NAIROBI,
Kenya's
chief justice said Saturday he had ordered "immediate action" over a
case where men accused of brutally gang raping a schoolgirl were ordered
to cut grass as punishment.
The ferocious attack on
the teenage girl and the lack of action against those who carried it out
sparked outrage in the country, while over 1.3 million people worldwide
have signed a petition demanding justice.
The
16-year-old, known by the pseudonym Liz, was reportedly attacked, beaten
and then raped by six men as she returned from her grandfather's
funeral in western Kenya in June, before the gang dumped her, bleeding
and unconscious, in a deep sewage ditch.
"I have sent
the matter to the National Council for the Administration of Justice
(NCAJ) for immediate action," Kenya Chief Justice Willy Mutunga said
Saturday.
The NCAJ is Kenya's top-level judicial
oversight body bringing together the judiciary, police, attorney-general
and director of public prosecutions.
KEEP OFF OUR PANTIES!
On
Thursday, hundreds of protestors marched through Nairobi wearing
T-shirts with the slogan "Justice for Liz" and draping dozens of women's
knickers along the fence of the police station.
Nebila Abdulmelik, of the women's rights campaign group Femnet launched the petition demanding justice.
"Our
immediate task is for the arrest and prosecution of the perpetrators,
and then disciplinary action at the police who failed to take action,
because we feel that they embolden others to rape," Abdulmelik said
during the demonstration.
"We are using Liz's story to
bring to light all the other cases of violence that are not necessarily
reported to the media, to the police."
Liz is now
wheelchair-bound with a broken back, caused either by the beating or by
being hurled down into the pit, and also suffered serious internal
injuries from the rape.
Her mother told the Daily
Nation newspaper, which first reported the story, that three men
identified by Liz were only ordered to cut grass around the police
station.
Rape is a major problem in Kenya, and is often not taken seriously by the police, according to studies.
One
government study in 2009 found that as many as a fifth of women and
girls were victims of sexual violence, although other studies have put
the rate even higher
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