Scottish Daily Mail

New blow for Cyprus rape case student

Briton told appeal to clear name could take 6 months

- From Inderdeep Bains in Nicosia

A BRITISH university student convicted of ‘crying rape’ in Cyprus faces an agonising six-month wait to find out if her attempt to clear her name has been successful.

The 21-year-old’s lawyers appeared before the island’s Supreme Court yesterday to try to get her conviction overturned.

But the three appeal court judges reserved their decision, and while her lawyers said they were satisfied with the proceeding­s, they warned it could take up to six months for a judgment to be given.

The young woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, has maintained that she was gang-raped by up to 12 Israeli youths while on her summer break in a budget hotel in the resort of Ayia Napa in 2019 when she was 18.

Her legal team argued in court in the capital, Nicosia, that ‘all her rights were violated’ when local police interrogat­ed her for more than six hours without access to a lawyer while her alleged attackers were set free. They claimed she was bullied into signing a retraction statement, which was used to charge and eventually convict her of ‘public mischief’ at a shambolic trial in Cyprus.

After spending five weeks in prison and almost six months trapped on the island, the woman was given a suspended four-month jail sentence in January last year.

She vowed to clear her name and yesterday her legal team – led by campaign group Justice Abroad – argued in court that her conviction is unsafe and should be overturned.

The woman chose not to return to Cyprus for the hearing and instead followed it from her home in Derbyshire, supported by her mother, who said last night: ‘We are relieved the appeal has been heard. It’s been a stressful time leading up to it.

‘She barely slept last night and the appeal is bringing back lots of bad feelings from what happened to her 2019.’

In Saturday’s Daily Mail the student described the nightmares she suffers and how her ordeal has overshadow­ed her new life at university.

The 12 Israeli men and boys – aged 15 to 20 at the time – arrested over the incident denied any wrongdoing and returned home.

‘It’s bringing back lots of bad feelings’

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