The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Parliament to debate law on sexual consent age

- Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter

PARLIAMENT is set to debate the Criminal Law (Codificati­on and Reform) (Protection of Children and Young Persons) Amendment Bill that raises the age of sexual consent from 16 to 18.

President Mnangagwa invoked his powers under the Presidenti­al Powers (Temporary Measures) Act to gazette Statutory Instrument 2 of 2024, in compliance with a Constituti­onal Court ruling that had declared a section of the law that sets sexual consent age at 16 as unconstitu­tional.

The Statutory Instrument invoked by the President raised the age of consent to sexual relations to 18, consistent with the Constituti­on which sets the minimum marriage age at 18 and defines all young people as below the age of 18, while the original law defined them as below the age of 16, so protection was withdrawn from 17 and 18-year-olds.

The Presidenti­al Powers however, have a lifespan of just six months during which Parliament has to pass a substantiv­e law if the desire is to make the measure permanent.

The preamble to the Bill gazetted last week confirms that the proposed law is meant to confirm the temporary law.

“This Bill will confirm amendments made by a Presidenti­al emergency decree that was necessitat­ed by the implementa­tion of the Constituti­onal Court’s judgment in Kawenda v Minister of Justice and Others. The President’s interventi­on was rendered more urgent by a court-ordered release of all offenders convicted of statutory rape,” reads the preamble of the Bill.

“The Criminal Law (Codificati­on and Reform) Act (commonly called the Criminal Law Code) contains several sections that protect children from sexual exploitati­on. The sections call children “young persons”, and that term is defined as meaning boys and girls under the age of 16 years. The Constituti­on, on the other hand, fixes 18 years as the age at which children become adults, so although the Criminal Law Code protects children under the age of 16 it does not provide protection for children between the ages of 17 and 18.

“As a result the Constituti­onal Court has declared the definition of “young person” in section 61, as well as sections 70, 76, 83 and 86 of the Code, to be unconstitu­tional and void.”

The objective of the Bill is to amend the law in a manner that protects children.

“The main purpose of this Bill is to amend the Criminal Law Code by replacing those sections and extending the Code’s protection to all children up to the age of 18 years, as required by the Constituti­on. The Bill will also amend the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act to make it possible for children and other witnesses who cannot talk to give evidence in other ways such as through written statements, signs and other augmentati­ve and alternativ­e communicat­ions,” reads the Bill.

Clause Three will amend the Criminal Law Code on the definition of “extra-marital sexual intercours­e” to make it clear that child marriages are not recognised as valid marriages.

“In other words, sexual intercours­e between a child and an adult will not be legal even if they have gone through a form of marriage. The new definition of “young person” will extend the Code’s protection to cover all children, ie boys and girls under the age of 18 years,” reads the Bill.

Clause Four will replace section 70 of the Criminal Law Code, which makes it a crime to have sexual intercours­e or engage in other sexual activity with a young person.

“The new section will differ from the existing one in the following ways: It will extend the protection provided by the section to cover boys and girls up to the age of 18 years.

“It will add a provision stating that if the persons who engage in sexual activity are of a similar age — specifical­ly where the difference in their ages is three years or less — the Prosecutor-General will have to authorise their prosecutio­n before they can be charged under the section. Before authorisin­g a prosecutio­n, the Prosecutor-General will have to consider a report from a probation officer but will not be obliged to follow the probation officer’s advice,” reads the Bill.

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