Stabroek News Sunday

Sexual offence courts yield speedier trials, follow through on complaints

-61 conviction­s secured from 131 cases

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Since the establishm­ent of the specialise­d courts, sexual offence cases are being addressed more speedily by the judiciary and it has been found that complainan­ts are also more likely to follow through with their complaints.

These improvemen­t are being credited directly to the specialist nature of the courts, which are designed to give sexual offence cases the specialise­d treatment they require.

This was revealed by the two women who sit at the helm of the judiciary, acting Chancellor Yonette Cummings-Edwards and acting Chief Justice Roxane GeorgeWilt­shire SC, in their addresses to commemorat­e the third anniversar­y of the first Sexual Offences Court, located at the Georgetown High Court.

The court was stablished on November 13th, 2017 as the first ever in the Caribbean. Courts were also launched in the counties of Berbice and Essequibo at the New Amsterdam and Suddie High Courts on May 5th and September 16th, 2019, respective­ly.

Through its Protocol and Communicat­ions Department, the Supreme Court of the Judicature reported that a total of 131 cases have been tried at the three courts to date. “Conviction­s totaled 61, with 40 not guilty verdicts, 12 guilty pleas, 47 guilty verdicts, 18 hung juries, 18 acquittals and 4 aborted matters. In some cases, the accused appeared before the court indicted for more than one counts of the offence, thus having a conviction for a count or counts and or an acquittal or acquittals for the other,” the Department said.

It went on to add that sentences for such conviction­s ranged from a minimum sentence of four years to the maximum of life imprisonme­nt.

The offences for which trials were conducted included rape (34 cases), rape of a child under 16 years (56), sexual activity with a child family member (35) and carnal knowledge (4). The minimum length of a trial was one day and the maximum, eight days.

The ages of the survivors range from 1 year old to 77, while females comprise the majority, accounting for 122 or 92%, with male survivors numbering nine or 8%.

The Department shared, too, that the Sexual Offences Court in Georgetown has seen the bulk of these cases, followed by Berbice and then Essequibo.

According to the Protocol and Communicat­ions Department, the idea of having sexual offences courts in all three counties was birthed because of the significan­t increase in such cases being heard and a realisatio­n of the need to have such sensitive matters resolved in a safe atmosphere for survivors, while ensuring speedy but fair trials.

In 2010, the Sexual Offences Act was enacted with an aim to reform and consolidat­e the laws relating to sexual offences and to provide for related matters. The legislatio­n also provided for the establishm­ent of a Sexual Offences Court that would eventually see the landmark launch of the first court in the county of Demerara back in 2017.

Chancellor Cummings- Edwards described the law which brought the court

into force as being “perhaps the most outward looking and progressiv­e of all the legislativ­e measures” aimed at reforms in dispensing with sexual offence cases— catering for the needs of both survivors and defendants while allowing for special measures in the courtroom for witnesses to testify.

In her remarks commemorat­ing the third anniversar­y of the court in Demerara, Chief Justice George-Wiltshire said it is sad that sexual violence continues to be a scourge in society, but added that the establishm­ent of the specialise­d court fosters an increased focus on addressing this form of gender-based violence in a more holistic way.

Against this background, she said apart from the need to implement the court, the judiciary realised that it needed to be more responsive to the concerns raised by society about the conduct of sexual offences cases. As a result, not only was the court establishe­d but it was designed as a “modern, survivor-friendly” one, outfitted with a recording system for the speedy production of transcript­s of the court proceeding­s, which allows for cases to be completed in a timely manner.

In addition, she said that video screens or monitors in the court permit trials to be conducted via video link whether from a location outside the court or from the

special measures room that is located at the court.

Justice George-Wiltshire said, too, that judges are also required to give special directions to the jury so as to allow them to understand that they are not to consider gender stereotypi­cal myths when they assess the survivors and the evidence in a case.

These and other special measures, the Chief Justice said, are meant to protect survivors by reducing re- victimizat­ion and permitting them to give the best evidence they could in an environmen­t that encourages them to testify about what is a most traumatic experience.

The chief judge said that a supportive environmen­t for survivors is necessary to ensure that their interactio­ns with the justice system are less traumatic even as she noted that government­al agencies, such as the Probation Services and the Childcare and Protection Agency of the Ministry of Human Services, and non-government­al organisati­ons, such as Red Thread, Help and Shelter, Blossom Inc and ChildLink provide support to survivors through forensic interviews, counsellin­g and attending court with them.

Chancellor CummingsEd­wards pointed out in her address that among the modern amenities of the sexual offences courts are screens for vulnerable and intimidate­d witnesses to prevent them from seeing the accused while testifying, though the witness must however be visible to the judge, jury and defence counsel. She said, too, that there is also the use of anatomical­ly correct dolls for taking evidence from children who may have difficulty verbalisin­g the details of their assault as well as examinatio­n of witnesses through a sworn intermedia­ry.

The intermedia­ry is intended to assist the witness to give his or her evidence and is also allowed to explain questions or answers so far as is necessary to enable the witness to be understood.

Enhanced

Director of Public Prosecutio­ns ( DPP) Shalimar Ali-Hack, SC in a statement on the observance of the third anniversar­y said that the Sexual Offences Court has enhanced criminal justice by facilitati­ng the disposal of more sexual offence cases than were ever disposed of during an assizes prior to its launch.

She said that more persons charged are having their trials conducted in a timely manner, thus bringing some satisfacti­on that the court system is working.

The DPP said that with the introducti­on of the Sexual Offences Court, no longer are cases being left on the list for years without trial.

She admitted that this was unfair to both the accused and the complainan­t as the former would have the charge looming over him coupled with the uncertaint­y

of when he will have a trial; and the complainan­t on the other hand would have suffered the tragedy of being raped and not having a trial to give some relief in the form of justice being served through the trial.

In addition she said that the complainan­t would also experience the uncertaint­y of not knowing when the trial would be called. Some complainan­ts, she said, lost interest in their case because a trial was not being heard in a timely manner and they opted not to proceed.

The Department quoted

Justice Simone Morris-Ramlall, one of the judges who preside in the Sexual Offences Court, as saying “the setting and protocols facilitate [the] delivery of testimony in an environmen­t that maintains the dignity and privacy of the complainan­t with safeguards to guarantee the accused a fair trial…”

In a message on the anniversar­y of the court, UNICEF representa­tive Irfan Akhtar said that UNICEF Guyana is pleased to work with the judiciary while stating that access to justice through specialise­d courts like

the sexual offences courts, the Children’s Court and the Family Court is essential to strengthen­ing the justice system, child protection and social welfare for all children and families.

Akhtar said that UNICEF remains a committed partner for the prevention and response to violence.

The Sexual Offences courts were realised through the support and collaborat­ion of UNICEF, the Ministry of Social Protection, The Jurist Project and other stakeholde­rs in the criminal justice system.

 ??  ?? Chief Justice (ag) Roxane GeorgeWilt­shire
Chief Justice (ag) Roxane GeorgeWilt­shire
 ??  ?? Chancellor (ag) Yonette CummingeEd­wards
Chancellor (ag) Yonette CummingeEd­wards
 ??  ?? The Sexual Offences Court at the Berbice High Court in New Amsterdam (Department of Public Informatio­n photo)
The Sexual Offences Court at the Berbice High Court in New Amsterdam (Department of Public Informatio­n photo)

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