
'I will never forgive him': Victims recall trauma as serial rapist Zou Zhenhao jailed in UK
LONDON: Three women who were drugged and raped by serial offender Zou Zhenhao described enduring trauma, feelings of powerlessness and mental health struggles in testimonies read out in court, where Zou was sentenced to life with a minimum of 24 years in prison.
Their victim impact statements were included as part of proceedings at the Inner London Crown Court on Thursday (Jun 19), ahead of Zou's sentencing.
Zuo, 28, who remained stone-faced throughout the hearing, was convicted of drugging and raping 10 women in the UK and China, though British police have identified at least 50 others from video footage he took during those assaults.
Twenty-four more women have now made themselves known to London's Metropolitan Police Service, and further charges could follow.
Zou, who is from the Chinese city of Dongguan, had been studying for a PhD at University College London since 2019 before his arrest in London last year.
A jury on Thursday heard how he met women using online platforms and dating apps over a period of years, inviting them to his home under the guise of studying or to have drinks.
Zuo, who preyed on fellow university students and other women, would offer them alcohol laced with incapacitating drugs that rendered his victims unconscious and confused.
Three of his victims volunteered to write assessments of the impact those rapes had on them.
"COMPLETELY POWERLESS"
The first woman recounted her experience of him raping her, saying she managed to 'open her eyes for a few seconds during the sexual assault' and felt him thrusting against her.
She recalled being 'completely powerless, and could only use all her strength to demand he stop, which he did not'.
'His face in that moment will clearly stay in my mind forever. Even as I type these words, waves of nausea and disgust keep overwhelming me,' she said.
She noted how the incident had affected her to this day, saying 'the memories trigger migraines and an overwhelming urge to scrub myself clean'.
'Words cannot fully capture the emotions I felt then or the pain I carry now. Whatever happened that night is etched into my soul forever. I will never forgive him,' she added.
A second woman wrote how she could not sleep in the days after the incident, 'no matter what she did', as the events of what happened replayed in her mind.
She found that her anxiety became overwhelming and she was unable to make any decisions.
She described how for 'a long time' she 'could not socialise with others normally' and that before the attack, she 'was not aware a human could do such cruel things'.
A third woman who reached out to police said she had deliberately tried to forget the attack, but when she saw the police reports after he was arrested, 'her body responded faster than her conscious mind'.
She wrote of having to spend 3,000 yuan (US$417) on sexually transmitted disease (STD), human papillomavirus (HPV), and HIV testing, and she had worried for three 'agonising' months over contracting a disease from Zou after he raped her.
She also described how 'for years, nightmares haunted' her.
She was 'unable to be alone after dark' and 'developed insomnia and bipolar disorder,' turning to 'frenzied self-harm during breakdowns'.
This, she explained, had produced 'endless self-loathing', and that 'to this day' she 'feels gagged by shame'.
'HIGHLY MANIPULATIVE'
Zou was found guilty of 28 offences in total, including multiple counts of voyeurism, possession of extreme pornographic images and possession of a drug to commit a sexual offence.
A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police said detectives downloaded over 1,600 hours of footage from Zou's phones and laptops, as well as around nine million messages, representing 'one of the biggest cases' its digital forensics lab had dealt with.
Investigators reportedly spent months trawling through those messages, having translated them from Chinese into English, in order to understand Zou's pattern of offending.
The prosecution said that Zou was calculated and predatory in nature, undertook a high degree of premeditated planning, and blamed his victims.
In sentencing remarks, Judge Rosina Cottage called him a highly manipulative man who 'told (women) they would have no choice but to comply, even when they begged him to stop'.
She recalled how during one video taken by Zou, which was shown to the jury, one of his victims could be heard 'crying out for her mother again and again' as he repeatedly penetrated her.
In justifying her sentence of at least 24 years' jail, the judge said she believed Zou posed a 'significant risk of further offences … long into the future'.
