The housekeeper at the Sofitel hotel who accused Dominique Strauss-Kahn of sexual assault has given a long and tearful interview, with her full name and picture attached, that provides her detailed account of the May encounter, including that Strauss-Kahn told her “You’re beautiful” as he attacked her.Rico says you can believe the stupid rich guy if you want, but he believes the housekeeper...
In the interview with Newsweek magazine, the housekeeper, a 32-year-old immigrant from Guinea named Nafissatou Diallo, said she had apologized and turned to leave when she realized that Strauss-Kahn’s room was not empty.
“Oh, my God,” Diallo recounted saying as she caught sight of a naked man— Strauss-Kahn, who was then the managing director of the International Monetary Fund— in the 28th-floor suite she had entered intending to clean. “I’m so sorry.”
Strauss-Kahn responded, “You don’t have to be sorry,” and reached for her breasts, she told Newsweek.
“You’re beautiful,” Strauss-Kahn said as he compelled her toward the bedroom, Diallo recounted to Newsweek, which also refers to her as “Nafi”. She said she told him to stop, saying: “Sir, stop this. I don’t want to lose my job.”
Much of the woman’s account tracks news reports about what she told the authorities about the encounter. Her allegations led to an indictment against Strauss-Kahn on charges including attempted rape. But some details are new, like her account of their dialogue and her account of her movements around the hotel immediately afterward. But they can be contradictory: She told counselors at the hospital right after the attack, for example, that Strauss-Kahn had not spoken at all.
Her interview marks the first time either person who was present in the room has publicly provided a narrative of what occurred there. Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers have suggested that any sexual encounter was consensual. Her interview with Newsweek, and a second one with ABC News (photo), appear intended to put pressure on the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., to prosecute the case.
“I want him to go to jail,” Diallo told Newsweek. “I want him to know there are some places you cannot use your power, you cannot use your money.”
In response to the Newsweek article, Strauss-Kahn’s lawyers said Diallo was “the first accuser in history to conduct a media campaign to persuade a prosecutor to pursue charges against a person from whom she wants money.”
Both Newsweek and ABC published pictures of her, and the Newsweek story describes her physically: “her dark hair is hennaed, straightened, and worn flat to her head”. Newsweek characterized Diallo’s account of the encounter as “vivid and compelling”, but said that, at other points during the interview, which lasted more than three hours, she was less forthright. Questions about her past in Africa “were met with vague responses”. At times, her tears struck the interviewers as “forced”, according to Newsweek. The article also said that she is illiterate, unable to read or write any language. She spoke proudly of her job at the New York Sofitel, where, according to the magazine, she made $25 an hour plus tips.
Although Strauss-Kahn remains under indictment, prosecutors have expressed concerns about the accuser’s credibility as a witness, saying that she had admitted lying in her application for asylum from Guinea. They also say she entered false information on tax returns and misrepresented her income to qualify for her housing.
Diallo described Strauss-Kahn as physically forceful, saying he behaved like “a crazy man to me”. Once in his bedroom, “he pulls me hard to the bed,” she told Newsweek. He tried to force her to engage in oral sex, she said. The woman, who is taller than Strauss-Kahn, said she kept pushing him off, but she added that she did not “want to hurt him” for fear of losing her job. Strauss-Kahn shoved her to the bathroom, she said, forced her to her knees and made her engage in oral sex, holding her head “so hard” between his hands. At the end of the encounter, she said, she ran out and sought refuge in the hallway. “I was standing there spitting,” she told Newsweek. “I was so alone.” She exchanged looks but not words with Strauss-Kahn as he left his suite and headed to the elevator, she said. She also sought to explain her movements after the encounter, which prosecutors have questioned. She recounted how she went to a nearby room to retrieve her cleaning supplies and then re-entered Strauss-Kahn’s suite to begin cleaning it. “I went to the room I have to clean,” she said. She reported the encounter to a supervisor. The whole encounter may have lasted just nine minutes. Citing an anonymous source, Newsweek reported that nine minutes after Diallo first entered Strauss-Kahn’s suite, he placed a call to his daughter, whom he then met for lunch.
25 July 2011
More on DS-K
Joseph Goldstein has an article in The New York Times about the housekeeper and the rich guy:
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