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For any copyright, please send me a message. The Famagusta District court ruled the 19-year-old was guilty of public mischief after she retracted charges against 12 Israeli youths and she now faces up to year behind bars and a £1,500 fine when she is sentenced on Tuesday. She maintains she was raped but forced to change her account under pressure from Cypriot police who she claims interrogated her alone for seven hours. Yona Golub, 18, was one of the group accused of attacking the teenager in the popular party resort of Ayia Napa last summer. He told the The Mail On Sunday he and his friends were now ”preparing to sue her”. He said: “We deserve compensation for what we went through. I don’t know how much I should get. “They need to put her in prison and only afterwards should they deal with the compensation.” Mr Golub, who was held in custody for eight days after the allegations were made, insists he was not among the Israelis who were in the room with the teenager when she claimed she was raped but in bed in the same budget hotel with an Israeli girl. He was released when his girlfriend showed police a selfie of them she said was taken in her room at the time the alleged gang-rape. He said: “The police took DNA swabs from our mouths and the enormity of what happened began to hit me. “I was sure I was going to be put in prison for my whole life.” The guilty verdict against the British teenager has sparked outrage in the UK buy Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said the Government was “careful” of aggravating authorities in Cyprus ahead of her sentencing. Mr Raab said he had conveyed his concerns to his Cypriot counterpart over her treatment and conviction for public mischief. But he told Sky’s Ridge On Sunday the case needed to be handled “very sensitively” to prevent doing anything “counter-productive” between now and the teenager’s sentencing next week. Trending Mr Raab said: “I have conveyed our concerns about her treatment and the case to my Cypriot opposite number. “I did that on Friday, and I also have also spoken to the young lady’s mother to see what more support we can provide to her. “So we also need to be careful that we don’t do anything which aggravates the situation between now (and) the date of sentencing, which is on Tuesday. “But the concerns that we have and that I have, have been squarely and firmly and categorically registered with the Cypriot authorities.” On what he would do if he felt there had been a miscarriage of justice, Mr Raab said Cyprus was “sensitive” about perceived political interference. He said: “We don’t control the Cypriot justice system, they’re very sensitive in Cyprus about perceived political interference, but there are clear questions around the due process, the fai
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