By MELISSA WELLHAM
Imagine this.
A 15-year-old girl, who has been repeatedly raped by her stepfather, sits in a courtroom during his trial.
The evidence is clear, there is no question that this crime took place. That this man, in a position of trust and confidence in her life, violated her sexually again, and again, and again.
During the trial, it comes to light that the girl had had consensual sex with another man, prior to the rape.
And so she herself is sentenced. Because the girl lives in the Maldives. And the island paradise destination that Australians look longingly at photos of in travel agency brochures…. is subject to Sharia Law.
And under Sharia Law, it is a crime to have premarital sex.
So the girl, a victim of horrific rape, is sentences to 100 lashes as punishment for her ‘crime’.
You can stop imagining now. Because this is no hypothetical, this is real, this is happening: in 2013.
On February 26, the girl was further sentenced to eight months house arrest for her ‘crime’. The Juvenile Court that oversaw her case (yes, this was the decision of a legitimate court) ordered the girl to a children’s home in a nearby community, where she is to serve her eight months arrest before being subjected to the whipping on her 18th birthday.