The trial of the Moldavian woman S.Č has ended: Families suffered harassment for years

It is the third trial of the Moldovan woman, after the High Court twice overturned the acquittal
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Zoran Piperović, Photo: Vesko Belojević
Zoran Piperović, Photo: Vesko Belojević
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.
Ažurirano: 25.06.2014. 06:52h

The family of Ekrem Jasavić and the sons of Zoran Piperović told the Basic Court in Podgorica yesterday that everything that happened to their loved ones in the S. Č affair was very difficult for them. and that for a long time they were exposed to shame and bullying by the public, their friends and acquaintances.

They said this at the retrial of the Moldavian woman S. Č. accused of giving false testimony.

The verdict in that procedure will be pronounced on June 30.

Jasminka Jasavić, Jasavić's wife, told through tears that all the events related to her husband significantly threatened her health, and that it also affected her work, because regular customers boycotted her store.

The sons of Jasavić and Piperović claim that they were ashamed to go to school in that period, because they experienced discomfort even from the professors, who commented "that's the son of that trafficker" and the like.

They added that they experienced various inconveniences on the street long after that, because people commented negatively on the event, but also on the physical appearance of their fathers.

"I remember when the dentist was fixing my tooth once, her colleague, not knowing that I was Zoran's son, commented on an article in the newspaper stating that they should be hanged and burned so that they would see what it would be like if their daughters were raped, and he also said for my father, it can be seen on his face that he is a real jerk", pointed out Đorđe Piperović.

It is the third trial of the Moldovan woman, after the High Court twice overturned the acquittal.

S. Ch. testified in 2002 about how she came to the territory of the former Yugoslavia in the late nineties to work as a waitress, when she was forced to have sexual relations with several officials and politicians, and she identified Piperović, Irfan Kurpejović, Jasavić and Bajram Orahovac as the organizers of the forced prostitution. Because of this, Piperović and Jasavić filed a private lawsuit.

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