 January – 31 June 2007: 45 454 domestic violence incidents reported, 17 633 reports resulting in criminal charges. Acornhoek: 942 complaints collected from hospital, courts and police station but only 63 resulted in charges Rape: 1 in 9 cases reported (2002); 1 in 25 reported (Gauteng 2010)
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Women’s access to justice 07/0808/0909/10 Booysens 318 187 (-70.1%)190 (1.6%) Dawn Park 128 252 (96.8%) 102 (-147.0%) Hillbrow 713 521 (-36.8%) 233 (-123.6%) Jhb Central 287 1 375 (379.0%) 249 (-452.2%) Krugersdorp 251 655 (160.9%) 224 (-192.4%) Sandton 64 142 (121.8%)271 (90.8%) Durban Central 279 1 091 (291.0%) 915 (-19.2%) Margate 130 368 (183.0%) 88 (-318.1%) Mount Road 323 798 (147.0%) 66 (-1 109.1%)
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FCS Units Deadline of 1 April 2011 to be fully reconstituted No SOA training reports submitted to parliament (or courses) –2 491 CSC officers trained –2 557 FCS and general detectives 806 victim support rooms by 2009/10
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Early anecdotal indications of challenges Human resourcing: –60% of TCC patients between 2003 – 2006 and 58% in 2010 children. Where are the adult women being seen? Need for resources to be allocated to the FCS units noted in SAPS Strategic Plan 2010 – 2014 Highlighted by two different reviews examining the impact of the redeployment of the FCS units eg. sexual assault evidence kits, as well as transporting victims (amongst other things). Budgets need to fall under the management of FCS units. Experience? Knowledge?
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Key recommendations FCS Units can’t be sole solution to domestic violence - mandate: only investigate attempted murder and assault with intent to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) and perpetrated within an intra-familial context. Breaches only investigated when part of assault GBH or attempted murder cases already being handled.
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Recommendations: Money Bills Police PC enquire into the extent of SAPS’ budgeting towards the DVA and SOA; and Ask that SAPS reports, as a matter of course, on the full extent and use of donor funding to augment their activities. play a strong role in assessing SAPS’ ENE, strategic priorities, measurable objectives, strategic plans and annual reports. Ensure that legislated commitments form part of SAPS performance indicators.
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Other Engage critically with interpretations offered by SAPS of their particular statistics Ensure that SAPS tables their training courses, accompanied by multi-year training plans (numbers and assessment methods) Invite a diversity of NGOs to comment on and engage with all these processes Collaborate with the WCPD PC around following up the recommendations from 2009 DVA hearings (tabled Oct. 2010) Very carefully monitor the CSP irt to the DVA – follow the process of drafting regulations – CSP budget? Human resources? Oversight powers?
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“[c]ompliance with the Constitution requires not only that laws be enacted to give effect to the rights in the Constitution, but also requires that those laws be implemented. Failure to implement laws that protect constitutional rights is a violation of the Constitution.” (Director of Public Prosecutions, Transvaal v Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others, 2009 (4) SA 222 (CC) at 201.)
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