Brazilian Student Expelled for Wearing Miniskirt Sues to Be Reinstated

Brazilian student Geisy Arruda The case of a Brazilian student expelled from school for wearing a miniskirt after being booed and threatened with rape by colleagues seems to have become a matter of national security in Brazil. Local, state, federal government, Bar Association and even Congress have now jumped into the bandwagon of condemnation of Uniban, Bandeirantes University.

On Sunday, November 8, Uniban bought an ad in which it announced it was kicking out tourism student Geisy Arruda, 20, blaming her for the incident and accusing her of indecent exposure and lurid behavior.

It all started October 22, when the girl was harassed by hundreds of her colleagues on campus for wearing a skimpy skirt. Threatened with violence and even rape she only was able to leave the school escorted by the Military Police, after a friend of hers called 190, the Brazilian 911. Scenes of what happened were registered in cell phones and posted on YouTube.

The lawyer for Arruda, intends to file for an injunction at the São Bernardo forum, in the Greater São Paulo, where the university is located, this Tuesday, so she can get back to school immediately.

Nehemias Domingos de Melo's, the lawyer, says that his intention is to be able to get his client back to college before the start of the final exams. Since the school year is about to finish in Brazil, Arruda does not want to lose the whole year, but she has already announced that she intends to look for another college next year.

In ads published Sunday in the main São Paulo newspapers, Uniban announced that it had opened an enquiry to investigate Arruda's story and had concluded that she was guilty of disrespecting the university's ethical principles as well as "academic dignity and morality."

The defense doubts the enquiry was balanced and complains that it wasn't shown the testimonies of those who testified against the student. Uniban interviewed the young woman for about five hours on Thursday.

Arruda says that the had to answer the same questions several times and that they ended distorting her words in the paid note published in the press announcing her expulsion. Moreover she claims that she never received a communication about her ousting and was made aware of it through the press.

 See full story in Brazzil Mag http://www.brazzilmag.com/content/view/11402/1/  

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Bank to Finance Mercosur’s Auto Sector

Brazil’s Minister of Development, Industry and Foreign Trade, Luiz Fernando Furlan, says that the ...

Banana Republics No More

Hasn’t the time come for serious new initiatives to ameliorate past suspicions and foster ...

500 Years of Inquietude

Francisco Julião used to defend agrarian reform forcefully arguing that it had to be ...

Ten Days into 2006 and Brazil’s Surplus Already Over US$ 1.2 Billion

Brazil’s foreign trade surplus for the first ten days of January stands at US$ ...

The Art of Giving

Close to 19 million adult Brazilians have become tired of waiting for government help ...

Brazil Ready to Produce Bird Flu Vaccine in Two Months

Isaias Raw, president of the Butantã Institute, in São Paulo, informed that within 60 ...

Brazil’s Right to Information Bill Still Very Imperfect, Says Article 19

International freedom of press organization Article 19 has published its analysis on the long-awaited ...

Brazilian composer Braguinha

Brazilian Hit Maker Braguinha Dies Weeks Before Turning 100

Brazilian composer Carlos Alberto Ferreira Braga, Braguinha, one of Brazil’s most enduring and beloved ...

Damascus/Sí£o Paulo (Brazil) Direct, Courtesy of Syria

Syria is planning to offer a flight between the city of São Paulo, in ...

Brazil: Picking Up the Pieces After Tragic Deluge

The Camará dam in the state of Paraíba, Brazil, was built two years ago ...