LEGISLATION NAME | Penal Code (Amendment) Act 2024 |
COUNTRY | Seychelles |
STATUS | Enacted 01 October 2024 |
SUMMARY
The Penal Code (Amendment) Act 2024 was passed by the Seychelles National Assembly on 18 September 2024. It was signed into law by the President on 30 September 2024 and took effect on 01 October 2024.
The Act, for the first time in the country’s history, allows for hate crimes to be recognised within the criminal justice system and prosecuted accordingly. It ensures that the hate element is considered at the sentencing stage, when a crime is motivated by prejudice against one or more of the victim’s protected characteristics: sexual orientation, gender identity, race, religious belief, disability, sex characteristics, political affiliation or HIV/AIDS status.
ACT DETAILS
Under the Act, a criminal offence is ‘aggravated’ by hate if there is enough evidence that immediately before, during or immediately after committing the offence, the perpetrator demonstrates hostility towards the victim based on one or more of the victim’s protected characteristics; or if there is enough evidence that the perpetrator committed the crime because of one or more of the victim’s protected characteristics. Where a crime is charged as aggravated, and it is proved before the court that it is aggravated by hate, the court must consider this when determining the sentence for the crime.
The Act represents a wider milestone for hate crime legislation globally, being the first hate crime law in the world that follows the ‘hybrid model’. This model was developed by Professor Mark Walters at the University of Sussex, and is based on an extensive analysis of all existing forms of hate crime law across the world, their benefits and their limitations. His research shows that using the hybrid model, which enables any existing criminal offence to be charged as ‘aggravated’ by hate, has several important impacts:
- It increases the likelihood of law enforcement agencies collecting relevant evidence of identity-based hate which can be considered by the courts
- It has an important symbolic purpose, showing that the element of hate in a crime is recognised in law
- It acknowledges the particularly harmful nature of hate crimes
OUR INVOLVEMENT
Since 2020, the Human Dignity Trust has worked with the Attorney General’s office in Seychelles to provide technical legal assistance in drafting the hate crime components of the Act, together with Professor Walters of Sussex Law School. The Act also includes elements relating to hate speech, in which the Trust was not involved.