Two Gov’t Officials Charge For Rape in South Korean

Two Gov’t Officials Charge For Rape in South Korean

Police in South Korea have formally charged two senior employees of the Liberia Maritime Authority (LiMA) accused of rape.

Moses Owen Browne, Liberia’s Permanent Representative to the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in the UK, and Daniel Tarr, Director of the Department of Marine Environmental Protection at the LiMA, were detained last month for allegedly raping two Korean teenagers.

They have been officially charged with the crime of committing “two people joint rape,” and now waiting trial in South Korea, said Blamo Nelson, Liberian Ambassador to Japan in a diplomatic note to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

If found guilty, Browne and Tarr are expected to serve a jail term of fewer than seven years.

The Korean government is yet to provide the name or location of the new facility to which Browne and Tarr were sent, as well as a notice on the date of the trial, the ambassador said.

Exerpt: “The sexual interaction between Browne and Tarr, and the two Korean ladies on the night of September 22, is not in dispute. Both men have confirmed their interaction with women. I saw how the two Liberian government officials were handled in preparation for their transfer to the Busan District Prosecutor’s Office,” said Nelson, who had jurisdiction over South Korea. “It was not a pleasant scene for me. Browne and Tarr were stripped of their belongings including cell phones. In my presence, the police not only handcuff them but also shackled and tied them at their feet.

“I vehemently protested that it was wrong to have them tied as though they were slaves being taken to slave camps; and that such treatment was inhumane and unacceptable; especially considering that they were not resisting, nor hostile in any way. After shouting, the police officers yielded to my argument with an apology and, except for the handcuff, removed the shackles and the ties,” he added

The two Liberian officials were in South Korea attending the International Maritime Organization GHG SMART Practical Training and Study Visit when this alleged incident occurred, according to reports in Korean media.

It is alleged that the victims informed Busan police that they are 14 and 16 years old, constituting the crime of statutory rape under South Korean criminal law. Browne and Tarr were arrested at a hotel in Busan after a friend of the alleged victims reported the case to the police, Busan police said.

According to South Korean Law, statutory rape occurs when an individual has consensual sexual intercourse with a person under the age of 20 in Korean age. The age of consent in South Korea is 20 years old, at which time an individual is considered legally old enough to consent to participation in sexual activity. Individuals aged 19 or younger in South Korea are not legally able to consent to sexual activity, and such activity may result in prosecution for statutory rape or the equivalent local law.


Earlier, Nelson had informed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs that based on his observation, there is a dire need for the government to hire lawyers to represent the legal interest of the two Liberian maritime officials who are now in jail, awaiting rape trial.

Busan police, the ambassador said, is open to reviewing Browne’s and Tarr’s requests for diplomatic immunity provided that the government of Liberia can submit the relevant documents regarding the claims, which are subject to review.

“I have not met any push-back from authorities of the Busan Police station where our two officials were held before their transfer. Those that I met officially were very willing to point out their expectation as to what, at this point, the Government of Liberia needs to do in this case: Supply documentation affirming the diplomatic status of the accused officials, and secure lawyers to begin legal defense of accused officials.

“Browne continues to hesitate to provide a substantive explanation to the Police, about their encounter he and Tarr had with the two Korean ladies. He is insisting that he has immunity under international law, considering his status as an official of the Government of Liberia, with a valid diplomatic passport and a visa duly issued by the Government of the Republic of Korea. He is of the hope that the GOL will make proper representation to the Government of the Republic of Korea.”

“Tarr, considering that he is not holding a Diplomatic Passport, but rather an Official Passport with a proper Visa issued by the Government of Korea, has responded to the Police interrogation, but I was not privileged to know what he may have explained. Tarr is expecting that the Gol will make the proper representation to the Government of Korea which would lead to their release and return to Monrovia,” he said.

CATEGORIES
Share This

COMMENTS

Wordpress (0)
Disqus (0 )