DA escalates child pregnancy failures of government to SAHRC

Issued by Angel Khanyile MP – DA Spokesperson on Women, Youth & People with Disabilities
07 Jun 2026 in News

Please find attached soundbite by Angel Khanyile MP. 

The DA remains deeply concerned that a national crisis of child pregnancies and statutory rape is not being addressed by the relevant actors in government. Just this week statistics presented in Parliament showed that 1,900 cases of statutory rape were abandoned by police and prosecutors since 2021.

The DA will not accept that young girls are being raped and sexually abused in silence, are carrying children, and the system is failing them at every step.

Police, Health, Justice and Social Development are all grossly in dereliction of their duty.

The DA will now file a comprehensive complaint with the South African Human Rights Commission to address the violation of human rights of young girls who are raped and made to carry children without legal consequences for their rapists.

The DA’s dossier will be populated with shocking findings uncovered by the DA showing systemic failure by numerous actors in government to report, track, investigate and prosecute suspected sexual abuse against children.

Last year the DA established an internal Task Team working on the DA’s fight against Gender-Based Violence, including the sexual abuse and rape of children.

The DA’s Task Team launched a national investigation, where questions were submitted to national Ministers and Provincial departments to determine the extent of child pregnancy and whether these departments are reporting these to the relevant authorities; as in some cases, a child being pregnant is prima facie evidence of a serious crime.

What the DA uncovered should shock every South African.

We believe that the fundamental constitutional rights of a child to dignity and to be protected from abuse are being violated by flawed systems that are working in silos.

Ahead of opening the SAHRC complaint we are finalising our papers to request that the SAHRC investigate these failures urgently and thoroughly, identify solutions, and make recommendations (both punitive and remedial).

The key issues found during our investigation were:

– the Department of Health revealed that of the 122,302 adolescents that gave birth in 2023/24, some 2,716 were between 10 and 14 years old.

– SAPS revealed that just 610 statutory rape cases were reported in 2023/24, with 39.5% of victims being 15 years old, 30.77% being 14 years old, and 20.66% being 13 years old.

– SAPS further revealed that in 2023/24 there were just 129 child births, 138 child pregnancies, and 27 child miscarriages/terminations reported for a whole year, for criminal investigation.

– Between 2021/22 and 2024/25, the NPA decided to enrol a total of 2,845 cases and successfully prosecuted 980 cases, closed 2,166 without result, and unsuccessfully prosecuted 180 cases.

– In 2024, the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Social Development reported 0 (nil) cases of statutory rape to SAPS. However, in that same period KZN DSD had received 2,185 form 22 complaints – 55 from DoH, and 1,157 from Non-Governmental Organisations (“NGOs”), and members of the public.

– In Mpumalanga, between 2020/21 and 2024/25, 65 087 children aged 10-19 years gave birth in Mpumalanga health facilities, of which 1 824 were aged 14 years or younger. Yet in 2022/23, just 4 (four) cases of child births, terminations or miscarriages, or pregnancies were reported to Mpumalanga DSD, and In 2023/24, just 2 (two) cases were reported, and in 2024/25, just 5 (five) case was reported.

The numbers simply do not add up, and Departments are working in silos, failing to comply with statutory reporting requirements, indicating a catastrophic failure in data management and sharing.

Our children deserve to be protected, and at the very least, the systems in place to protect children should work.