Capital punishment in South Africa
Capital punishment in South Africa was abolished on 6 June 1995 by the ruling of the Constitutional Court in the case of S v Makwanyane, following a five-year and four-month moratorium since February 1990.[1]
History
The standard method for carrying out executions was hanging, sometimes of several convicts at the same time. Mandatory death penalty for murder was abolished in 1935, comparable to the similar act passed in the United Kingdom in 1957. Before this reform, vast numbers of delinquents were sentenced to death without having their sentences carried out, with only 24% of capital verdicts being carried out in the period 1925 to 1935 (including 7% of verdicts against women).[2][3]
The reform was supported by Prime Minister Jan Smuts, who decried the draconian rates of nominal sentences, favouring greater discretion for judges which were ultimately brought into the penal code with a rule of extenuating circumstances, which largely were maintained into the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977, which is largely still in force.[4] At the same time, criminal justice saw an increased racialisation in disfavour of the non-white majority, who represented the vast majority of accused and convicted in capital cases. In part this was because of the jury system, completely dominated by White South Africans because an ongoing effort to suppress the franchise for non-white citizens.[5] Non-white jurors (in effect only occurring in the Cape Province), although retaining the right to vote until 1960, were removed by statute in 1954. In the case of women defendants, an all-women jury could be selected.[6]
Reform
Hanging was maintained as the preferred method, as in most post-independence cases of criminal law, following South Africa's independence as a republic in 1961. At the same time, South Africa saw mounting international criticism against purposely political executions of anti-apartheid activists convicted of violent crimes; mainly blacks, but occasionally whites, the case of Frederick John Harris in 1965 being exemplary. Most verdicts were for homicide, the vastly most common reason for being on death row, others under anti-terrorism legislation. Rape, under aggravated circumstances, was also a capital crime. Judge Quartus de Wet - of the Rivonia Trial - explicitly iterated that the prosecution's selection of indicting the accused, Nelson Mandela et al., for sabotage and not high treason, supported his decision to issue a sentence of life imprisonment for those convicted, rather than an expected sentence of hanging. The jury system, having been set aside for serious cases by special statutes (e.g. the Rivonia Trial). Already in 1947, 75% of criminal trials had been by judge (usually assisted by two assessors), not jury, largely as result of the selection by the accused. In capital trials, the three-judge panel was mandatory if selected. Certain discretion was also granted to the Minister of Justice to decide on trial by judge regarding interracial crimes, further eroding the likelihood of trial by jury. The layman participation was finally scrapped by the Abolition of Juries Act of 1969, with half a percent (0,48 %) of trials in 1968 being decided by juries.[6] Liberal writer and opposition politician Alan Paton later stated that the abolition of juries, although part of criminal reforms to bring the procedure under the control of the government, probably increased legal security particularly for black defendants, due to the prejudice of white juries.[7]
The 1980s, a period of incremental constitutional change and lessening of some apartheid provisions, nevertheless saw a decline in even fundamental standards of rule of law and rapid increase in the number of executions; 164 in 1987 alone (an official tally higher than that of any other country, including the People's Republic of China and Iran). Since 1959, the South African government officially performed 2,949 hangings (14 of women), including 1,123 in the 1980s.[8][9] Of over one hundred South Africans executed in 1988, only three were white, all sentenced for the murder of whites.[8] Despite the obviously skewed verdicts, most capital cases ended not with execution; out of 83 black South Africans convicted of killing whites between June 1982 and June 1983, a minority of 38 were hanged, as well as one white convicted of killing a white (out of 52). These numbers show, as a whole, the vast use of the "extenuating circumstances" rule in a country deeply steeped in racial strife, with widespread incidents of violence and presumed threat making such a defence justifiable.
All executions were carried out in Pretoria Central Prison; condemned prisoners were held in a section of the prison called "The Pot".[10]
Moratorium and abolition
The last execution carried out by the South African government was the hanging of Solomon Ngobeni in November 1989. The last woman executed was Sandra Smith on June 2 the same year along with her boyfriend Yassiem Harris, in all cases following an aggravated murder conviction.[9] In February 1990, a moratorium was declared by President De Klerk. Two further executions were, however, carried out in the nominally independent "homelands" of Boputhatswana and Venda in 1990 and 1991 respectively, almost universally considered parts of South Africa at the time, but with little to no intervention from South African authorities.[11]
Although the death penalty was abolished in 1995, opinion polls have repeatedly suggested public support for its reinstatement, with significant differences between white and black South Africans.[12][13] A 2014 poll in South Africa found that 76 percent of the Millennial generation South Africans support re-introduction of the death penalty.[14]
Current situation
There are a number of parties in South Africa that currently support the return of the death penalty. They are the National Party South Africa,[15] the African Christian Democratic Party,[16] African Covenant,[17] the African Transformation Movement (ATM)[18][19] and the National Conservative Party of South Africa.
