http://www.dailychilli.com/news/4755-ear-test-for-mans-virginity

Ear test for man's virginity 


Vietnamese acupuncturist Pham Thi Hong performs point acupuncture on Nguyen 
Dinh Kien, 30, at her home in Hanoi, Vietnam. Hong who claims she can detect a 
man's virginity based on a small dot on the ear.
An acupuncturist who claims she can detect a man's virginity based on a small 
dot on the ear has become a minor celebrity in Vietnam, where she is credited 
with helping to free three convicted rapists from prison.

Traditional medicine practitioner Pham Thi Hong started lobbying for the men's 
release, pleading their case all the way to the president, because she believes 
all three men are virgins and therefore could not be guilty of rape.

"They all had small red spots on the back of their ears," said Hong, 54. "The 
spots should have disappeared if they had had sex. My many years of experience 
told me that these men did not have sex before."

Her claims are unusual even for a country where acupuncture and traditional 
medicine are still common remedies, but Hong's determination to have the case 
reopened - even threatening to light herself on fire - led to prosecutors 
re-examining the case. The convictions eventually were suspended due to flaws 
by initial investigators.

"Thanks to her efforts, investigators revisited the case which otherwise could 
have been buried," said Nong Thi Hong Ha, a lawyer for one of the freed men.

Hong says she discovered the spot on Nguyen Dinh Kien's ear the first time he 
visited her for treatment four years ago. He was brought to the hospital from 
prison, where he was serving a 16-year sentence after being convicted of gang 
raping a 20-year-old woman in 2000.

After seeing the spot on Kien's ear, Hong believed his insistence that he was 
innocent. She later examined his two alleged accomplices and began a campaign 
for their release. Eventually, President Nguyen Minh Triet ordered that the 
case be re-examined.

Investigators who revisited the case discovered flaws, including the fact that 
testimonies of witnesses indicating their innocence were not included in the 
case's files, according to the local Pioneer newspaper. The three men, having 
served 10 years in jail, were released in January.

Vietnamese newspapers have dedicated profiles to Hong and her virginity test, 
crediting her with helping to free the men while not expressing any skepticism 
of her ability. Earlier this week, she went on an online chat on Pioneer 
newspaper where readers expressed their "great admiration" for her efforts.

She says she was first taught how to determine if a man has ever had sex by 
feeling their pulse. She later developed the ear-spot method on her own. She 
says the spot will only disappear after heterosexual intercourse and is not 
affected by gay sex or masturbation.

"I never thought that one day I would use this method to help the three men 
prove their innocence," said Hong, while treating a patient in her home on the 
outskirts of Hanoi.

Her virgin-detecting claims have drawn skepticism from other traditional 
medicine practitioners, who work with needles, herbs and other methods using 
centuries-old techniques to manipulate energy, or chi, in the body.

"I have never heard of this method before," said Nguyen Van Hao, 60, an 
acupuncturist who has practiced for 14 years. "From the medical point of view, 
it's impossible to determine whether a man has had sex or not by feeling the 
pulse or examining the red spot on their ears."

Hong, however, said she's convinced her method works after years of testing it 
on her students.

Hong says her reputation has now prompted other convicted rapists to seek her 
help in appealing their cases.

"I'm not planning to launch a campaign to clear innocent people who were 
falsely convicted of rape," she said. "But I'm willing to help people to prove 
their innocence, if they really are." - AP

Published July 2 2010

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