Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Strauss-Kahn: a trial of the accuser not the accused...

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A French attorney told the Guardian on Monday that "It's not that he [the DA] doesn't believe her, it's that he doesn't believe her to be a good victim." A woman who gets intoxicated can be raped. Prostitutes can be raped. And a poor woman who has told lies can be raped. In fact, it is often the women who "don't make good victims" who are most at risk because they are the most vulnerable, and it is these women who are least likely to be listened to.

Diallo's past proved to be more incriminating than Strauss-Kahn's, a man with an infamously predatory reputation towards women, and who has since been accused of another sexual assault by a French writer. In an interview with the Swiss magazine L'illustré, a former mistress of Strauss-Kahn said that Diallo's description of how he grabbed her "encouraged me to believe this woman". But all too often in rape cases, the principle of presumption of innocence for the accused tips into assumption of guilt for the accuser. Full story...

Don't miss:
  1. The real Strauss-Kahn story back at the New York Times... 
  2. Was the hotel maid's tape recordings doctored in favour of Strauss-Kahn? 
  3. As hotel maid Diallo goes public, pressure mounts on Strauss-Kahn... 
  4. Strauss Kahn: "Somebody did something bad to me", says victim... 
  5. Strauss-Kahn is " “a predator who seeks not to please but to take... 
  6. Strauss-Kahn: are we too quick to assume innocence? 
  7. Rape isn't funny: on making excuses for Strauss-Kahn...
  8. Air France 'let only males serve Strauss-Kahn'
  9. Her name was Africa. His was France. Her name was silence. His was power.

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