.
We now have over 35,000 articles in our archive. Please don't forget to rate articles you read. Your votes will be reflected in the Weekly & All-Time rankings of the articles. Robert Mugabe has stolen every election & ruled Zimbabwe illegally since 2002. The most open theft was observed & proven on 29 March 2008.
           News       
  News - General 
  South Africa 
  Crime 
  Tourism 
  Zimbabwe 
  Witchcraft that Kills 
  Europe 
  America 
  Middle East 
  World War III 
 Mailing Lists 
  Subscribe 
  Unsubscribe 
 Columnists 
  Collen Makumbirofa 
  Kwanele Sibanda 
  Different Perspective 
  Right Perspective 
  Robb Ellis 
  The Centurion 
Readers' Comments  
  Most Popular 
  Browse Comments 
  Guestbook 
  JTF Bulletin Board 
  Our Online Shop 
  Donations 
 
  Send us News 
 Reader's Favourites 
  The All-Time Top 40 
  Last Week's Best 20 
  The Worst 20 
 Predictions Analysis 
  Explanation 
  Latest Scenarios 
  Latest Predictions 
  Latest Comments 
  Predictions due 
  Add a Prediction 
         Other         
  Search Engine 
  Editor's Comments 
  The Editor's Choice 
  The Editor's Gallery 
  Afrikaans 
  Humour 
  Cartoons 
  Photo Gallery 
  Classic Gallery 
  Audio & Radio 
  White Homeland 
    Brainstorming 
 Quick Translation 
  Arabic 
  Chinese 
  French 
  German 
  Italian 
  Japanese 
  Korean 
  Portuguese 
  Russian 
  Spanish 

Please tell us what you think of this article by clicking on a button & rating it:-
    


S.Africa: 2,000 children murdered annually, 1000 disappear

Date Posted: Thursday 09-Aug-2007

Thomas Siebert shifts uncomfortably on the wooden court bench and flinches occasionally at the testimony of the man who sodomised and then strangled his six-year-old son to death 18 months ago.

He tries to avoid staring at the 48-year-old killer, Theunis Olivier, instead peering around the courtroom and making occasional notes.

But Siebert's emotion is apparent when he addresses reporters on the steps of the Cape High Court, expressing the wish that Olivier, convicted of kidnapping, indecent assault and murder, be removed from society for good.

"The only possible outcome can be life [imprisonment]," he said on the sidelines of pre-sentencing proceedings last week. "By law the maximum is life. That is all that there is."

Siebert is among a growing body of parents whose children are kidnapped, raped and murdered in South Africa every year.

Activist body Missing Children South Africa says about 2 000 children are killed in the country annually. Just under 1 000 are currently listed as missing.

Siebert swallows hard when describing the 18 months since his son, Steven, went missing just before Christmas 2005, while on holiday with his parents in Plettenberg Bay in the Western Cape province.

His body was found hidden in bushes near the home of Olivier, a Zimbabwean-born handyman who has confessed to abusing a number of children over several years.

He had spent 15 years in Zimbabwean jail for child molestation.

How is the Siebert family getting on with their lives? "We're not," says the boy's father.

"We're just trying to deal with it day by day. This is the first step to try and get it behind us," he says, gesturing toward the courtroom.

Opposition political parties and activist groups have been urging the government to step up measures to contain such crimes and community members protesting at court cases have called for the return of the death penalty.

"[There is] a serious moral corrosion within our communities and society," the Inkatha Freedom Party's Patricia Lebenya said recently.

"Our children are not safe anymore and government has not done enough to create safer environments."

Ann Skelton of the University of Pretoria's Centre for Child Law said prevention was part of the answer.

A breakdown in family cohesion, fuelled by poverty and alcohol abuse, was leaving children vulnerable to predators, she said.

She proposed that government resources be pumped into a mass deployment of fieldworkers to monitor children at home and school and make sure that failing parents get special training and rehabilitation.

"It is a developmental process," said Skelton.

Newspapers have been carrying stories almost daily about children falling prey to violent criminals in recent months.

They include Sheldean Human (7) from Pretoria, who was raped and murdered in February, and Mikayla Rossouw (6) of Swellendam in the Western Cape who was found dead in the backyard shack of a neighbour's house in June.

The body of Sonja Brown (2) from Rawsonville in the Western Cape, was found in a sewerage manhole last month, and Anastacia Wiese (11) was found dead in the ceiling of her mother's home in Mitchells Plain, Cape Town, in March.

Eight-year-old Refilwe Ringane's body was discovered in a field in Modimolle in the northern Limpopo province in June, while an 11-year-old girl from Bishop Lavis in the Western Cape gave birth to a baby last month after being raped, allegedly by a neighbour.

Arrests have been made in most cases, but the families' wounds are slow to heal.

"There is no way to understand the grief and the anguish a family goes through," said Vernon Norton (47) whose six-month-old granddaughter, Jordan Leigh Norton, was murdered in June 2005.

At court last week to support the Siebert family, said Norton: "I came to hear first-hand that the justice system is able to rid our society of such evil people.

"It is difficult to understand how a human being supposed to show some compassion towards children and protect children is able to commit such a crime." - Sapa-AFP

Source: Daily Mail & Guardian
URL: http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articlei...

The Afrikaners: Biography of a People How South Africa built Six Atom bombs Flab Falls Off Conditioned Victim? : Handbook for a Violent Society Racism, Guilt, Self-Hatred & Self-Deceit: An amazing book by an American academic who lived in Africa for over 30 years 
There are no Readers' Comments for this article