Gang Rape of Four Muslim Brothers Underway in OZ

In the open: rapists' campaign of vicious assaultsBy Natasha Wallace July
22, 2005

 
Unending trauma ... two of the rapists' victims who gave evidence against
them.
Photo: Tamara Dean



They are probably the most violent, prolific gang rapists Sydney has known,
with as many as 18 young victims. But until now the extent of the horrific
crimes of four brothers from Pakistan has been kept secret.

Yesterday, more than three years after they went on a six-month rampage,
luring girls as young as 13 to their home in Ashfield to rape them,
suppression orders forbidding publication of their trial details were
lifted.

They still cannot be named because two of the brothers were juveniles, aged
16 and 17, when they committed the first offences. But the crimes of the
brothers MSK, MAK, MRK and MMK, and their friend RS, can now be made public.

The brothers, who came to Australia from Pakistan around 2000, had claimed
in the face of damning DNA evidence that they were the victims of an
anti-Muslim conspiracy.

The eldest brother feigned mental illness, they sacked numerous lawyers and
aborted trials to ensure delays as they tried to wear down the victims who
had agreed to testify.

Yesterday the Director of Public Prosecutions, Nicholas Cowdery, QC, said
the brothers took the rules that ensure a fair trial "to their limits" and
they "may need to be re-examined to assess whether they are appropriate".

"People from time to time test the operation of these rules. Some people
call it game-playing, but if the rules are there to be tested and used, that
is a legitimate part of the process," Mr Cowdery said.

"It may be that a view can be taken that the rules are being abused and if
that view is being taken it may be time for those rules to be changed."

The rapes of at least eight girls took place mostly in the brothers'
Ashfield home between January and July 2002. The girls were invited to a
"party", but would arrive at the house, which was strewn with rubbish and
plastered with posters of semi-naked girls, to find no other females there.

Some victims were repeatedly raped at knifepoint and told they would be
killed if they went to police. The brothers videotaped their rapes, and the
tapes show another dozen possible victims. The police have not been able to
find them all and some did not want to come forward.

The victims who did make complaints breathed a sigh of relief on Monday,
when the oldest brother, MSK, pleaded guilty to the aggravated sexual
assault of a 13-year-old girl in July 2002. That spared the victim from
having to give evidence and brought the series of trials to an end.

The brutality of the crime, the last to go to trial, was typical. Before
raping the girl, MSK told her he had strangled a girlfriend and hung her
from a balcony in Iraq - though he was from Pakistan.

In June this year MSK was found guilty of four counts of aggravated sexual
assault against a 14-year-old. MAK pleaded guilty to one count of the same
charge after the trial was aborted due to outbursts by MSK, who shouted
details of their previous convictions at the jury. He also jumped the dock
and threw broken glass at the victims' mothers.

Under cross-examination, the girl was accused of coaxing MSK to have sex.
She told the Herald: "It's always going to be terrible. In your mind you
relive the experience over and over again. A smell will set it off or a word
. but nothing was as hard as retelling the whole story . in detail while
being accused of being a liar."

All five men had already been sentenced in April last year to between 10 and
22 years in jail for gang-raping two other girls, aged 16 and 17. RS hanged
himself a week before sentencing.

For the first trial, in 2003, a new law was rushed through to prevent MSK
and MAK personally cross-examining their victims. For the next two years MSK
and MAK subjected their victims, the police, prosecutors, judges and even
their own defence barristers to calculated ploys to avoid justice. An
investigating police officer, Detective Leading Senior Constable Tony Adams,
told the Herald this meant the victims continued to suffer long after the
rapes. "It's been really trying at times but it's satisfying to see the end
result and get the guilty verdicts." The victim who was spared giving
evidence in the last trial told the Herald this week: "I am still angry but
relieved. I was just nervous about everything and to face him - I was glad I
didn't have to go through that."

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2005/07/21/1121539094208.html



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