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Ayia Napa: Woman wins appeal against gang rape lie conviction
The Derbyshire teenager retracted the allegation after being held without a lawyer, and was then tried and convicted of causing public mischief.
Her conviction was overturned at the country’s Supreme Court.
The woman’s case had outraged women’s rights campaigners, who gathered outside court ahead of the decision being handed down on Monday.

The woman, who is now 21, had not had to serve her original four-month sentence in prison as it had been suspended by the judge.
The woman’s family now want the original rape allegations she made to be investigated, in order for her to get “true justice”.
‘Manifestly unfair’
Mr Polak, who co-ordinated the appeal against the conviction, said the teenager and her female lawyers had been shouted at and “treated with contempt” during the trial.
“We have always maintained that our client was not given a fair trial and today the Supreme Court of Cyprus has agreed with us,” he said.
“Important fair trial provisions, which are in place to prevent miscarriages of justice, were totally disregarded in this case.
“A young and vulnerable woman was not only mistreated when she reported the rape to the police, but then she was just put through a trial process that was manifestly unfair, as the Supreme Court has recognised.”
Mr Polak said the trial judge had shouted “this is not a rape case” at least seven times when her female lawyers tried to put forward evidence that supported the woman’s case that she had been raped.

In a statement, the woman’s family said they were relieved the authorities in Cyprus had “recognised the flaws in their legal process”.
“Whilst this decision doesn’t excuse the way she was treated by the police or the judge or those in authority, it does bring with it the hope that my daughter’s suffering will at least bring positive changes in the way that victims of crime are treated,” they said.
“Of course, if justice is to be done, an authority would need to pick up on the evidence that was gathered in Cyprus and do with it what should have happened at the outset.”
Cypriot lawyer Nicoletta Charalambidou, who is part of the legal team, said: “This is a very important day for women’s rights and in particular for victims of rape or other forms of sexual violence in Cyprus.
“The acquittal by the Supreme Court… points to the failure of the authorities to effectively investigate the rape claims she reported. This is what we will now pursue.”
