• Vicious three-day attack in Belhar ends with life sentence for the perpetrator
• Survivor's pleas were initially ignored by neighbours and police
• Judgment affirms courts’ resolve in tackling gender-based violence
The brick houses of Belhar, Cape Town, often echo with the sounds of family life, children playing, meals being shared, ordinary days unfolding. But behind one of those doors in October 2019, a woman lived through a nightmare so violent and relentless that even the judge, hardened by years on the bench, struggled to speak of it without emotion.
The Western Cape High Court delivered a decisive blow to gender-based violence in South Africa, confirming the life sentence of a man convicted of holding his estranged wife captive and subjecting her to three days of terror, beatings with a cricket bat, repeated rape, humiliation, and near-fatal injury.
‘No one helped me’
The victim’s story is one of strength, but also a haunting reminder of how isolated survivors of domestic violence often are. After enduring days of assault, she escaped from the house barefoot and bloodied. Yet the community around her, the very people one might expect to respond with urgency, turned away.
“She’s always fighting with her husband,” one neighbour reportedly said. Another simply closed the gate. When she reached out to the police, her plea was brushed aside with an excuse; they were attending to a shooting. Hours passed at the police station. There was no urgency, no empathy, until a nurse saw her condition and acted.
That intervention possibly saved her life. She had severe injuries, including head trauma that required immediate medical attention. Her survival hinged not only on her own will to live, but on a single person choosing to see her humanity.
Courtroom reckoning
On 21 September 2022, the accused pleaded guilty to attempted murder and was convicted on multiple counts of rape and sexual assault. The Regional Magistrate imposed a life sentence for the rapes and 15 years for attempted murder, sentences that spoke to the horror of the offences.
Still, the perpetrator launched an appeal. He claimed his sentence was too harsh. He cited “anger issues.” He offered excuses. The High Court did not agree.
“There are no compelling circumstances here,” the judgment read. The brutality, the calculated nature of the abuse, and the irreparable harm caused to the survivor left no space for leniency. Life behind bars was the only fitting outcome.
A woman’s words
In her victim impact statement, the woman did not merely recount pain; she reclaimed power. She spoke of her physical injuries, the financial toll, the emotional scar tissue. But she also spoke of survival, of refusing to let shame or fear bury her truth, of wanting to ensure that what happened to her doesn't happen to another woman.
Her testimony laid bare not only the crime but the many failures around it, neighbours who looked away, police who delayed, a system that only partly worked.
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