Rapists in UK getting away with a “slap on the wrist’’

January 07, 2013 07:06 pm | Updated 07:06 pm IST - LONDON

Indians hold a candle light vigil to salute the undying spirit of a rape victim in New Delhi, India , Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012. The young woman who died after being gang-raped and beaten on a bus in India's capital was cremated Sunday amid an outpouring of anger and grief by millions across the country demanding greater protection for women from sexual violence. (AP Photo/ Saurabh Das)

Indians hold a candle light vigil to salute the undying spirit of a rape victim in New Delhi, India , Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012. The young woman who died after being gang-raped and beaten on a bus in India's capital was cremated Sunday amid an outpouring of anger and grief by millions across the country demanding greater protection for women from sexual violence. (AP Photo/ Saurabh Das)

If India has a poor record of tackling crimes against women, the supposedly more “enlightened” Britain has hardly done much better with official figures showing that hundreds of convicted sex offenders, including rapists, are getting away with what victim groups described as little more than “a slap on the wrist”.

The revelation that many rapists were being let off simply with a warning or community sentences prompted calls for more deterrent sentencing guidelines.

One activist said that allowing a rapist to get away with community service amounted to a “slap on the face” of victims.

“These figures are horrendous and we are disturbed that cases get to court and receive such a low sentence,’’ Jo Wood of the campaign group Rape Crisis told The Sunday Telegraph which broke the story.

She said women were “appalled” that so many convicted rapists were receiving cautions or community services.

“It is just ridiculous, and it trivialises the victim’s experience and the impact the assault has had on them. To endure a rape trial is a further violation of your dignity, and for your rapist to be found guilty and then simply given a community sentence is the final slap in the face.”

Labour MP Jenny Chapman, who obtained the figures, said she was “shocked” to see how many sex offenders were being let off with non-custodial sentences.

“There are far more violent criminals and sex offenders receiving non-custodial sentences than anybody realised. I was shocked to see just how many there were. Clearly these punishments are outside the sentencing guidelines and more work needs to be done to justify these lenient sentences. Most of the messages that have come out over the last couple of years, particularly around sex offences, have been very unhelpful,” she said.

According to the Telegraph report, a 76 year-old man convicted of raping his niece when she was just 11-year-old was allowed to walk free from court with a community service order on the ground that he was suffering from an age-related mental illness.

In another case, a 25-year old man was let off with a two-year community order after he claimed that he was drunk when he raped a woman.

“Another case last year saw a teenager who repeatedly raped his nine year-old male cousin was handed a two year rehabilitation order by Judge John Harrow at Bournemouth Crown Court,’’ the report said.

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