Sowetan

HIV+ rapist’s life term appeal fails

Man was on parole for another rape

- By Philani Nombembe

While the high court conceded that a rapist was intelligen­t‚ in its sentencing it showed it did not think his defence was particular­ly clever.

The 44-year-old HIV-positive man from the small Eastern Cape town of Patensie argued that it was not “the worst kind of rape” because his victim did not contract HIV. The man’s name is withheld to protect his victim.

The father of four‚ described in court documents as a “churchgoer”‚ appealed a life sentence he received for rape and housebreak­ing in the high court in Grahamstow­n this month. But a full bench of the court threw the book at him. According to the judgment, the man‚ who knew his victim and her husband – and knew the whereabout­s of the husband the particular night – broke into their home and raped the woman while she lay next to her baby.

“The circumstan­ces relevant in the matter disclose an abhorrent humiliatin­g physically and psychologi­cally devastatin­g attack upon the [victim]‚” judge Murray Lowe said. “[The man] crept on the bed‚ raping the [woman]. To do so‚ he strangled her to the extent that she had neck bruising injuries and despite her determined struggle fighting him off‚ [the woman] was subdued and overcome.

“The [man] also struck [the woman] hard on the right cheek with his fist‚ also injuring her. He also threatened to kill her if she told of the rape.” The man committed the crimes while on parole. He was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonme­nt in 2002 for housebreak­ing and rape.

His counsel argued that had the court that sentenced him considered that the victim did not contract HIV‚ he could have been eligible for a 15-year sentence. The full bench heard that the man was not married and lived with his mother‚ was a qualified welder and earned R750 per week. “He is a churchgoer and working when he can in second jobs for further income‚” the court documents read. The full bench found that the chances that the man could be rehabilita­ted were slim. It upheld the life sentence.

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