SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 2006 1

WELL WORTH THE
WAIT?

The Sexual Offences
Bill in 2006

The Sexual Offences Bill finally seems to be winding its way to conclusion in parliament. It has taken three

years to reach this point since its first introduction in 2003, raising serious questions about the government’s

sense of urgency in addressing sexual assault. This article looks at the Bill to establish what it really holds for

victims of sexual assault. 

A
fter its initial tabling in parliament in 2003,
the Sexual Offences Bill1 was followed in
relatively short succession by public

hearings and vibrant deliberations in the portfolio
committee on Justice and Constitutional
Development. Towards the end of February 2004,
the drafters of the Department of Justice and
Constitutional Development produced a working
document with some of the changes proposed by
the committee. At this point, parliament adjourned
for the national elections. And the Sexual Offences
Bill vanished from sight… for almost two years, as
we will see.

This silence soon elicited negative criticism from
civil society organisations. A sense of impatience on
their part was understandable, given that the
parliamentary process had already been preceded
by a lengthy investigation by the South African Law
Reform Commission [SALRC]. This investigation
began its life in 1996 as an inquiry into sexual
offences committed against (and by) children. The
scope of this investigation was eventually expanded
in 1999 to include adults as well as children.2

The SALRC conducted an extensive and thorough
inquiry, entailing the publication of several issue
papers and discussion papers. The Commission

concluded the project in December 2002 with its
final report, which also contained a draft Bill.3 It
was this Bill that formed the basis of Bill B50-2003,
introduced to parliament in 2003.

The hiatus
When parliament reconvened after the 2004
elections, women’s organisations were hopeful that
the Sexual Offences Bill would be high on the
portfolio committee’s list of priorities. However,
time passed without any indications as to the fate
of the 2003 Bill or the subsequent working
document. This delay was difficult to understand,
in the face of consistent public reassurances by the
Ministry of Justice and Constitutional Development
that the Bill would be ‘fast-tracked’ – without any
apparent effect. It was also difficult to understand
in the face of the 55,114 cases of rape reported for
the year 2004 to 2005 in South Africa.4

It is significant to note that during this period, while
the Bill was languishing in corners unknown, a
regional magistrate preempted the legislation by
finding that the common law definition of rape was
too narrow and therefore discriminatory.5 The ambit
of the offence therefore had to be extended to
include anal penetration. The distinction between
rape and indecent assault is important for a number

Helene Combrinck
Community Law Centre, University of the Western Cape
hcombrinck@uwc.ac.za



SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 20062 COMBRINCK

Definitions of sexual offences 

Chapters 2 to 4 set out to codify the law relating to
sexual offences. (At present, certain of these offences
are set out in the Sexual Offences Act,13 while others,
such as rape and indecent assault, are so-called
‘common law’ offences.) 

Clause 3 makes provision for an extended definition
of rape. This is perhaps to date one of the most well-
publicised aspects of the Bill. The new definition
reads that:

any person (A), who unlawfully and
intentionally commits an act of sexual
penetration with a complainant (B), without the
consent of B, is guilty of the offence of rape. 

The expansion of the current definition of rape
becomes clear when one looks at the definition
clause,14 which describes ‘sexual penetration’ as any
act that causes penetration (to any extent) of the
genital organs of one person into the genital organs,
anus or mouth of another person, or of any other
body part or object into the genital organs or anus or
another person.15

The definition therefore no longer makes any
reference to the sex of the perpetrator or the victim,
as does the current definition,16 nor does it prioritise
certain forms of sexual penetration above others.
(This was the dilemma that confronted the court in S
v Masiya.) The interest to be protected here is that of
sexual and physical autonomy and integrity, and
from a policy perspective, the extension of the
definition of rape is therefore to be welcomed.

This chapter further sets out the following offences:17

sexual assault, compelled rape, compelled sexual
assault, compelled self-sexual assault, exposure or
display of sexual acts or genital organs or
pornography to persons 18 years or older, incest,
bestiality and sexual acts with a corpse.

