Outrage as Father Gets No Jail Term for Sexually Assaulting Daughter for 8 years

 Outrage as Father Gets No Jail Term for Sexually Assaulting Daughter for 8 years

By Adekunle Badmus

The Lutzville community on the West Coast in Cape Town, South Africa is enraged that a father who sexually assaulted his daughter for eight years since she was three years old got ‘a light sentence’.

The man was handed a suspended jail sentence of five years, 24 months correctional supervision,

and 16 months community service at the Vredendal Magistrate’s Court on Wednesday for sexually assaulting his daughter over a period of eight years.

The un-named father had sexually assaulted his daughter until her mother found out in 2018.

The mother said she was disappointed and hurt and they now living in fear as the perpetrator was still roaming the streets.

She is yet to disclose the outcome of the case to her daughter.

The mother the victim will be very disappointed because she wanted her father to be jailed and that she is very afraid of her father.

“We have a protection order against him which he violated and is still out on bail”, she added.

Rural and Farmworkers Development director, Billy Claasen said the state was failing the community, at a time when the president was calling for harsher sentences for those convicted of sexual crimes.

Claasen said: “The National Prosecuting Authority owes the community of Lutzville an explanation of why the prosecutor in this matter said in court (that) correctional supervision would be an appropriate sentence.

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The safety of our grandmothers, mothers, aunts, sisters and children are left in the hands of people such as this prosecutor.

It’s shocking how arrogant prosecutors such as this person are when they prosecute matters in the rural areas,” Claasen said.

The community has written to the Western Cape Police Commissioner Yolisa Matakata and the Police minister to “immediately review the sentence”.

They have also appealed to Justice and Correctional Services Minister Ronald Lamola to look into the deployment of magistrates and prosecutors in rural areas as “most of them are for years in the areas and have become familiar with some people”.

lagosstreetjournal

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