For many victims of gender-based violence, navigating their way through the criminal justice system is a daunting journey.
This is the perspective of a woman who was raped and has seen her attacker walk free, owing to "lack of evidence" in court.
The woman, who cannot be named to protect her identity, was inconsolable when she saw her case fall apart.
"It was difficult to come to terms with and I still have not been able to deal with it despite receiving counselling regularly," she said.
She was raped, allegedly by her cousin during a family gathering in 2012.
"I was 17 at the time. My family had gathered at my grandmother's house for her 80th birthday party so I felt safe and never imagined that anything bad would happen to me," she said.
She said her older cousin called her to his car and asked her to accompany him to the shops.
"But instead, he drove to a nearby bush where he had his way with me. We returned and I was too scared to tell anyone at the time because I didn't think anybody would believe me," she said.
She told Sowetan that she was only able to confide in her mother after eight months as she could not cope with the horror anymore. Her mother immediately told her that they needed to report the matter to the authorities.
"The incident happened in Hammanskraal, so when we went to the local police station in Soweto, they told us that we needed to go report the matter where it happened. That was the first hurdle," she said.
She said she was forced to endure secondary trauma through the treatment she received at the Hammanskraal police station.
"At first it was difficult to tell the officer in the charge office what had happened because he did not seem interested. But he referred us to another male officer who took me to a separate room. No counselling was offered to me and he was insensitive in the way he questioned me about the incident."
She said she was then referred to the Teddy Bear Clinic where she was told that she would not be able to be assisted because she had just turned 18, even though her ordeal occurred when she was a minor.
"My case was referred to a prosecutor who, after four court appearances, withdrew the charges against my cousin because he said there was not enough evidence.
"The prosecutor did not even know my name and treated the case like it was a petty crime," she said.
She said the pain and trauma she felt has never left her.
Now 24, the woman said a better approach needs to be adopted in the criminal justice system in order to assist victims with attaining justice.
Despite the cracks that exist in the system, a ray of hope does exist in the form of civic organisations that aim to obtain justice for victims by offering them legal support and counselling.
Tshwaranang Legal Advocacy Centre (TLAC) director Welekazi Stofile said the greatest challenge for women who have fallen prey to the scourge of sexual and gender-based violence is accessing justice.
"When you talk about the criminal justice system, you talk about a chain that starts from the police to the courts, to social development, health care establishments, all the way up to correctional facilities," she said.
Stofile said the system was flawed in a sense that it did not provide adequate support to victims in each link in the chain.
"At times, police stations lack the capacity to deal with a rape victim, then you find a prosecutor or magistrate who does not take the matter seriously by not showing up to court or following up on important information. Cases are then lost and the victims are the ones that are left to pick up the pieces," Stofile said.
TLAC provides legal advice and support, including free legal representation, budget permitting, to women survivors of gender-based violence and was recently the recipient of R100,000 from Diageo South Africa, the makers of leading spirits brands in the country.
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