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Maoist cult leader Aravindan Balakrishnan jailed for 23 years | Maoist cult leader Aravindan Balakrishnan jailed for 23 years |
(35 minutes later) | |
A Maoist cult leader who committed a string of sex assaults and kept his daughter captive in London for three decades has been jailed for 23 years. | A Maoist cult leader who committed a string of sex assaults and kept his daughter captive in London for three decades has been jailed for 23 years. |
Aravindan Balakrishnan, 75, of Enfield, called himself Comrade Bala and brainwashed his cult into thinking he had god-like powers. | |
Over 30 years he also raped two of his followers, Southwark Crown Court heard. | |
His daughter Katy Morgan-Davies said the situation was "horrible, so dehumanising and degrading". | |
Ms Morgan-Davies, 33, who has waived her right to anonymity, said: "I felt like a caged bird with clipped wings." | |
Supernatural force | |
Balakrishnan was convicted of offences including child cruelty, false imprisonment and assault. | |
The court heard he established the Workers' Institute of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought in the 1970s in south London and convinced his followers into thinking he could read their minds. | The court heard he established the Workers' Institute of Marxism-Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought in the 1970s in south London and convinced his followers into thinking he could read their minds. |
He warned them a supernatural force called Jackie would cause natural disasters if he was ever disobeyed. | He warned them a supernatural force called Jackie would cause natural disasters if he was ever disobeyed. |
Branding him a "narcissist and a psychopath", his daughter said: "The people he looked up to were people like Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot and Saddam Hussein - you couldn't criticise them either in the house. | |
"They were his gods and his heroes. These were the sort of people he wanted to emulate." | "They were his gods and his heroes. These were the sort of people he wanted to emulate." |
During the trial she told the court she was beaten and banned from singing nursery rhymes, going to school or making friends. | During the trial she told the court she was beaten and banned from singing nursery rhymes, going to school or making friends. |
And she said her father was using the sect as a "pilot unit" to learn how to control people before taking over the world. | And she said her father was using the sect as a "pilot unit" to learn how to control people before taking over the world. |
She said: "I used to think 'God, if the whole world is going to be like this, what way out is there? How am I going to live? I cannot live in this. | She said: "I used to think 'God, if the whole world is going to be like this, what way out is there? How am I going to live? I cannot live in this. |
"So I used to think that the best way would be to die." | "So I used to think that the best way would be to die." |
Told she was a "waif", it was only when she was a teenager that she learned a follower of Balakrishnan, Sian Davies, then known as Comrade Sian, was her mother. | Told she was a "waif", it was only when she was a teenager that she learned a follower of Balakrishnan, Sian Davies, then known as Comrade Sian, was her mother. |
Ms Davies fell from a window at the cult's base on Christmas Eve in 1996 and died several months later in hospital | Ms Davies fell from a window at the cult's base on Christmas Eve in 1996 and died several months later in hospital |
Ms Morgan-Davies said that night she heard screaming and shouting and saw her mother lying in a pool of blood below the bathroom window pleading with Balakrishnan to "kill me". | Ms Morgan-Davies said that night she heard screaming and shouting and saw her mother lying in a pool of blood below the bathroom window pleading with Balakrishnan to "kill me". |
She said in the subsequent years she would dream of her mother and wake up crying. | She said in the subsequent years she would dream of her mother and wake up crying. |
Sentencing Balakrishnan, the judge said: "You decided to treat her as a project, not a person. | |
"You claimed to do it for her to protect her from the outside world, but you created a cruel environment." | |
Ms Morgan-Davies managed to escape the cult in 2013 after memorising the number for an anti-slavery charity she saw on the news. | Ms Morgan-Davies managed to escape the cult in 2013 after memorising the number for an anti-slavery charity she saw on the news. |
She has since moved to Leeds and started an education and said: "I've been a non-person all my life and now is my chance to be myself." | |
During sentencing the judge recommended that £500 be given to the charity Palm Cove Society, which helped Balakrishnan's daughter escape. |