MOGADISHU - A human rights group has urged Somali authorities to drop charges against a woman who accused security forces of raping her.
MOGADISHU - A human rights group has urged Somali authorities to drop charges against a woman who accused security forces of raping her.The woman, who has not been named, could face between three and six years in prison for insulting a government body and making a false accusation.Four others, including her husband and a journalist, have also been charged.US-based Human Rights Watch said the charges "made a mockery of the new Somali government’s priorities”.Last September, a new president was elected by MPs in a process backed by the UN.The new government is trying to rebuild Somalia after more than 20 years of conflict which saw clan-based warlords, rival politicians and Islamist militants battle for control of the country.Attorney General Abdulkadir Mohamed Muse brought charges against the five of insulting a government body and persuading someone to give false evidence or giving false evidence, among other accusations, in a court in the capital, Mogadishu, on Tuesday.The charged journalist, Abdiaziz Abdinur Ibrahim, has been in detention since 10 January.Two days earlier he had interviewed the woman about the rape allegations, but did not report the story.The police allege he collected material for a news report by al-Jazeera about rape in camps for displaced people in Mogadishu. The Qatar-based news network has said Mr Ibrahim was not involved in its story.According to Human Rights Watch, the woman retracted her allegations after two days of police interrogation without a lawyer present.Afterwards she was released, but her husband was arrested in her place. A man and woman who helped introduce her to the journalist were also arrested.Mr Muse told the BBC Somali service on Saturday that the accused had plotted to discredit the government and its security forces - and the woman and her accomplices had been paid by the journalist to lie.An investigation had revealed that the police station where the woman had originally reported the alleged rape in Hodan, a district in Mogadishu where many displaced people live, had found no medical evidence to back up her rape allegation, he said.