Ireland: Paki Who Raped Retarded Woman Beat-Up in Prison

Daily Stormer
January 8, 2017

But remember that most of them are enriching our culture in various unspecified ways.

Sunday World:

A sick rapist has been viciously beaten up by other prisoners inside Cloverhill Prison according to his brother.

Faisal Ellahi was jailed for 13 years last year after being convicted of the rape of a woman with Down syndrome after luring her back to his Dublin flat after she became separated from her mother.

Now his brother Mudassar has told the Star that the sex attacker was so badly beaten up that he had to spend 23 days in hospital, adding that the fact Ellahi is a Muslim was the reason for the beating.

“They also tell him they are going to kill him,” Mudassar tells the paper. “He tells me it is because he is Muslim and from Pakistan. The last six months have been very bad, he has been treated like an animal.”

The report in the Star says that there had been a ‘row’ in the prison involving Ellahi and that it had nothing to do with his religion.

The attack is said to have happened a few months ago and Ellahi has been separated from the rest of the lags for his safety.

Mudassar Ellahi also claimed that his brother did not rape the woman and that he didn’t understand Down syndrome, adding “we are Muslim, we don’t lie”.

Faisal Ellahi (34), originally from Haripur in Pakistan, had pleaded not guilty to rape, sexual assault and having sex with a mentally impaired person at his Dublin home on June 12, 2013.

A jury at the Central Criminal Court convicted him of the rape and sexual assault charges in March last year.

Mr Justice Tony Hunt said he would not suspend any portion of the 13-year sentence as he hoped Ellahi would not be in the community on release.

He said the crime, which had “carelessly demolished” the victim’s independence, was at the lower end of the upper range in seriousness.

Judge Hunt commented that the “frightening, appalling, disgusting and depraved” offence committed by Ellahi had taken away years of work in helping the woman lead an independent life.

He said this was “all blown away for a couple of minutes of instant gratification”.

The judge noted that Ellahi had been out “prowling” the streets approaching another woman at the same time his victim was returning home.

He said some of the most difficult evidence in the case was the reaction of the woman’s family members at her “dehumanised” state.

He complimented the victim’s mother on her dignity and fortitude in meeting the case and wished the family well in future as they “restore” the woman to her independence.

He added that he hoped the Minister for Justice would take every step to remove Ellahi from the country when his sentence was completed.

Judge Hunt backdated the jail term to when he entered custody.

The trial heard that the victim told a specialist interviewer that Ellahi locked the door behind them and that she was afraid he was going to stab or kill her.

“I wanted to go home but he wouldn’t let me,” she said. The woman said that at one point she panicked and started banging on the door screaming “help, mum, help.”

Ellahi gave evidence in his own defence in which he admitted propositioning many women as he walked the streets near his Dublin home. He said he would stop women and ask them to come home with him for “consensual fun”. He said he also used prostitutes.

The court heard evidence from 16 women who were approached by Ellahi in the area around the time of the rape. One women who lived across the road from him said he tried to force his way inside her home after she returned from a night out.

During his evidence Ellahi admitted “sexual contact” with the special needs victim but denied penetrative sex and claimed that he didn’t know she had a mental impairment. He said she looked “normal” to him and that she enjoyed herself.

He said he never heard of Down syndrome until his arrest. He said in his native country people with mental impairments were kept at home or in hospitals and that they wore name badges to indicate they were disabled.