Rape case thong triggers consent protests in Ireland

AFP  |  Dublin 

Protests have flared across this week triggering a after a showed a 17-year-old girl's thong or G-string in court as alleged proof of her consent in a case.

The outrage has included a female lawmaker brandishing underwear in parliament and women posting pictures of their thongs online with the hashtag #ThisIsNotConsent.

"It might seem embarrassing to show a pair of thongs in this incongruous setting," said -- pulling the underwear from her sleeve against the objections of the on Tuesday.

"But the reason I'm doing it -- how do you think a victim or a woman feels at the incongruous setting of her underwear being shown in a court?"

She was referring to a case in the republic's southern city of Cork, where a girl's underwear was shown to jurors.

The 27-year-old defendant was acquitted, Irish media reported.

"A barrister actually told a jury to 'look at the way she was dressed', that she was 'open to meeting someone' because she was 'wearing a thong with a laced front'", Coppinger added.

"Women in this country are getting a little bit weary at the routine victim-blaming going on in Irish courts." Protests have now taken place in the cities of and Cork as well as in Northern -- with women appearing brandishing pairs of underwear and placards emblazoned with the phrase "This is not consent."

Protestors are calling for a reform in Irish rape prosecution laws to deny the defence practice which they say reflects a culture of victim-blaming.

"Bringing rape myths into a sexual violence case is to bring misogyny into a sexual violence case," Clona Saidlar of Rape Crisis Network told AFP on Friday.

She said culture places "enormous pressure" on women and girls "to be sexualised and to present sexually" -- but that rape trials then often punish that same behaviour with the use of such "evidence".

Clothing, as well as fake tan and contraception, have all been used as alleged proof of consent in recent rape trials, Coppinger said Tuesday.

These latest protests follow demonstrations in Ireland and after the so-called "rugby rape trial" -- when Ireland players and were acquitted of raping a woman in 2016.

More than 4,000 protesters gathered in after the pair walked free in March.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, November 16 2018. 19:30 IST