Authorities in Brazil are investigating reports that a young woman was left in a police cell with some 20 men for a month and repeatedly sexually abused.
The governor of the state of Para, where the reported case took place, has promised a full inquiry.
Governor Ana Julia Carepa said the age of the woman, put variously at 15 and 20, was irrelevant as she should not have been jailed with male prisoners.
Women's rights groups in Brazil say it is not an isolated case.
According to reports in the Brazilian media, the number of men in the cell with the young woman ranged between 20 and more than 30.
Media reports suggested that the girl was placed in a police cell in the town of Abaetetuba on suspicion of theft.
But human-rights groups say there is uncertainty about what offence the girl was accused of and she was not formally charged.
They say that she was raped relentlessly and forced to have sex in order to obtain food.
The girl's father has now alleged that he has been threatened by police who tried to force him to provide a birth certificate showing that the girl was 20 years of age - a document which he said did not exist.
The police are said to have believed at one stage that the girl was not under age.
Gov Carepa said the girl's age did not matter.
"Whether she was 15, 20, or 100 doesn't matter. A woman should never be left in a jail with men," she said.
"I am shocked and indignant, as a woman and as a governor," Gov Carepa said, promising that those responsible would face "exemplary punishment" and that such an incident would not be allowed to happen again.
Jails in Brazil are notorious for overcrowding and appalling conditions, and this is not the first time that there has been a controversy over a female prisoner being detained alongside men.
However, on this occasion, the seriousness of the allegation has caused shock and considerable public anger, the BBC's Gary Duffy in Sao Paulo says.
Women's rights groups in Para state quoted by the Globo website say there have been at least three cases of women being put in cells with men.
I just finished reading this article in my e-mail.
This is a touchy subject, because Brazil's prison system obviously differs from the United States, where I live. While I doubt co-ed prisons are high in numbers there, this proves that it isn't TOTALLY non-existant. Rapes occur in single-sex prisons, but I'm going off on a limb and saying that it probably occurs more in co-ed prisons. I don't know if they have juvenile detention centers there, but if they do, she should have been sent there.
oh, i thought prisons ought to be exclusively for men and exclusively for women. i dont really know how the system is over here, but i think they are segregated.
and if you think they cannot commit crimes behind bars... _________________
oh, i thought prisons ought to be exclusively for men and exclusively for women. i dont really know how the system is over here, but i think they are segregated.
and if you think they cannot commit crimes behind bars...
The biggest thing in this case, however, is her age--15. She's a minor in Brazil, the authorities acknowledged that in the statement. She should never have been in a prison with adult criminals.
The above link gives a basis of Brazilian prison.. I didn't find though anything about co-ed prisons.. Basically it just looks like there is alot of corruption in the prisons.. and my guess is that the girl was put in there at the request of someone else... Women being put in with the men doesn't seem to happen enough to get more recognition so my guess it deals with drug deals and mafiosas.. something a long those lines..