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Home I live in the slums stories by citizen journalists

Rape Survivors Refuse to Be Silenced: Why We’re Protesting Outside South Africa’s Magistrate Courts

December 29, 2025
in I live in the slums stories by citizen journalists
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Week after week, a growing movement of rape survivors is standing outside South Africa’s magistrate courts — not out of choice, but out of necessity. We are there because the justice system that promised to protect us has failed us. We are there because the courts, which should be sanctuaries of justice, have become spaces where our trauma is dismissed, our safety is ignored, and our pain is trivialised.

Our anger is not abstract. It is rooted in lived experience — in watching the men accused of violating us walk free just days after arrest. It is fuelled by a justice system that treats bail as a box-ticking exercise, even in cases where survivors fear retaliation or intimidation. Time and again, magistrates release accused rapists back into our communities, often with minimal conditions, as though sexual violence were a minor offence.

For survivors, these decisions are more than legal missteps — they are betrayals. They send a clear message: the system values the “rights” of the accused more than the safety and dignity of the violated.

The injustice does not end with bail. South Africa records over 42,000 rapes every year — and we know the real number is far higher. Yet only a tiny fraction of cases lead to convictions. Most never even reach trial. Police fail to collect evidence properly. Prosecutors drop cases for “lack of evidence.” Survivors are grilled on the witness stand as if they were the ones on trial. Many cannot bear the trauma of going through it all and simply walk away — silenced once again.

This is why we are taking our fight to the courthouse steps. We are there with our banners, our voices, and our stories because silence has never protected us. We refuse to accept a system that makes it harder to convict rapists than it does to grant them bail.

We are calling for urgent change:

  • Reform bail procedures in cases of sexual violence so that survivors’ safety and community risk are prioritised.

  • Train police and prosecutors to handle rape cases with the seriousness and sensitivity they deserve.

  • Establish specialised gender-based violence courts to speed up justice and reduce retraumatisation.

  • Hold Parliament accountable by demanding public hearings on why our justice system continues to fail survivors.

We know that change will not come easily. It never has. But every protest outside a courthouse is a declaration that we are done waiting. We are done begging for justice from a system that barely notices when it denies it.

South Africa cannot call itself a democracy while it continues to betray survivors of rape and gender-based violence. The time for excuses is over. We will keep showing up — outside magistrate courts, inside Parliament, and in every public space that will hear us — until this country treats sexual violence not as an inevitable statistic, but as an intolerable crime.

Justice delayed is justice denied. But justice refused — that is violence all over again.

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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).

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