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Posted: 2019-12-30 14:32:32

Emerging from the court house after the verdict, both the woman and her mother wore strips of fabric over their mouths onto which stitched lips were drawn.

Papathanasiou said that the defendant admitted to investigators under questioning that she had lied and apologised. He said she made up the claims because she was "ashamed" after finding out that some of the Israelis had videoed her having consensual sex with her Israeli boyfriend on their mobile phones.

The judge said the woman admitted that what had transpired in the hotel room happened with her consent. He said that admission and her subsequent apology "was the only time the defendant told the truth."

The court heard that a physical examination of the woman after she filed the complaint to police found no evidence of rape. The judge rejected testimony from a pathologist testifying for the defence that rape couldn't be ruled out.

The woman told investigators that she had been raped by as many as a dozen Israelis aged 15-20 on July 17. Cyprus police said she retracted the allegations 10 days later after investigators found what they said were inconsistencies in her statements.

All 12 Israelis returned home shortly after their release and their defence lawyers said they would sue the woman for damages.

Taking the stand earlier in the trial, the British woman said that while she was having sex with her boyfriend, she was pinned down and others who entered the room raped her.

She said that she felt threatened by investigators while she was being questioned and that she feared she would be arrested if she didn't sign the retraction, adding that she "even feared for her life."

Judge Papathanasiou dismissed her testimony as being "exaggerated, confused, contradictory and incoherent."

Defence lawyer Ritsa Pekri asked the court to mitigate her sentence, saying that she regretted her actions and only did what she did out of "immaturity," and because she was under strong psychological pressure. Pekri said the woman is on anti-depressants.

Outside of the court, Nicoletta Charalambidou, another lawyer on the British woman's legal team, said the conviction was expected and that an appeal would be filed to Cyprus' Supreme Court because defence lawyers feel that their client's rights to a fair trial had been "violated to a significant degree."

Charalambidou said witness testimony for the defence created "reasonable doubt" that her client was guilty of the public mischief charge, adding that the judge didn't "properly assess" that testimony.

She said Pekri's remark that the British woman regretted her actions "doesn't mean that she admits guilt."

Michael Polak with the group Justice Abroad, which also helped defend the British woman, said the appeal will be based on the premise that there was evidence indicating that the woman had been raped, but that the judge refused to consider it.

The lawyer for some of the 12 Israelis accused by a 19-year-old British woman of gang raping her welcomed the ruling.

Lawyer Nir Yaslovitzh called for a "harsh sentence" in order to deter "all those accusers who find it OK to make up false" accusations.

AP

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