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Your right to Protection from Continuing Abuse

* Any women who is being assaulted, threatened or harassed by an abuser can apply through a lawyer for a court order telling them to stop their behaviour. This is called an interdict.
* An interdict can be granted if you want an abuser to be told to stop assaulting you but do not wish to have them put out of the home. It can also be granted if you are living apart from the abuser and you still need protection from them. For example, the abuser may be prohibited from assaulting and threatening you in your home or anywhere else, or from coming within fifty yards of the family home.
* If the abuser breaks the interdict, the response of the police will depend on whether or not a power of arrest is attached to the interdict.
* If there is a power of arrest then the police can arrest the abuser if they have reasonable suspicion that the interdict has been broken.
* If there is not a power of arrest then the police have no special powers unless the abuser has committed a separate criminal offence at the time. If no criminal offence has been committed, you must go to your lawyer about taking your abuser through the civil courts for 'breach of interdict'.
* You can apply to the court for a power of arrest to be attached. It is important that you talk to a lawyer about applying for this protection, your local women's aid group can provide you with a list of sympathetic lawyers

 

 

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