That sentence is the minimum term Zou must serve in custody, but he could spend the rest of his life in prison if a parole board finds he is unfit for release after serving 24 years.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Jail for part-time tutor who filmed young students, own sisters in toilets over 10 years
SINGAPORE: In 2011, a man began illicitly filming females in their private moments, beginning with his sisters. While he used his mobile phone initially, the man, now 31, started buying spy camera pens for the purpose and widened his net in the course of a decade to include scores of other victims, including his ex-girlfriend, cousin, and students and staff from an education centre he taught at part-time. Investigators who went through his recordings established that they were filmed at the education centre, at the residences of relatives, friends and tutees, and in shopping centre toilets. No fewer than eight victims were identified in his videos. The man, who cannot be named to protect the victims' identities, was handed a jail term of one year and five months on Thursday (Jun 19) over his offences. He pleaded guilty to three counts of voyeurism and two of possessing voyeuristic images or recordings. Another six similar counts were taken into consideration for his sentencing. Apart from teaching part-time at the education centre, the man gave home tuition and had a full-time job as an engineering assistant with an air-conditioning company. PLACED PEN IN TOILET AT EDUCATION CENTRE Between April 2020 and August 2021, while teaching at the education centre, the man placed a spy camera pen in a toilet cubicle at the centre, which was used by both males and females. He recorded one of his tutees, a girl who was only nine years old at the time, relieving herself in a recording that lasted 10 minutes. He later told investigators that he had started recording voyeuristic videos at the education centre in May 2018. FILMED SISTER One occasion where the man filmed one of his sisters occurred on Jun 27, 2021. He switched on a spy camera pen and placed it in recording mode in a toilet before positioning its lens to face the toilet bowl. The sister, then 26, eventually used the toilet, and the man retrieved the pen later. The recording lasted nearly nine minutes and captured the woman relieving herself. CAUGHT BY DOMESTIC HELPER The man's long-time offending came to an end when a vigilant domestic worker spotted one of his pens in a toilet and picked it up with the intention of reporting the matter. On Aug 31, 2021, the man went to a residence to provide tuition to a boy. At about 8pm, he went to use the toilet, intending to set up a spy camera pen to record the domestic helper. He placed the pen on a pipe facing outwards towards the rest of the toilet before returning to his tuition session. He returned to retrieve the pen after the helper had used the toilet, but discovered that the device was missing. The maid had entered the toilet to shower, but as she was suspicious of the man, she decided to shower with the lights off. When she spotted the pen after completing her shower, she quickly got dressed and picked up the pen, wanting to inform the tutee's parents about the device. However, she was spotted holding on to the pen by the man after she exited the toilet. She returned the device to him when he asked her to do so, as she felt scared. The domestic helper eventually still informed the tutee's mother, and the police were called. One of the boy's parents informed the police that an attempt to check the contents of the camera had been made, but that this had been unsuccessful. The parent added: "The teacher said he (dropped) it in the toilet and (tried) to recover it." ACCUSED ARRESTED The man was placed under arrest and escorted to his residence on Sep 1, 2021, where police officers seized electronic devices, including four disassembled spy camera pen parts, one spy camera pen, two laptops and a mobile phone. The man then came clean about filming females in compromising states since 2011, starting with his sisters while they were in the toilet. He said he would typically have at least two functional spy camera pens, and would bring one out with him. He would periodically download the footage recorded and transfer it to his hard disks when they began taking up too much space on his laptops. No fewer than 55 images and recordings of victims – both staff and students at the education centre – were found in the devices, with the recordings being around 10 minutes long on average. Another 24 images and recordings of victims younger than 14 were found. There were 87 images and recordings in total. The prosecution said this was a case of a person abusing his position of trust by planting cameras in the homes of his tutee and family, as well as the education centre. "The filming of voyeuristic videos took place over 10 years. No less than eight victims were identifiable in the voyeuristic videos he took, including two of his students who were younger than 14 years old," it added, arguing for no less than two-and-a-half years' jail. The man's lawyer Kalidass Murugaiyan cited his client's various disorders, namely social anxiety disorder, voyeuristic disorder and major depressive disorder with anxious distress, in mitigation. However, District Judge Tan Jen Tse noted that there was nothing in the man's medical reports to indicate that he had been deprived totally or substantively of his self-control. The man had been aware of his actions and their wrongness, and there was no lack of impulse control, said Judge Tan, pointing to the planning and premeditation involved in the offences. He said that the case showed a "gross abuse of trust" as it took place at venues where children and parents have a right to feel safe. General and specific deterrence still outweigh rehabilitation in this case, indicated Judge Tan, who said that he had still taken into account the man's conditions and how he was actively seeking treatment. Voyeurism carries a jail term of up to two years, a fine, caning, or any combination of these penalties.


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
Cyclist did not report gunshot wound at point of admission, says NUH
SINGAPORE: A man who suffered a gunshot wound while cycling in a restricted forested area near Nee Soon Range did not disclose that he had been shot at the point of admission to the National University Hospital (NUH). In response to CNA's queries, an NUH spokesperson said on Friday (Jun 20) that the man admitted himself to its emergency department at 1pm on Jun 15. During triage and the initial clinical assessment, the man 'did not report that he had been shot', NUH noted. Based on the man's account and the circumstances of his admission, there were also 'no overt signs' to indicate a firearm-related injury, it said. As such, 'there was no known basis for a police report to be made at that point', the hospital added. NUH said that the police were notified immediately once the cause of the external wound was 'definitively determined'. 'We are cooperating fully with the police in their investigations and are unable to comment further out of respect for patient confidentiality, and as the case remains under investigation.' On the man's treatment, NUH said he was attended to promptly, based on standard trauma protocols, and was closely monitored. Appropriate care was given based on the team's clinical assessment and the man was assessed to be in a stable condition throughout, it added. THE INCIDENT The man was shot at about 11.40am on Jun 15 while cycling with friends in a forested part of the Central Catchment Nature Reserve, between Upper Seletar and Upper Peirce reservoirs — a restricted area where live-firing activities are conducted. At the time of the incident, an authorised live-firing activity was being conducted by the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) at its Nee Soon 500m Range, about 2.3km away. According to the police, the man was taken to the hospital by his friends, and a bullet slug was found lodged in his left lower back. He was in a stable condition after surgery to remove the slug. In the wake of the incident, Singapore's cycling governing body has urged riders to stay on designated trails and follow safety guidelines. The man is currently being investigated for wilful trespass, the police said on Wednesday. Under the Military Manoeuvres Act, unauthorised individuals are not allowed to enter gazetted areas designated for SAF live-firing for their own safety. Wilful trespass refers to a person deliberately trespassing on any grounds that belong to the government, areas designated for public purposes, houses, premises, land, boats or vessels without a satisfactory excuse.


CNA
3 hours ago
- CNA
Serial rapist Zou Zhenhao jailed for life in UK
Scroll up for the next video X Serial rapist Zou Zhenhao jailed for life in UK