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Home » Polokwane High Court acquits child offender, 17, of culpable homicide
Law & Justice

Polokwane High Court acquits child offender, 17, of culpable homicide

Kennedy MudzuliBy Kennedy MudzuliNovember 24, 2024Updated:November 24, 2024No Comments
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The High Court's Limpopo Division in Polokwane has overturned the conviction of a 17-year-old child offender, who was initially found guilty of culpable homicide in a tragic stabbing incident that occurred in September 2023.

At the heart of the case was a confrontation between the child offender and the now deceased, who, along with his friends, escalated tensions that originated at their shared school. The altercation, which was ignited by verbal insults, quickly turned physical.

According to testimony presented during the proceedings, the child offender was surrounded and assaulted by the now deceased and others, who initiated violence against him. In a moment of perceived peril, the child offender drew a kitchen knife and stabbed the now deceased, who subsequently succumbed to his injuries.

During the review process, the court scrutinised the earlier judgment, revealing a critical assessment of the evidence presented. The Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions remarked that the child offender had not exceeded the bounds of self-defence and that the circumstances justified his actions. Evidence suggested the child had sought to avoid confrontation, even altering his route home to evade potential attackers.

Judge J Kganyago, who presided over the review, articulated a powerful argument in favour of self-defence, detailing how the child offender faced an unjustified and unprovoked attack. "There was no duty on the child offender for him to wait to be injured before he is permitted to act," Judge Kganyago stated, affirming that the child acted out of necessity when he utilised the knife to ward off the assault.

The court explicitly outlined the four conditions necessary to validate the child offender's self-defence claim: the response must correspond to an unlawful attack, be necessary for protection, maintain a reasonable relationship between the attack and response, and demonstrate awareness of acting in self-defence. With this in mind, the court concluded that all conditions had been met, as the child offender was indeed defending himself from a life-threatening situation.

There was no duty on the child offender for him to wait to be injured before he is permitted to act.
- Judge Kganyago

In light of the compelling evidence to support the notion of self-defence, the High Court quashed the previous conviction of culpable homicide and acquitted the child offender of all charges.

The ruling marks an important precedent in the legal treatment of juvenile offenders, especially in contexts involving self-defence against assault.

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Kennedy Mudzuli

    Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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