Boy, 5, ‘gang-raped on Australian beach by four boys under 13’

Five-year-old boy is ‘brutally gang-raped on a remote Australian beach by a group of CHILDREN all aged under 13’ – before alleged victim is rushed to hospital with horrific injuries

  • Five-year-old boy allegedly gang raped on a remote beach in North Queensland
  • His accused attackers are all under 13 and have now been taken into custody 
  • The boy had to be airlifted to Cairns Hospital for emergency medical treatment
  • Locals say the situation has reopened wounds from a previous sex crime nearby  

A five-year-old boy has allegedly been gang raped by a group of children – all aged under 13 – on a remote beach in an Aboriginal community in Far North Queensland.

The attack unfolded at Napranum, on the north-west coast of Cape York in  Queensland on July 1, police allege. 

The four boys accused of the rape have been taken into custody, while the 800-strong community has banned them from returning to the town, The Australian reported. 

The alleged attack was so violent the five-year-old required emergency medical treatment and was airlifted to Cairns Hospital, some 800km away.     

The four boys accused of the July 1 attack, which allegedly occurred on the northwest coast of Cape York at a remote beach in Napranum (pictured), have now been taken into custody

Community members said the disturbing allegations have torn several families apart and reopened wounds from a shocking sex crime that happened 15 years earlier. 

‘There are big arguments about how this happened,’ a source told paper. 

‘It is creating big problems in the town. It is not the first time something like this has happened.’

The neighbouring community of Aurukun, about 40km south of Napranum, was at the centre of nationwide outrage in 2006 when a 10-year-old girl was gang raped by nine men aged between 13 and 25.

The young girl was born to an alcohol-dependent mother and suffered from a mild intellectual disability.

Although the men all pleaded guilty to a litany of sexual offences, the judge spared the perpetrators jail time, noting the victim ‘probably agreed’ to have sex with them.

She ruled the men were also victims themselves after growing up deprived and subjected to physical and sexual abuse at the hands of others in their community.

No convictions were recorded in the horrifying case, sparking fury across Australia.

The alleged gang rape of a five-year-old boy has reopened wounds from a shocking sex crime 15 years earlier in Aurukun

The alleged gang rape of a five-year-old boy has reopened wounds from a shocking sex crime 15 years earlier in Aurukun

At the time Prime Minster Kevin Rudd expressed his anger at the court’s decision. 

‘I’m disgusted and appalled by the reports that I’ve seen in today’s newspapers on this case,’ Mr Rudd said. 

‘My attitude of violence towards women and children, including sexual violence towards women and children, is one of zero tolerance.’ 

Due to the young age of the alleged offenders in Napranum, police can use their discretion to determine how they proceed with prosecution.

Ten is the age an offender can be found guilty of a crime, but if a child under 13 commits an offence police can issue a caution.

Sources said the injuries inflicted upon the alleged victim were so horrific he had to be airlifted to Cairns Hospital (pictured) for emergency medical treatment

Sources said the injuries inflicted upon the alleged victim were so horrific he had to be airlifted to Cairns Hospital (pictured) for emergency medical treatment

Another option is restorative justice – a tactic commonly used in Indigenous communities – which normally involves extensive counselling, a mediated meeting with the victim’s family and an apology to the victim.  

The alleged Napranum gang rape is the latest of a string of horrifying cases to hit remote Aboriginal communities.  

A 27-year-old man was sentenced to 13 years in prison in March for raping a two-year-old girl in Tennant Creek while her mother was sleeping in a crime that shocked Australia. 

The toddler suffered severe internal injuries in the 2018 attack and had to be flown to an Adelaide hospital where she underwent a blood transfusion.

Remote Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory where the horrific child rape of a two-year-old occurred in 2018

Remote Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory where the horrific child rape of a two-year-old occurred in 2018

Such incidents have raised concerns about child safety in remote Indigenous communities.

In 2016, a Griffith University study headed by Professor ­Stephen Smallbone examined the prevalence of sexual abuse in several Indigenous North Queensland communities. 

It found sex crimes in Aurukun were occurring at a rate 6.6 times higher than the rest of Queensland, with the average age of victims just 14.

The report also revealed that sexually transmitted diseases were spreading at an alarming rate.

Syphilis infections were detected to be 56 times above the state average and the report showed 29 children younger than 10 had contracted the sexually transmitted disease. 

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