Man at centre of Nobel Literature scandal loses rape appeal

Published December 4, 2018
The 72-year-old Frenchman was found guilty of one rape in 2011. — File
The 72-year-old Frenchman was found guilty of one rape in 2011. — File

STOCKHOLM: The man with ties to the Swedish Academy that awards the Nobel Prize in literature lost his appeal on Monday to have his rape conviction and a two-year prison sentence reversed and instead was convicted of a second rape. The Svea Court of Appeal on Monday gave Jean-Claude Arnault two years in jail for raping the same woman twice seven years ago.

In October, the 72-year-old Frenchman, who is married to a former member of the Swedish Academy board, was found guilty of one rape in 2011 and sentenced him to two years. He was acquitted of a second rape because the victim said she was asleep at the time and the lower Stockholm Dist­rict Court said her account wasn’t reliable.

But the appeals court made “a different assessment”, saying it was “beyond any reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty of rape” in the second case.

The woman’s deposition “gave a credible impression”, adding that her account “was strongly supported by those of several witnesses”, and found them “reliable and sufficient” for a conviction.

The court also said it had taken into consideration Arnault’s age and “the unusually long time from the offence committed to the prosecution”.

In Sweden, rape is punishable by a minimum of two years and a maximum of six years in prison.

Arnault’s lawyer, Bjorn Hurtig, said the Frenchman was “seriously stunned, stupefied and saddened”, and they would appeal to Sweden’s Supreme Court. Elisabeth Massi Fritz, the lawyer for the unnamed victim, told Swedish broadcaster SVT that her client was “extremely grateful and relieved”.

The sex abuse scandal led eight Swedish Academy members to either leave or disassociate themselves from the secretive body’s 18-member board. Amid the chaos and reputational risk, this year’s Nobel literature award was postponed to 2019.

The Nobel Foundation warned the academy that if it doesn’t resolve its tarnished image, it could decide that another group would be a better Nobel host.

In 2017, 18 women came forward in a Swedish newspaper with abuse accusations against Arnault. An academy investigation found in April that “unacceptable behaviour in the form of unwanted intimacy” had taken place in the ranks of the prestigious institution.

Published in Dawn, December 4th, 2018

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