Lesbian gang-raped by five boys on her 14th birthday

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A 14-year-old lesbian has been raped in Ghana.

Mariam, who lives in the capital of Accra, met up with her male friend on her birthday.

He told her he had a present for her, and led her back to his home.

Dozens of people cheer and dance as they take part in the Namibian Lesbians, Gay, Bisexual and Transexual (LGBT) community pride Parade in the streets of the Namibian Capitol on July 29, 2017 in Windhoek. Even though there have been marches and protests against discrimination against the LGBT community in the past years, this is the first time that the community held such a parade along the capital's main street, Independence Avenue, to celebrate their identity and rights. / AFP PHOTO / Hildegard Titus (Photo credit should read HILDEGARD TITUS/AFP/Getty Images)

A Pride march in Namibia (Getty)

It was there that she discovered that the boy she thought was her friend had invited four other boys there to rape her.

They hit her in the face before pinning her to the bed.

“It was my friend who started with the rape,” she told Ghanaian publication Joy News.

Mariam passed out during the horrific assault.

The rapists impregnated her, and she gave birth a few months before her 15th birthday.

South Africa Pride parade (Getty)

South Africa Pride parade (Getty)

The child was given to another family member.

Mariam has attempted suicide four times since the rape, which has gone unpunished in the seven years since it occurred.


She spoke about how the rape affected her mental health, saying: “I started behaving like a mad girl.

“I was down. Sometimes I would scream; I would shout.

“I was admitted to the psychiatric hospital, moving from hospital to hospital, from medication to medication just to bring me back to normal,” Mariam recalled.

Members of the South African Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender and Intersex (LGBTI) community chant slogans as they take part in the annual Gay Pride Parade, as part of the three-day Durban Pride Festival, on June 24, 2017 in Durban. / AFP PHOTO / RAJESH JANTILAL        (Photo credit should read RAJESH JANTILAL/AFP/Getty Images)

South Africa Pride parade (Getty)

The trauma has been made worse by one of her rapists sending her taunting messages saying he would never be arrested for what he did to her.

He was right.

Mariam said: “We were supposed to arrest them, but the police are not willing to support [me]. I don’t know why.”

In her community in the town of Mataheko, she said rape was seen as a minor crime.

“I am not the first and am not the last.”

“Gang rape is normal,” she added.

Mariam said that she and her father go to the local police station every so often to report her rapists’ whereabouts, but to no avail.

“The policeman will say he is the only person in the station and cannot leave to arrest a mere criminal,” she said.

Mariam, who is now 21, has been in a same-sex relationship for more than a year.

Her parents have been crucial to improving her mental health, she said.

“My mum and my dad – they have done all that they could do.

“Even though I am the first child I am pampered like a last baby.”