The Use of Force in Effecting Arrest in South Africa and the 2010 Bill: a Step in the Right Direction
Abstract
In South Africa the use of force in effecting arrest is statutorily governed by section
49 of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. The inception of the Constitution
brought about a dramatic change in South African law in this regard. During 2001
and 2002 the two highest courts in the country had to decide on the constitutionality
of sections 49(1) and 49(2) respectively. The Supreme Court of Appeal in Govender
v Minister of Safety and Security 2001 2 SACR 197 (SCA) did not declare section
49(1) unconstitutional but found it had to be interpreted restrictively ("read down") to
survive constitutional scrutiny. The Constitutional Court on the other hand confirmed
the unconstitutionality of section 49(2) in S v Walters 2002 2 SACR 105 (CC) and the
section was declared invalid. By then (as early as 1998) the legislature had already
promulgated an amendment to section 49, but the amendment came into operation
only in 2003 after section 49 had undergone intensive constitutional scrutiny. Legal
scholars and others raised serious objections against the amendment ? some were
even of the opinion that it created a "right to flee" and that the rights of perpetrators
were protected to the detriment of law–abiding citizens. The Department of Justice
and Constitutional Development in 2010 drafted an Amendment Bill which was
subsequently approved in Parliament. This paper discusses and concludes on: the
developments over the last years in the South African law with regard to the use of
force in effecting arrest by the South African Police Service (SAPS); international
policies and guidelines of the police in this regard; and the application of the
provisions of the Amendment Bill in practice and the possible pitfalls in the
application of the latter.