Two students who sent rape threats in group chat will not return to university
Two Warwick University students involved in a group chat which contained threats to rape other students will not be returning to campus in September, despite a ban on their attendance being reduced.
In a statement released on Monday, university vice chancellor Stuart Croft confirmed the two male students would not come back.
The students were initially barred from campus for 10 years following the incident, but this was reduced to one year following an appeal.
In a statement Mr Croft said: “We are committed to ensuring the safety of our community. I have today spoken to the two young men concerned and confirm that neither of them will be returning to the university.
“I am continuing to listen to the views of students, staff and all members of our community here at Warwick and support them so that we can learn from this experience.”
One of the women targeted in the group chat said in an interview with BBC Radio 5 Live that she was “physically sick” when she found out the men would be returning to campus in September.
When the news was revealed last week, students reacted angrily on Twitter tweeting #ShameOnYouWarwick.
An open letter from one head of department, Professor Emma Mason, said students and staff were united in their “shock and disgust” at the decision to reduce the 10-year ban.
Following the news the students would now be returning, one student tweeted: “I’m longer afraid to come back to Warwick – but I will come back and fight for the safety of our students so they feel safe on campus.”
The incident was first reported by Warwick University newspaper The Boar last year after it obtained screenshots of the group chat.
Graphic messages encouraged members to rape specific students, as well as including anti-Semitic and racist language.
After a university investigation five students were suspended. Two were banned for 10 years, two were excluded for one year and one was given a lifetime ban.
Following the vice chancellor's statement, one of the complainants told The Boar: “I think it’s important to remember this isn’t a victory for any of us really. We’ve had to fight this and have been through a horrendous process, the men have wasted a year of their lives and haven’t been able to just move on because the university made a commitment to take them back that was simply untenable, and the student body as a whole has lost – lost the respect toward the university, the belief that coming forward will ever help and the feeling of safety.
"It’s still a sad time to be a Warwick student.”