Indonesian Court Sentences Islamic Teacher To Death For Raping 13 Students

The girls, between the ages of 12 and 16, were sexually groomed by the teacher, who would impregnate eight of them.

Indonesian Court Sentences Islamic Teacher To Death For Raping 13 Students
Herry Wirawan (36), a former teacher and founder of an Islamic boarding school, who is accused of raping 13 school girls between 2016 and 2021, sits during his verdict trial at the district court in Bandung, West Java province, Indonesia February 15, 2022

 

 

An Indonesian court handed down a death sentence on Monday to a teacher for raping 13 girls at an Islamic school, upholding an appeal by the prosecutors for the death penalty after he had initially received a sentence of life in prison. The case of teacher Herry Wirawan has shocked Indonesia and shone a spotlight on the need to

 

protect children from sexual violence in the country's religious boarding schools. After he was sentenced to life in jail by a court in the city of Bandung in February, prosecutors who had called for the death penalty filed an appeal. We hereby punish the defendant with the death penalty, the judge said in a statement on Monday

 

 

posted on Bandung High Court's website. Ira Mambo, Herry's lawyer, declined to comment on whether there would be an appeal, citing a need to see the full ruling from the court. A spokesperson for local prosecutor's office also said it would wait to receive the final ruling before commenting. Between the 2016 and 2021, Herry

 

 

sexually groomed the 13 girls, who were between 12 and 16 years old, and impregnated eight of his victims, a judge said in February. Indonesian officials, including the country's child protection minister, had also backed calls for the death penalty, though the nation's human rights commission, which opposes the death penalty,

 

 

said it was also not appropriate. Indonesia, the world's biggest Muslim majority country, has tens of thousands of Islamic boarding schools and other religious schools that often provide the only way for children of poorer families to get an education.