“Even American female soldiers dare to touch!” In 2019, an Indian worker at a U.S. military base in Afghanistan raided an American female soldier, thinking it was as good as India, and didn’t think of kicking the iron board.
In August 2019, at the U.S. military base in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, the 24-year-old American female soldier Sophia returned to her dormitory after finishing her training and was shut up by a man who suddenly broke into her bathroom door.
The other is the base logistics contractor hired by the Indian worker Rockefeller, the 35-year-old man with the name of repair dive into the camp area, seeing the dormitory is not locked up, he became upset.
Two hours after the atrocity, Sophia was tortured by fainting past, and Nake even opened the pipe to hide the traces, and the royal land splashed back to his home.
When discovered by her comrades-in-arms, Sophia was covered in wounds and severely dehydrated. After waking up, she immediately identified the Indian with "dark skin and obscene eyes".
U.S. military surveillance quickly locked Nick, the boy was still screaming when arrested: "Isn't it just sleeping a woman? in India it doesn't matter at all!" he didn't expect that the U.S. military base was implemented by the Military Jurisdiction Act (MEJA), even as a foreign contractor, the offence must be done according to U.S. law.
In less than 48 hours, Naik was escorted back to the United States by military plane, and the evidence chain such as DNA comparison and surveillance video was clear at a glance. The investigation also revealed that he had two criminal records of sexual assault in India, both of which spent money to bribe the judge, so he dared to go to Afghanistan to take risks.
When the verdict was pronounced in 2020, the judge directly convicted him of two counts of serious sexual abuse, and the penalty far exceeded that of ordinary cases-the US military knew in its heart that the safety face of overseas bases was more important than anything else.
Interestingly, the case broke up in both U.S. and Indian countries.Indian netizens accused Nake of throwing out the face of South Asian workers, while Americans grabbed the security vulnerabilities of the base: the U.S. military's internal sexual abuse report in 2018 showed that the Navy female soldier victims rate was up to 11%, now even outsourcing workers dare to do it.
The U.S. military subsequently tightened contractor review, and the criminal record screening was changed from "spot check" to "full check", but everyone understands that the real difference lies not in the system, but in the enforcement.
There are international netizens who say: "Some countries always use overseas bases as 'the back yard of their own', and both require others to comply with the rules, but they do double standards."
This is not wrong, the U.S. military in overseas to do the case to do a great way, but the turn of their own soldiers committing, often fails. but for Nike, he misunderstood the most basic reason: no matter where in the terrain, committing the law do not want to rely on the "local practice" to escape, in this world there is never a real "land outside the law".
In August 2019, at the U.S. military base in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, the 24-year-old American female soldier Sophia returned to her dormitory after finishing her training and was shut up by a man who suddenly broke into her bathroom door.
The other is the base logistics contractor hired by the Indian worker Rockefeller, the 35-year-old man with the name of repair dive into the camp area, seeing the dormitory is not locked up, he became upset.
Two hours after the atrocity, Sophia was tortured by fainting past, and Nake even opened the pipe to hide the traces, and the royal land splashed back to his home.
When discovered by her comrades-in-arms, Sophia was covered in wounds and severely dehydrated. After waking up, she immediately identified the Indian with "dark skin and obscene eyes".
U.S. military surveillance quickly locked Nick, the boy was still screaming when arrested: "Isn't it just sleeping a woman? in India it doesn't matter at all!" he didn't expect that the U.S. military base was implemented by the Military Jurisdiction Act (MEJA), even as a foreign contractor, the offence must be done according to U.S. law.
In less than 48 hours, Naik was escorted back to the United States by military plane, and the evidence chain such as DNA comparison and surveillance video was clear at a glance. The investigation also revealed that he had two criminal records of sexual assault in India, both of which spent money to bribe the judge, so he dared to go to Afghanistan to take risks.
When the verdict was pronounced in 2020, the judge directly convicted him of two counts of serious sexual abuse, and the penalty far exceeded that of ordinary cases-the US military knew in its heart that the safety face of overseas bases was more important than anything else.
Interestingly, the case broke up in both U.S. and Indian countries.Indian netizens accused Nake of throwing out the face of South Asian workers, while Americans grabbed the security vulnerabilities of the base: the U.S. military's internal sexual abuse report in 2018 showed that the Navy female soldier victims rate was up to 11%, now even outsourcing workers dare to do it.
The U.S. military subsequently tightened contractor review, and the criminal record screening was changed from "spot check" to "full check", but everyone understands that the real difference lies not in the system, but in the enforcement.
There are international netizens who say: "Some countries always use overseas bases as 'the back yard of their own', and both require others to comply with the rules, but they do double standards."
This is not wrong, the U.S. military in overseas to do the case to do a great way, but the turn of their own soldiers committing, often fails. but for Nike, he misunderstood the most basic reason: no matter where in the terrain, committing the law do not want to rely on the "local practice" to escape, in this world there is never a real "land outside the law".