By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Newsunplug KenyaNewsunplug KenyaNewsunplug Kenya
  • News
    • Metro
    • Politics
    • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Spotify
Reading: Woman who bit off attacker’s tongue acquitted after 61 years
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Newsunplug KenyaNewsunplug Kenya
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Spotify
  • News
    • Metro
    • Politics
    • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Tech
  • Spotify
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Newsunplug Kenya > Blog > Metro > Woman who bit off attacker’s tongue acquitted after 61 years
Metro

Woman who bit off attacker’s tongue acquitted after 61 years

new5nuke
Last updated: September 10, 2025 10:39 am
new5nuke
23 seconds ago
Share
SHARE

A South Korean woman has been acquitted after a court revisited her decades-old conviction for biting off the tongue of a man during an alleged sexual attack.

Choi Mal-ja was 18 when she was convicted of grievous bodily harm and sentenced to 10 months in jail. Her aggressor, who was 21, received a lighter sentence of six months.

After a years-long campaign to clear her name, a retrial began in the southern city of Busan in July. In its first hearing, prosecutors apologised to her and, in an unusual move, asked the court to quash the conviction.

“I could not let this case go unanswered… I [wanted to stand up for other victims who share the same fate as mine,” Choi said after the acquittal.

As a teenager back then, the incident changed her fate by “turning [me] from a victim to an accused”.

“People around me warned me that it would be like throwing eggs at a rock, but I could not let this case go,” said Ms Choi, now 78.

She thanked her supporters and called out those in power whom she said “abused their authority to trample the weak and manipulate the law”.

READ MORE  Monica Kimani's Murder: Jowie explains how 'he shot himself' after fight with Maribe over SMS

Her case has been cited in legal textbooks in South Korea as a classic example of a court failing to recognise self-defence during sexual violence.

According to court records, the attacker had pinned Choi to the ground somewhere in the southern town of Gimhae. She only managed to break free after biting off about 1.5cm (0.59in) of his tongue.

The man continually demanded compensation for his injury and even broke into Ms Choi’s home with a knife on one occasion, South Korean media reported.

In one of South Korea’s most contentious rulings on sexual violence, the man was given a six-month suspended sentence for trespassing and intimidation. He was never charged with attempted rape.

Choi received the harsher sentence for causing him grievous bodily harm, with the court saying at the time that her actions exceeded the “reasonable bounds” of self-defence.

She was detained for six months during the investigation and was later given a ten-month suspended sentence.

In 2018, inspired by the global #MeToo movement, which has also taken hold in South Korea, Ms Choi reached out to advocacy groups and spent about two years gathering evidence before filing a petition for a retrial.

READ MORE  One killed as firearm stolen from Vihiga OCS recovered in Nairobi

Her path to exoneration has been challenging. Lower courts rejected her petition, saying there is no evidence to support her claims of self-defence.

Choi fought on, saying she did not want to see other victims of sexual violence go through what she did. “[They] should not have to bear the pain alone,” she told The Korea Herald in an earlier interview.

Finally, in December 2024, the Supreme Court granted her application to reopen the case.

Outside the court on Wednesday, Choi and her supporters were all smiles, with some of them holding placards that said, “Choi Mal-ja did it!” and “Choi Mal-ja succeeded”.

The Korea Women’s Hotline, one of the groups that had supported Choi in her campaign, believes Wednesday’s verdict will pave the way to justice for victims of sexual violence.

“Going forward, women’s defensive acts will be understood as legitimate. I expect this will mean fewer women will face unjust suffering,” says Song Ran-hee, who leads the group.

“At the very least, it will send a message to victims. Even if the process you are going through now is painful and unjust, it says: ‘Your voice matters. Speak out,’” Ms Song tells the BBC.

READ MORE  Kenyan man opens up on meeting 72-year-old wife on Facebook, long distance marriage

There have been at least two other cases in South Korea of women biting off the tongues of sexual assailants – one in 1988 in the city of Andong, and another in 2020 in Busan. In both cases, the courts recognised what the women did as legitimate acts of self-defence and ruled in favour of them.

Jacqueline Ngina murder: How mobile phone gave away suspect Robert Kinisu
Surprise marriage proposal nearly ends in tragedy after woman swallows ring hidden in her food
19-year-old local footballer found murdered in Ugenya
Man who threatened to kill his wife to spend end year festivities in remand
32-year-old scientist brutally m@rdered by her boyfriend in South Africa
Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Previous Article Gen Z claim Nepal protests hijacked as army patrols streets
about us

We influence 20 million users and is the number one business and technology news network on the planet.

Recent Posts

  • Woman who bit off attacker’s tongue acquitted after 61 years
  • Gen Z claim Nepal protests hijacked as army patrols streets
  • Renowned lawyer Kyalo Mbobu gunned down
  • Police nab person of interest with sack of bhang in Awendo
  • There are over 30,000 HIV cases among young adults in Houston – Married Nigerian man gives reasons he can’t cheat

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
Newsunplug KenyaNewsunplug Kenya
© Newsunplug Kenya. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?