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Judges miss chance to condemn 'barbaric' custom

Publish date: 15 July 2019
Issue Number: 832
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Corruption

Three women judges of Zambia' Court of Appeal have dismissed a young man's appeal against his sentence of 30 years' imprisonment with hard labour for violently raping his 12-year-old cousin three times. The accused maintained he took the girl as part of a Tonga custom in terms of which, as the judges put it in their decision, 'one can abduct a woman and have sexual intercourse with her and later formalise the marriage'. But, as Carmel Rickard writes in her A Matter of Justice column on the Legalbrief site, the judges did not take the opportunity to criticise this custom. They simply rejected this justification of his actions because the trial record did not mention any agreement between the accused and the girl's father for her to be abducted for the purposes of marriage. Why don't judges speak out and condemn such barbarities?' she asks.

A Matter of Justice

Ruling

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