Sexual offences against children and against mentally
disabled persons

Chapter 3 deals with sexual offences against children
or young persons. The major controversy here has
been the offence of so-called ‘statutory rape’, with
the debate ranging over whether the ‘age of consent’

of reasons, but specifically for purposes of the
mandatory minimum sentencing legislation, which
treats indecent assault as a less serious offence than
rape.6

The accused in this matter was originally charged
with rape. However, the victim, a nine-year old girl,
testified that he had penetrated her per anum. The
magistrate, relying on an extended definition, found
the accused guilty of rape instead of indecent assault.
This finding was subsequently confirmed by the
Pretoria High Court.7 In his original judgment, the
regional court magistrate was specifically critical of
parliament and the ‘unreasonable delays’ in the
finalisation of the Bill. 

The revival 
During this period, some degree of public debate was
sustained around the Sexual Offences Bill through the
efforts of civil society organisations. However, at the
beginning of 2006, sexual offence trials were starkly
drawn back into the public domain by the highly
publicised Zuma rape trial. In this matter, the former
deputy president of South Africa was charged with
raping a family friend. The trial proceedings, the
evidence led by both sides and the eventual verdict
of ‘not guilty’, were broadcast to saturation level. 

Shortly before the conclusion of the Zuma trial,
Cabinet approved a reworked version of the Bill,8

which was introduced in the Portfolio Committee for
Justice and Constitutional Development on 19 June
2006.9 The committee was briefed10 by the drafters
from the Department of Justice and Constitutional
Development as well as the previous chairperson,11

and commenced deliberations on the Bill during the
course of August 2006. 

Overview of the Bill 

Introductory provisions

The Bill consists of seven chapters. The first chapter
sets out the definitions and objects of the legislation.
Significantly, these objects include affording
complainants of sexual offences ‘the maximum and
least traumatizing protection that the law can
provide’.12 These statements of principle in Clause 2
should be seen as providing the basis for the
implementation and interpretation of the Act as a
whole.  



SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 2006 3COMBRINCK

Compulsory HIV testing of the alleged offender

Compulsory HIV testing has been one of the most
contentious issues in the realm of sexual offences
legislation. A separate Bill, entitled the Compulsory
HIV Testing of Alleged Sexual Offenders Bill,23 was
introduced to parliament in 2003. The introduction
of the reworked Sexual Offences Bill in 2006 saw,
for the first time, the consolidation of the two Bills.  

The proposed procedure for compulsory testing of
an alleged sexual offender entails that the victim
may apply to a magistrate within 60 days after the
alleged commission of the offence for an order that
the offender be tested for HIV. If the magistrate is
satisfied that there is prima facie evidence that a
sexual offence has been committed against the
victim by the alleged offender, that the victim may
have been exposed to the body fluids of the alleged
offender, and that no more than 60 calendar days
have lapsed from the date on which it is alleged
that the offence in question took place, s/he must
order the testing of the offender for HIV and the
disclosure of the results to the victim and alleged
offender. 

Significantly, the Sexual Offences Bill now also
allows for a SAPS investigating officer to apply for
an order to have an alleged offender tested for
HIV.24 S/he may, for purposes of investigating a
sexual offence, apply to a magistrate for an order for
HIV testing of the alleged offender. If the court is
satisfied that there is prima facie evidence that a
sexual offence has been committed by the offender
and that HIV testing would appear to be necessary
for purposes of investigating or prosecuting the
offence, the magistrate must issue an order for such
testing and for the test results to be disclosed to the
investigating officer and to the alleged offender. 

The Bill states, in clause 37, that the results of an
HIV test may only be used to inform a victim
whether the alleged offender is infected with HIV
with the view to ‘making informed personal
decisions’, or as evidence in ensuing civil
proceedings arising from the sexual assault in
question. The results may also be used to ‘enable an
investigating officer to gather information’ with the
view to using them as evidence in criminal
proceedings.  

should be 16 or 18.18 The Sexual Offences Bill
proposes that an adult who performs a sexual act
with a young person older than 12 but under the
age of 16 with his or her consent will be guilty of
an offence.

