Four years for rape is not enough, Flemish justice minister says

Four years for rape is not enough, Flemish justice minister says
Flemish Minister of Energy Zuhal Demir. Credit: Belga

The Flemish Minister of Justice, Zuhal Demir, took to Twitter to say the four-year prison sentence for a 19-year-old convicted of rape is 'too low'. The man was handed the sentence for the rape a pregnant woman.

Minister Demir has called for improved therapy and rehabilitation for sex offenders in prison, saying there is “never an excuse” for raping women. She also lashed out at lawyer Christine Mussche, after she referred to the defender and client as an “ordinary” boy.

Translation Tweet: An 'ordinary boy', Master Mussche? An ordinary boy doesn't rape women. There is never an excuse for that. Never. #sentencetoolow

The sex offender, Ben C., had drunkenly pulled a 29-year-old pregnant woman off her bicycle in the early hours of 7 April 2021 in Lier and raped her. The maximum sentence that the court could have imposed for the offence was five years in prison.

But the three-member court, made up of women, ruled that four years would suffice, two of which are suspended.

Demir does not consider it problematic that she offered her opinion on a judicial verdict, her spokesperson told De Standaard, as she is the Flemish - as opposed to a federal - Minister of Justice, as well as a “human being with the right to her own opinion”.

The Justice Minister often believes that rape cases are sentenced too low, as she is in favour of a higher sentence combined with offender therapy.

Victim’s lawyer disagrees

The lawyer defending the rape victim, Hugo Coveliers, does not agree with Demir’s criticism. “It is always better as a minister not to comment on a matter you are not familiar with. I am also in favour of stricter sentences, but I think this is a good verdict.”

Besides four years in prison, the perpetrator must pay large damages, get treatment for his sexual problems and stay away from drugs and alcohol. “I’m pretty sure they’ll follow suit,” Coveliers said.

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An ‘ordinary’ boy

The defendant's lawyer Christine Mussche responded to Demir’s comments, saying: “The minister is talking about a file she does not know. It is disappointing that she is guided by newspaper articles without context.”

Mussche stated that Demir could have spoken to her, and she would have explained the details of the case. According to the lawyer, there was no discussion in court about the facts.

“It concerns a horrific rape, nobody is denying that. But the court expert – not me – concluded in her report that Ben C.'s explanation was credible, in particular, that he committed the offences during a blackout.”

She explains that the trend of young people committing rape under the influence of alcohol and drugs without remembering afterwards is becoming more and more common.

“There are no excuses for rape, but it is in that context that I have called him ‘an ordinary boy’,” Mussche said. “I meant ‘an ordinary boy’ until that terrible day.”

In the new Federal law against sex crimes that was approved last month, the maximum sentence for rape will be increased to ten years.


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