The gang rape of an 18-year-old woman in Germany has sparked a dispute about lowering the age of criminal responsibility.
Two of the suspects in the western city of Mülheim are aged 12 and the other three are 14. Germany does not prosecute children under 14.
All five have been suspended from school and so far one 14-year-old has appeared before an investigating judge.
The victim, found in bushes late on Friday, was taken to hospital.
A police spokesman said the assault involved “considerable violence” and went on for a long time.
The head of the police force union, Rainer Wendt, said “for years we’ve been demanding that the age of criminal responsibility be lowered in Germany”.
However, Jens Gnisa, head of the German Association of Judges, argued that “the equation ‘more punishment equals less criminality’ does not work with youths”. He said the educational rules established in German law were working well to tackle juvenile crime.
The Mülheim rape case, in Germany’s industrial Ruhr region, requires action by the Youth Welfare Office to address the suspects’ behavioural issues, a senior Child Protection Agency official said.