The chapter further deals with offences relating to
the sexual exploitation and sexual ‘grooming’ of
children, engaging in sexual acts in the presence of
children and exposure or display of genital organs,
pornography or sexual acts to children. Chapter 4,
which sets out sexual offences against mentally
disabled persons,19 mirrors the provisions of Chapter
3 on children, except for the omission of offences
relating to ‘consensual sexual activity’.20

Post-exposure prophylaxis 

Chapter 5 bears the ambitious heading of ‘services
for victims of sexual offences and compulsory HIV
testing of sexual offenders’. Upon closer
examination, it appears that services for victims, as
set out in this chapter, consist of the following: A
victim may receive PEP21 for HIV infection at a
designated public health establishment at state
expense, and be given free medical advice
surrounding the administering of PEP. She may also
be supplied with a prescribed list of public health
establishments for purposes of providing PEP or
carrying out compulsory HIV testing. She may apply
to a magistrate for an order that the alleged offender
be tested for HIV, at state expense. 

However, a victim may only receive these services
if she lays a charge with the South African Police
Service (SAPS) in respect of an alleged sexual
offence, or reports an incident of sexual assault at a
designated health establishment within 72 hours
after the incident took place.

The Bill provides that a victim or ‘an interested
person’22 must, when laying a charge or making a
report, be informed of the importance of obtaining
PEP for HIV infection within 72 hours after the
assault took place and the need to obtain medical
advice and assistance regarding the possibility of
other sexual transmissible infections. In the case of
an application for compulsory HIV testing of the
offender, she must also be provided with
information regarding this process. 



SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 20064 COMBRINCK

National register for sex offenders

Chapter 6 contains a series of provisions relating to
a national register for sex offenders. The purpose of
this register is to ensure that no person who has
been found guilty of the commission of a sexual
offence against a child will be allowed to work with
children. The register will be completely
confidential: employers will be required to apply to
the register to ascertain whether potential employees
were listed. If they are, they may not be employed
in that position. The Bill also imposes a duty on the
convicted person to disclose that he has been
convicted of a sexual offence against a child, and a
failure to do so constitutes a further criminal
offence. 

General provisions

Chapter 7 contains certain sections relating to
evidence and also makes provision for the
implementation of the Act. The two evidence
provisions relate to the question of so-called ‘first
report’ evidence, and, more importantly, the
negative inference that is often drawn when a victim
does not report an incident of sexual assault at the
first ‘reasonable’ opportunity. Clause 55 deals with
this situation by stipulating that the court may not
draw an adverse inference only from the length of
any delay between the alleged commission of a
sexual offence and the reporting thereof. Clause 54
provides that a court may not draw an adverse
inference only from the absence of a previous
consistent statement. 

From an implementation perspective, Clauses 57 to
61 form the heart of the Bill. Clause 57 requires the
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development
to adopt a national policy framework ‘to ensure a
uniform and coordinated approach by all
Government departments and institutions in dealing
with sexual offences’. The Bill also establishes an
inter-sectoral Committee for the Management of
Sexual Offences Matters, to consist of several highly
placed members of government (but no
representatives from civil society). This committee
will be responsible for developing a draft national
policy framework. 

The Bill further contains extensive provisions
relating to the issuing of national instructions and

directives, as well as the development of training
courses. These sections are unusually specific: for
example, clause 61(2)(a) sets out the subject matter
to be covered by the directives issued by the
National Director of Public Prosecutions. These
include the circumstances in which the prosecution
must apply to court for an order that a witness give
evidence by means of closed circuit television, as
provided for in section 158 of the Criminal
Procedure Act, as well as the circumstances in
which the prosecution must request the court to
consider directing that the proceedings may not
take place in open court, as provided for in section
153 of the Criminal Procedure Act. 

Chapter 7 further contains certain transitional
provisions relating to trafficking in persons for
sexual purposes. In addition, Schedule 1 sets out
the provisions of legislation amended by the Bill.
Noteworthy here are provisions relating to
prescription, the appointment of an intermediary in
terms of section 170A of the Criminal Procedure
Act, the admissibility of a complainant’s previous
sexual history, and the mandatory minimum
sentencing legislation. 

