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Gang Rape Suspects’ Punishment: Mow Grass

(CNN) — Outraged Kenyans are demanding justice for a teenage girl who was allegedly gang-raped, dumped in a sewage ditch, and left for dead. Her alleged a...
grass

(CNN) — Outraged Kenyans are demanding justice for a teenage girl who was allegedly gang-raped, dumped in a sewage ditch, and left for dead.

Her alleged attackers were ordered to cut grass at the police station as punishment, then later freed, local rights groups said.

The 16-year-old was walking home from her grandfather’s funeral in Busia town when the attack occurred.

After the alleged rape, the six men reportedly buried her in the 20-foot latrine. Neighbors heard her cries for help hours later and pulled her out, bloody and by then unconscious, according to Kenya’s Daily Nation, which broke the story.

She identified three of her attackers, and neighbors hauled them off to the local police station, the paper said.

Police ordered the suspects to cut grass in the yard, then released them shortly after, according to the newspaper, which is spearheading a fundraiser to help meet the medical bills for the teen, who’s been nicknamed Liz.

Word of the attack, which occurred weeks ago, got out this month. An outcry ensued on social media, with Kenyans expressing their dismay using the hashtags #JusticeforLiz and #StandwithLiz. They are demanding the arrest of the suspects and the officers who ordered them to cut grass.

“This is yet another example of blatant impunity and repeated noncompliance by the police and other government authorities. Rape and other gender crimes have consistently been treated as lesser crimes — this is unacceptable,” Kenya’s Coalition on Violence Against Women said in a statement.

The girl has had to use a wheelchair since the attack, according to the Daily Nation newspaper. She’s also suffering from a condition that makes her unable to control her bowels as a result of the rape.

CNN does not name victims of sexual assault.

The global campaigning network Avaaz has launched an online petition demanding justice. It had more than 400,000 signatures by Saturday.

In a tweet Saturday, Kenyan police chief David Kimaiyo thanked Kenyans for bringing the case to light.

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