South Africa - safe haven for human traffickers? Employing the arsenal of existing law to combat human trafficking
Abstract
Having ratified the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons,
Especially Women and Children, South Africa is obliged to adopt legislative measures
that criminalise human trafficking and comply with other standards laid down in this
international instrument. However, by mid-2011, South Africa had not enacted the
required comprehensive counter-trafficking legislation. The question that now arises is if
the absence of such anti-trafficking legislation poses an insurmountable obstacle to the
prosecution of traffickers for trafficking-related activities. In asking this question the
article examines the utilisation of existing crimes in order to prosecute and punish
criminal activities committed during the human trafficking process. Firstly, a selection of
existing common law and statutory crimes that may often be applicable to traffickingrelated
activities is mapped out. Secondly, transitional trafficking provisions in the
Children's Act 38 of 2005 and the Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters)
Amendment Act 32 of 2007 are discussed. Finally, since the Prevention and Combating
of Trafficking in Persons Bill B7 of 2010 will in all probability be enacted in the near
future, the use of other criminal law provisions in human trafficking prosecutions, even
after the passing of this bill into law, is reflected upon.
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Narratives of child trafficking survivors in rehabilitation : conceptualisations of freedom for human rights education
Visser, Anja (North-West University (South Africa), Potchefstroom Campus, 2018)Children are being trafficked for sexual exploitation in virtually every country in the world (USDS, 2016:340). As yet, however, qualitative studies have not produced a clear conceptualisation of child trafficking for ... -
Narratives of child trafficking survivors in rehabilitation: conceptualisations of freedom for human rights education
Visser, A. (North-West University, 2018)Children are being trafficked for sexual exploitation in virtually every country in the world (USDS, 2016:340). As yet, however, qualitative studies have not produced a clear conceptualisation of child trafficking for ... -
Legal measures to combat the trafficking of antiquities that serve to finance terrorism
Romylos, Lizangela (North-West University (South Africa), Potchefstroom Campus, 2016)The rise of terrorist groups in Middle Eastern countries has led to the looting and trafficking of cultural objects in an attempt to raise funds for the illicit activities they engage in. This study focuses on the effectiveness ...