A cautious verdict
When evaluating the Sexual Offences Bill, one
should first and foremost be realistic. Unlike the
Domestic Violence Act, this Bill is not aimed at
crafting a unique legal mechanism such as a
protection order. Instead, it sets out to address
various areas of disadvantage experienced by sexual
assault victims in the different components that
make up the criminal justice process, including
substantive criminal law and the law of evidence
and procedure. The Bill is therefore by its very
nature a multifaceted and in many ways an
unwieldy and disparate piece of legislation. 

The codification of sexual offences is generally to
be welcomed, with specific reference to the
expansion of the definition of rape. However, the
classifications of the different offences set out in the
Bill are complex, and one sincerely hopes that the
central objective – the protection of the
complainant’s sexual and physical integrity – will
not be lost in the miasma of body parts tumbling
through the definition clause. (This is, to repeat a



SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 2006 5COMBRINCK

familiar refrain, where training will have to play a
central role.)  

If one compares this version of the Bill with the two
previous ones (i.e. the SALRC 2002 Bill and the
2003 Bill), it appears that one area where the
legislation has become ‘thinner’ is that of service
provision. This is not in itself a cause for
despondency, since the national policy framework
envisaged under Clause 57 allows for further
development of policies relating to service
provision. It would have been more satisfactory,
from the perspective of victims’ rights advocates, to
have the Bill spell out that victims of sexual assault
are entitled to certain services (at state expense). 

However, the fact that the Bill does not expressly
refer to such services does not preclude the
introduction or improvement of policies relating to
service provision. Indeed, the provisions of the Bill,
and especially Clause 2, may now provide a
stronger basis to argue for the introduction of such
policies than before. The Bill should therefore not
be seen as the final word on the services provided
to sexual assault victims. 

In this respect, it is important to note that Clause 61
requires the national instructions and directives for
police officials, public prosecutors and health care
practitioners to be published in the Gazette. From
the viewpoint of civil society organisations
providing services to sexual assault victims, this is
an important mechanism to ensure accountability
and compliance with the legislation. Because
organisations will have access to the directives and
will therefore know what the expected standards of
service provision are, they will be able to respond
far more swiftly on behalf of their clients when
deviations from these standards occur. 

There are aspects of the Bill that appear to be
problematic, for example, the question of
compulsory HIV testing of alleged sexual offenders.
On the one hand, the aim of judicially directed HIV
testing is to facilitate the task of the SAPS in
investigating instances of intentional transmission of
HIV.25 This in itself cannot be faulted, and it should
be noted that irrespective of the final decision on
whether a ‘new’ offence of intentional transmission

of HIV is introduced,26 (or the status quo of
prosecuting such conduct under the existing
common law offences of attempted murder or
assault is maintained), the proposed measures could
assist the investigation and prosecution of such
offences. 

On the other hand, it has been stated that the aim of
the provision allowing the victim to apply for an
order for testing of the alleged offender is to ‘lessen
the secondary trauma on the victim’.27 The potential
utility of this measure is questionable, and it
remains to be seen whether it will prove to be of
any practical benefit to sexual assault victims. 

It should be remembered that the Bill is still ‘a work
in progress’. At the time of writing, the committee is
still busy formulating certain clauses that have not
yet been included in the reworked version of the
Bill. The cautionary rule relating to complainants in
sexual offence cases is a case in point.28

A question posed by many commentators after the
Zuma trial was whether the course, and indeed the
outcome, of the case would have been different if
the Sexual Offences Bill had been in operation at
the time. It is clear from the above that the simple
answer would have to be ‘no’. 

The reason for this is that the Sexual Offences Bill
does not create a separate legal universe for the
adjudication of sexual offences – nor was it ever
intended to do so, in spite of the high expectations
that the Bill has raised over the past years. Rape law
reform in other jurisdictions has shown that
legislative interventions are circumscribed by the
inherent limitations of an adversarial criminal
justice system,29 as well as by the closely held
personal perceptions of those responsible for the
administration of this system. 

