• Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • How to contact us
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
No Result
View All Result
SACBC Justice And Peace
OUR NEWSLETTER
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
    • How to contact us
  • Movements under pastoral accompaniment
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
  • Theology at the margins
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
    • How to contact us
  • Movements under pastoral accompaniment
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
  • Theology at the margins
  • Newsletter
  • News \ Articles
No Result
View All Result
SACBC Justice And Peace
No Result
View All Result
Home Problem of violence, crime and alcohol abuse: Church walking with rape victims and tavern owners

Survey reveals that rape survivors feel victimized by the justice system

September 17, 2025
in Problem of violence, crime and alcohol abuse: Church walking with rape victims and tavern owners
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
A recent survey of nearly 300 rape survivors, conducted by the young women for life, has revealed a troubling reality. Only 14% of respondents believed they would achieve justice by reporting the crime to the police.

This finding comes at a concerning time. While the reporting of rape cases to the police have increased significantly, the number of cases charged by the public prosecutor has dropped markedly. In 2019/20, there were 55,000 rape reports to the police, but only 1,867 cases were charged. Moreover, the proportion of victims who chose to withdraw their support for their case has steadily risen, from 25% in 2015/16 to 41% in 2019/20.

The survey results make clear that survivors feel actively re-victimized by the very system meant to deliver justice. For survivors of this deeply damaging and highly prevalent crime to truly feel “the state is on their side,” the government’s review must drive radical cultural transformation across the criminal justice system.

In the survey, the survivors have told us:

  • Being believed is one of the most important things to survivors, but many feel their credibility is tested through each stage of the criminal justice process
  • Many survivors experienced poor treatment from individual criminal justice practitioners
  • Survivors had serious concerns about the use of digital disclosure requests and how they felt that their privacy had been violated
  • Prompt, proactive communication is very important to survivors, though many told us they had to chase for updates
  • Survivors highly value the support given by victims’ services and Independent Sexual Violence Advisors
  • Decisions to take no further action and not to prosecute can have devastating effects on survivors and it often appears to them that good evidence has not been considered and the reasons for discontinuing are insufficient.
  • Survivors gave various reasons for not taking further action and withdrawing their rape complaints, such as fears of the criminal justice process and wanting to move on
  • Survivors’ experience of the courtroom and rape trials is traumatic, they often feel isolated and attacked in the courtroom
  • Survivors want to be treated sensitively, fairly, respectfully, to be believed, but also for criminal justice system professionals to better understand trauma, provide clear and timely information, and to offer better support services
  • Rape survivors have low levels of confidence in the criminal justice system’s handling of rape complaints

This survey and the voices behind it reveal the extent of the crisis within our justice system.

Next Post
Working with tavern owners to end violence

Working with tavern owners to end violence

Connect with us

Recommended

Mining should be banned in water catchment areas

1 year ago

The fact that there are hundreds of mine workers affected by black lung disease is itself an indictment on corporate greed

9 months ago

SACBC Justice and Peace Commission is an agency of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
Its mission and role: “To proclaim the good news to the poor, to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set the oppressed free.” (Luke 4:18).

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • How to contact us

© 2025 SACBC Justice And Peace All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Staff
    • Mission
  • Take Action
    • Church witness in context of government corruption and state capture
    • Church walking with apartheid-era human rights victims seeking reparation and the healing of the nation
    • Church walking with rape survivors, and a movement tackling violent crime, alcohol abuse and moral renewal
    • Mission in context of scramble for Africa’s minerals and land
    • Church walking with unemployed graduates challenging government policies on youth unemployment crisis
  • News \ Articles
  • Newsletter
  • How to contact us

© 2025 SACBC Justice And Peace All Rights Reserved. Designed by Vasiliki Technologies.

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In