
17 January 2005
South Africa’s new Victims’ Charter, approved by the Cabinet at its last meeting for 2004, consolidates the current legal framework on the rights of victims of crime and the services to be provided to them.
The Charter aims to ensure that victims remain central to the criminal justice process in South Africa, to eliminate “secondary victimisation” from this process, to clarify the standards of service to be accorded victims by the criminal justice system – and to provide for recourse when these standards are not met.
The complementary Minimum Standards on Service for Victims of Crime aims to explain the rights contained in the Victims’ Charter further, and to help make these rights a reality – by giving detailed information to enable victims to exercise their rights and service providers to uphold them.
Victims of crime: your rights
The Charter states that, if you are a victim of crime, you have the following rights, in terms of the law and the Constitution, in your contact with the authorities – including the police, court officials, and members of any government body dealing with or providing a service to you.
The right to be treated with fairness and respect for dignity and privacy
This includes the right to be attended to promptly and courteously, and treated with respect for your dignity and privacy.
As part of this, the authorities are to take steps to minimise inconvenience to you – among other things, by conducting interviews with you in your language of choice and in private, if necessary.
The right to offer information during the criminal investigation and trial
The authorities must ensure that any contribution that you wish to make to an investigation, prosecution or parole hearing is heard and taken into account in the making of decisions. This means you have the right to:
The right to receive information
You have the right to be informed of:
You can request:
The right to protection
You have the right to be free from intimidation, harassment, tampering, bribery, corruption and abuse.
With this right comes a responsibility: anyone who witnesses such threats must report them to the police or senior state prosecutor.
As part of this right:
The right to assistance
You have the right to request assistance and, where relevant, have access to available social, health and counselling services, as well as legal assistance which is responsive to your needs. As part of this:
The right to compensation
You have the right to compensation for loss of or damage to property suffered as a result of a crime.
“Compensation” means an amount of money that a criminal court awards a victim who has suffered loss or damage to property, including money, as a result of a crime.
As part of this:
The right to restitution
You have the right to restitution in cases where goods or property have been unlawfully damaged or taken from you.
“Restitution” refers to cases where the court, after conviction, orders the accused to return or repair the property or goods.
The prosecutor will inform you what restitution involves and the clerk of the court will assist you in enforcing this right.
Complaints
If you have any complaints about the service you’re getting, or if your rights are not being observed, you should contact the government department or service provider concerned.
If you’re not happy with the way in which your complaint is handled, you can also contact:
More information
For more information on any issue regarding the Victims’ Charter, you can contact the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development’s gender directorate at the following numbers:
SAinfo reporter
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