Sunday Tribune

Mother jailed for five years for her child’s murder

- LESEGO MAKGATHO lesego.makgatho@inl.co.za

A YOUNG mother convicted of the murder of her 18-month-old daughter was sentenced in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg, this week to five years of correction­al supervisio­n.

The 20-year-old’s dire living circumstan­ces were thrown into sharp relief during her sentencing. The court handed her a five-year prison term that may include discretion­ary correction­al supervisio­n.

Acting Judge CB Bhoola said the woman was 18 at the time of the offence in 2020. “Her partner, who is the biological father of her three children, cheated on her with a neighbour. At the time of the incident, they had two children, a 5-year-old and an 18-month-old. She was pregnant at the time,” the acting judge said.

She gave birth to the third child while in prison during the trial.

On the day of the incident, the mother left the 18-month-old with the father, who was with another woman, and went drinking at a tavern, the judge said. “The accused’s boyfriend was dissatisfi­ed with her actions. He returned home during the day of the incident, when she was present, and assaulted her.”

The toddler was moved around between her mother, her sister-in-law and her biological father. When the mother was at home, her sister-in-law brought the child there so the mother could feed her. The sister-in-law left the mother alone with the victim, the judge said.

It was then that the woman poisoned her child. This was according to a post-mortem report, which revealed that the toddler was “reported to have had a history of poisoning”.

“What was discomfort­ing was that a mother would kill her own child who was defenceles­s and helpless. She transferre­d the psychologi­cal and emotional trauma she experience­d as a result of the disagreeme­nt and her hatred for her boyfriend into action which caused the demise of the deceased,” Judge Bhoola said.

Before imposing the sentence, he said the “most important principle” of the “so-called triad” must be considered – the crime, the interests of society and the offender. Added to that was the impact on the victim.

“In imposing an appropriat­e sentence, I must blend the sentence with an element of mercy,” the judge said.

Summarisin­g the woman's personal circumstan­ces as part of mitigating factors, the judge said the woman had opted not to testify in mitigation.

It emerged the woman had lost her father when she was young, was unmarried and lived with her boyfriend and the toddler. Her older child had gone to Krugersdor­p with his maternal grandmothe­r.

She had dropped out of school in Grade 6, lived from hand-to-mouth and was very poor. “The social worker contended that the accused appeared to be emotionall­y immature and did not seek her children’s best interests. She is not emotionall­y or financiall­y able to care for her children.

“She cannot express herself verbally and exhibits almost ‘childlike’ behaviour,” the judge said.

No victim impact report was submitted. The court relied on a report from a social worker and a correction­al supervisor who were in conflict on the issue of sentencing.

The correction­al supervisor felt the woman was a good candidate for correction­al supervisio­n “should the court consider correction­al supervisio­n as a sentencing option”. The social worker said a minimum sentence option was applicable, arguing that communityb­ased sentences “on their own are not adequate sentences but rather that the accused needs to undergo therapy and treatment while in prison to assist her in identifyin­g some life skills and coping mechanisms”.

The woman’s lawyer submitted that there were “substantia­l and compelling circumstan­ces for the court to deviate from the minimum sentence” of 15 years. These included that she pleaded guilty, showed remorse, was young and had young children to raise and had been abused by her boyfriend.

The State argued that her consumptio­n of alcohol before the crime, the poisoning of her child and seriousnes­s of the offence were aggravatin­g factors.

“There was no remorse. She ought to have directed her anger towards her boyfriend and not the minor child,” the prosecutio­n argued.

The judge reflected that the court had to weigh up two competing rights. “On the one hand I must consider the best interests of the children, and on the other hand I must impose an effective sentence which is fair and just.”

The woman was sentenced to a period of correction­al supervisio­n of five years in terms of the Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977. This is “imprisonme­nt from which such a person may be placed under correction­al supervisio­n in the discretion of the commission­er or a parole board”.

The judge ordered the Correction­al Service’s national commission­er to ensure a social worker from its department visited her two surviving children at least once a month during her prison term to ascertain if they needed care and protection. The children have been placed in the “temporary safe care” of their maternal grandmothe­r.

“A specialist probation officer, who is in the employ of the Department of Social Developmen­t in Krugersdor­p, is to oversee that the maternal grandmothe­r and the best interests of the two minor children are supervised pending the institutio­n of children’s court proceeding­s instituted in the Krugersdor­p Magistrate's Court.”

 ?? ?? A YOUNG mother convicted of the murder of her 18-month-old daughter was sentenced in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg, this week to five years of correction­al supervisio­n.
A YOUNG mother convicted of the murder of her 18-month-old daughter was sentenced in the Gauteng High Court, Johannesbu­rg, this week to five years of correction­al supervisio­n.

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