The Deputy Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development explained this difficulty quite
succinctly during the recent briefing of the portfolio
committee on the Bill by stating that we find
ourselves in a patriarchal society with a certain
mindset, and that this is difficult to change. The
problem is thus systemic, with every judicial officer
interpreting cases in terms of their own world view:



SA CRIME QUARTERLY No 17 SEPTEMBER 20066 COMBRINCK

“it is not possible to legislate how they look at the
world”.30

However, one should not descend into legal
nihilism and under-estimate the symbolic value of
legal reforms. By enacting the Sexual Offences Bill,
the legislature will be sending an important message
about sexual assault and the treatment of sexual
assault victims – which may in the long run be as
important as any of the ‘instrumental’ changes
brought about by the legislation.31

Endnotes
1 Full title: Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related

Matters) Amendment Bill B50-2003.
2 The topic of sexual offences committed by children

was subsumed into the broader investigation on
juvenile justice.

3 One aspect of this investigation which remains
incomplete is the issue of adult commercial sex work,
which the SALRC has elected to deal with by means of
a separate process. 

4 <http://www.saps.gov.za/statistics/reports/ 
crimestats/2005/_pdf/crimes/rape.pdf.>

5 S v Masiya (Unreported judgment dated 11 July 2005, 
Graskop Regional Court, Case Number SHG 94/04.)

6 Act 105 of 1997.
7 Judgment was given in the Pretoria High Court on 

25 July 2006. The matter must now be referred to the
Constitutional Court due to the finding that the
common law offence of rape is unconstitutional.

8 Cabinet approved the Bill on 3 May 2006. The Zuma 
judgment was handed down on 8 May 2006. 

9 The Bill is still officially entitled B50-2003, although it 
is now referred to as ‘as introduced on 19 June 2006’
in order to distinguish it from the previous version. All
references to ‘the Bill’ from this point are to the 2006
version, unless specifically indicated otherwise. 

10 Minutes of these briefings are available on 
www.pmg.org.za. 

11 Adv JH de Lange, now the Deputy Minister of Justice 
and Constitutional Development. The minutes of this
briefing, which took place on 7 August 2006, are
available on www.pmg.org.za.

12 Clause 2. 
13 Act 23 of 1957.
14 Clause 1.
15 Subclause (c) also lists the penetration of the genital 

organs of an animal into the mouth of another person.
16 The current definition of rape requires a male 

perpetrator having sexual intercourse with a female
victim without her consent. 

17 The scope of this article does not allow a 
comprehensive discussion of these offences. 

18 Political parties such as the ACDP have called for the 
age limit to be increased to 18 years. 

19 See Clause 1 for the definition of a ‘mentally disabled 
person’.

20 The motivation provided for this distinction is that 
disabled persons are unable to ‘provide valid consent
to those acts’ - briefing by Adv JH de Lange on 7
August 2006 (minutes available on www.pmg.org.za).
We suggest that this reasoning may be incorrect.

21 Post-Exposure Prophylaxis. 
22 Defined in Clause 30 as ‘any person who has a 

material interest in the well-being of a victim,
including a spouse, same sex or hetero-sexual
permanent life partner, family member, care giver,
counselor, medical practitioner, health service
provider, social worker or teacher of such victim’.

23 B10-2003.
24 This provision was not contained in Bill B10-2003.
25 The current legal position appears to be that section 

37 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, which
allows for the drawing of blood for purposes of
criminal investigation, is inadequate to cover these
situations. 

26 The portfolio committee decided in 2004 that a new 
statutory offence of intentional transmission of HIV
should be created. However, this provision was
removed from the reworked Bill at the request of
Cabinet, where it was decided that the matter needed
further research and discussion. 

27 Briefing by Adv JH de Lange on 7 August 2006. 
28 Briefing by Adv JH de Lange on 7 August 2006. 
29 See e.g. C Spohn & J Horney Rape Law Reform 

(1992) at 174.
30 Briefing by Adv JH de Lange on 7 August. 
31 Spohn & Horney Rape Law Reform 175.