The
trial of a man accused of participating in a brutal gang rape of a
schoolgirl, and who was made to cut grass as punishment for his actions,
opened Tuesday in Busia in western Kenya.
The suspect,
who is charged with gang rape and grievous bodily harm, tried to cover
his face as he appeared under tight police security, according to an AFP reporter in the courtroom.
As
the suspect is himself a minor, reporters and the public were ordered
to leave the court after prosecution lawyers asked for the hearing to be
held in private.
Worldwide outrage over the alleged
rapists' lenient punishment last year prompted more than 1.7 million
people to sign a petition demanding justice.
The
16-year-old victim, known by the pseudonym Liz, was reportedly attacked,
beaten and then raped by six men as she returned from her grandfather's
funeral in June 2013.
The gang dumped her, bleeding and unconscious, in a deep sewage ditch.
She
suffered a broken back, caused either by the beating or by being hurled
down into the pit, as well as serious internal injuries from the rape.
CUTTING GRASS
The
case made global headlines after it emerged that three of the alleged
rapists whom Liz identified were ordered by police to cut grass around
the police station as punishment.
"For me the opening of this trial marks a beginning of a new chapter — and victory —
after a long struggle," said Mary Makokha, a local civil rights
activist who has been a key leader campaigning to stop rape in the area.
"I hope this opens doors to other voiceless girls who are vulnerable and may suffer the same cause," she added.
Rape is a serious problem in Kenya but is seldom taken seriously by the police, rights groups say.
Police
chief David Kimaiyo has cast doubt on Liz's testimony, saying in
November that the time between her screams for help and villagers'
coming to her rescue was "too short for six assailants to have
gang-raped her."
But the public prosecutor later ordered the suspects to be charged with gang rape.
The
other suspects are reported to be on the run, with the public
prosecutor ordering they be "apprehended and brought to justice without
further delay."
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