2018 saw growing calls for the return of the death penalty. On 20 July the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) stated that the time had come to discuss the possibility of reinstating the death penalty in South Africa,[20][21] and on 8 August the National Freedom Party called for the restoration of the death penalty in South Africa after the death of Khensani Maseko, in a call similar to that of the IFP weeks before.[22]
In April 2020, former EFF Gauteng chairperson Mandisa Mashego announced that she supports the reinstatement of the death penalty in South Africa.[23]
See also
- Category:People executed by South Africa
- Life imprisonment in South Africa
- Necklacing in South Africa
Further reading
- Lloyd, Vogelman (1989). "The Living Dead: Living on Death Row". South African Journal on Human Rights. University of the Witwatersrand.
References
- French, Howard W. (7 June 1995). "South Africa's Supreme Court Abolishes Death Penalty". The New York Times.
- Devenish, G (1992). "The historical and jurisprudential evolution and background to the application of the death penalty in South Africa and its relationship with constitutional and political reform". South African Journal of Criminal Justice. 5: 1–31. hdl:20.500.12144/34298.
- Turrell, Robert Vicat (2004). White Mercy: A Study of the Death Penalty in South Africa. Praeger. p. 237. ISBN 978-0-325-07126-8.
- Novak, Andrew (1 January 2013). "Abuse of state power: the mandatory death penalty for political crimes in Southern Rhodesia, 1963-1970". Fundamina: A Journal of Legal History. 19 (1): 28–47. hdl:10520/EJC137217.
- Konaté, Dior (1 December 2005). "Robert Turrell, White Mercy. A Study of the Death Penalty in South Africa: Westport, Praeger, 2004, 281 pp., ISBN 0 325 07132 2". Crime, Histoire & Sociétés. 9 (2): 134–135. doi:10.4000/chs.312.
- Seligson, Milton (2001). "Lay participation in South Africa from apartheid to majority rule". Revue Internationale de Droit Penal. 72 (1): 273–284.
- Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Firing Line with William F. Buckley Jr.: What's Happening in South Africa?". YouTube.
- Battersby, John D. (1 December 1988). "Hangings Now the Routine at Pretoria Prison". The New York Times.
- "Sandra Smith – the last woman to be hanged in South Africa". Capitalpunishmentuk.org. 14 November 1989. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
- Adams, Robert (1998). The Abuses of Punishment. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-312-17617-4.
- Clark, Richard. "Capital punishment in the Commonwealth". Capital Punishment UK. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
- "South Africans Support Death Penalty". Angus Reid Global. 14 May 2006. Archived from the original on 22 April 2014. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
- "Youth 'want death penalty reinstated'". SAPA. 22 February 2013. Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 22 April 2014.
- "Youth 'want death penalty reinstated'". News24. 22 February 2013. Archived from the original on 19 May 2014. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
- "National Party South Africa (NP)". Nationalparty.co.za. Archived from the original on 26 October 2018. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
- "Justice". ACDP. Retrieved 19 January 2016.
- "2019 ELECTIONS: The crib-sheet to the political parties contesting the 2019 polls, Part One". 21 March 2019.
- "From the death penalty to scrapping low pass marks: Manyi's ambitions for the ATM". www.timeslive.co.za.
- New political party officially launched in the Eastern Cape. Retrieved on 21 January 2019.
- "Should SA bring back the death penalty? IFP believes it may be time". 23 July 2018.
- "Let's talk about bringing back the death penalty, says IFP – the Citizen". 20 July 2018.
- "NFP echoes IFP calls for death penalty after rape victim's suicide". citizen.co.za. 7 August 2018. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
- Feketha, Siviwe (2 April 2020). "Former EFF Gauteng chairperson wants to fight for death penalty". Johannesburg. IOL. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
There are other pursuits that I want to be part of, such as fighting for the death penalty and I cannot do that under the EFF because the founding manifesto says that the death penalty cannot be returned to SA and I don't agree with that", she said.