A Swiss appeals court has convicted Islamic scholar, Tariq Ramadan, of raping a woman in a Geneva hotel in 2008, overturning an earlier court acquittal.
During the hearing, the court said it “annuls the judgment of 24 May 2023” and sentenced the 62-year-old former Oxford University professor to three years in prison, two of which were suspended.
The ruling was made on August 28 but not made public until Tuesday.
The scholar has strongly denied the charges against him, based on an accusation by an unnamed Swiss woman relating to the incident 16 years ago.
Ramadan’s accuser, a Muslim convert identified only as “Brigitte”, had testified before the court that he subjected her to rape and other violent sex acts in a Geneva hotel room during the night of October 28, 2008.
Brigitte’s lawyer said she was repeatedly raped and subjected to “torture and barbarism”.
Ramadan said that Brigitte invited herself up to his room. He let her kiss him, he said, before quickly ending the encounter. He said he was the victim of a “trap”.
Brigitte was in her forties at the time of the alleged assault. She filed a complaint 10 years later, telling the court she felt emboldened to come forward following similar complaints filed against Ramadan in France.
The appeals verdict overturns a lower court finding last year acquitting Ramadan of rape and sexual coercion, citing a lack of evidence, contradictory testimonies, and “love messages” sent by the plaintiff after the alleged assault.
However, during their appeal, Brigitte’s lawyers alleged that Ramadan had exercised significant “control” over the woman, suggesting she had suffered something akin to Stockholm syndrome.
The three appeals court judges pointed to “witness testimony, certificates, medical notes, and private expert opinions consistent with the facts presented by the plaintiff”.
“Elements collected during the investigation have thus convinced the chamber of the guilt of the accused,” the court said in a statement.
Ramadan, the grandson of Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt founder Hasan al-Banna, was a professor of contemporary Islamic studies at Oxford and held visiting roles at universities in Qatar and Morocco.
He was forced to take a leave of absence in 2017 when rape allegations surfaced in France at the height of the “Me Too” movement.
In France, he is suspected of raping three women between 2009 and 2016.
meanwhile, his legal defense team is challenging a Paris appeals court decision in June that the cases can go to trial.