A court in Paris has sentenced prominent Islam scholar Tariq Ramadan to 18 years in jail for raping three women, two years after he was given a jail term for a separate rape offence in Switzerland. The French rape case unfolded in 2017, when two of the three women came forward during the Me Too campaign against sexual abuse and harassment. Ramadan, a 63-year-old former professor of Islamic studies at St Antony's College in Oxford, did not attend the trial in Paris, although he has always denied the charges.
His lawyers said he was being treated in the Swiss city of Geneva for multiple sclerosis and condemned the trial as a farce. Judge Corinne Goetzmann told the court that a warrant had been issued for Ramadan's arrest, however Switzerland does not have an extradition treaty with its neighbour. Ramadan is also facing a permanent ban from French territory.
The court ruled that the 18-year jail term was justified by the extreme seriousness of the acts. Consenting to sex does not imply consenting to any sexual act whatsoever, the judge said. Leaving court, one of the women involved in the case, Henda Ayari, told reporters that the judges had believed her, and she spoke of nine years of suffering and struggle since she had filed a complaint.
In 2017, she told French TV that Ramadan had literally pounced on me like a wild animal in a hotel room in 2012. Ramadan has called for a new trial, insisting that he did not avoid the process intentionally due to health issues and that he assembled a legal team. He asserts that the allegations against him are part of a slander campaign to discredit him as a Muslim intellectual.
His lawyers said he was being treated in the Swiss city of Geneva for multiple sclerosis and condemned the trial as a farce. Judge Corinne Goetzmann told the court that a warrant had been issued for Ramadan's arrest, however Switzerland does not have an extradition treaty with its neighbour. Ramadan is also facing a permanent ban from French territory.
The court ruled that the 18-year jail term was justified by the extreme seriousness of the acts. Consenting to sex does not imply consenting to any sexual act whatsoever, the judge said. Leaving court, one of the women involved in the case, Henda Ayari, told reporters that the judges had believed her, and she spoke of nine years of suffering and struggle since she had filed a complaint.
In 2017, she told French TV that Ramadan had literally pounced on me like a wild animal in a hotel room in 2012. Ramadan has called for a new trial, insisting that he did not avoid the process intentionally due to health issues and that he assembled a legal team. He asserts that the allegations against him are part of a slander campaign to discredit him as a Muslim intellectual.


















