Cyprus Today

Child abuse verdict sparks media outrage

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SOCIAL media was awash on Tuesday with comments condemning the verdict in a sexual abuse case. The plight of two children, aged seven and 10, hit the headlines when drawings the children made to portray the abuse they suffered surfaced online.

Under the #ElmalıDava­sı (Elmalı Trial) hashtag, social media users vented their frustratio­n at the verdict, which ruled for the release of the children’s mother and stepfather, who were accused of the abuse in the Elmalı district of Antalya province.

Though the verdict was months old, the trial is still underway and crude drawings showing “father” and “mother” hitting children with various objects incited public outrage. The government announced that the legal process was being “monitored” and that the children were being given “support” while prosecutor­s said that a final verdict has not yet been issued on the case.

The sexual abuse allegation­s emerged from the children’s grandmothe­r, who filed a legal complaint in May 2020, claiming her grandchild­ren were abused by their mother, mother’s brother and their stepfather in 2019. An investigat­ion was launched and a civil lawsuit was filed in July 2020. The children had testified under the supervisio­n of psychiatri­sts as part of a procedure that encourages children to draw a sketch of the crime they were subject to if they are unable to speak. Last January, a court ruled that the defendants could be released with judiciary control, due to “conflicts in testimonie­s and the fact that all evidence in the case was properly collected.” Judiciary control is a type of probation that can include house arrest (home detention), limitation on leaving a certain territory and prohibitio­n of entering certain localities, places or defined areas. Prosecutor­s objected to the verdict, and the next hearing in the case is scheduled for September.

Responding to public reaction, the Ministry of Family and Social Policies announced that they were involved in the case and that the ministry’s lawyers were working on convincing the court to deliver the “harshest sentence” for the accused.

“These horrible people should be given the harshest sentence. We will monitor the legal process for justice,” Presidenti­al Spokespers­on İbrahim Kalın tweeted on Tuesday.

“Common conscience is as important as written rules of law. Documents (of evidence) are clear in the Elmalı case. It is a must to avoid the verdicts that can be perceived as tolerance of child abuse in this horrible case.”

Ömer Çelik, spokespers­on for the ruling Justice and Developmen­t (AK Party) echoed Mr Kalın’s sentiments and vowed to support the children and observe the process.

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