
Prosecutors in South Korea have apologised to a girl who was convicted for defending herself throughout a sexually violent assault greater than 60 years in the past.
Choi Mal-ja was sentenced to 10 months in jail, suspended for 2 years, for biting off a part of her attacker’s tongue as he allegedly tried to rape her in 1964, when she was 18 years outdated.
Impressed by the nation’s #MeToo motion, Ms Choi, now 78, has campaigned for years to have her conviction overturned.
Her retrial started within the metropolis of Busan on Wednesday, the place prosecutors issued an apology and requested for the courtroom to quash her responsible verdict.
“For 61 years, the state made me dwell as a prison,” Ms Choi instructed reporters outdoors the courtroom forward of the listening to.
She stated she hoped future generations might dwell a cheerful life free from sexual violence.
At the beginning of the trial, Busan’s Chief Prosecutor Jeong Myeong-won stated “we sincerely apologise”.
“We’ve got brought about Choi Mal-ja, a sufferer of a intercourse crime who ought to have been protected as one, indescribable ache and agony.”
A ultimate ruling is scheduled for 10 September, with authorized observers anticipating the courtroom to overturn Ms Choi’s conviction.
Outdoors the courtroom after the listening to, Ms Choi raised her fist and stated: “We received!”
She celebrated by embracing campaigners from civic organisations who have been there to help her.
In 1964, an 18-year-old Choi Mal-ja was attacked by a 21-year-old man, who pressured his tongue into her mouth as he pinned her to the bottom within the southern city of Gimhae, in line with courtroom data.
Ms Choi escaped the assault by biting off 1.5cm (0.59in) of the aggressor’s tongue.
The person was sentenced to 6 months in jail, suspended for 2 years, for trespassing and intimidation. He was by no means convicted of tried rape.
Ms Choi was given a harsher sentence than her attacker for inflicting him grievous bodily hurt.
The courtroom on the time stated her actions had exceeded the “cheap bounds” of self-defence.
Ms Choi’s case has since been cited in authorized textbooks in South Korea as a traditional instance of a courtroom failing to recognise self-defence throughout sexual violence.
‘Justice is alive on this nation’
After taking inspiration from South Korea’s #MeToo motion within the late 2010s, Ms Choi contacted advocacy teams to start work on petitioning for a retrial.
She filed a petition in 2020, 56 years after the assault, nevertheless it was initially rejected by the decrease courts. Three years later, the Supreme Court docket dominated that Ms Choi’s retrial might go forward.
Her battle for justice turned well-known in South Korea, with Ms Choi and fellow activists holding protests outdoors the Supreme Court docket constructing in Seoul.
“I nonetheless cannot consider it,” Ms Choi stated after Wednesday’s listening to, the Korea JoongAng Each day newspaper reported.
“But when the prosecution is admitting its mistake even now, then I consider justice is alive on this nation.”