In the clip, Secretary General Cecilia Bödker Pedersen tells what she sees the judiciary needing to do for the future.

Storasyster is an independent non-profit organization that offers support to those who have been victims of rape or other sexual abuse.

Every day they meet children who have been exposed to abuse in one way or another and work to support them in the question of whether they should dare to report or not.

- Many who come to us are afraid that they will not be believed when they make a police report, and many also express a concern that they do not know how a legal process works, says Cecilia Bödker Pedersen, secretary general of the association Storasyster.

Too high demands are placed on the children

The Western Court of Appeal acquitted a man in his 50s when there was uncertainty about how the word "snip" should be interpreted.

Storasyster's general secretary believes that such high demands are placed on children and exactly what words they use in legal proceedings. 

- This particular sentence risks making young people believe that they have to do everything right, and it shouldn't be that way.

As a victim of crime, you should be able to go to the police and say "I have been the victim of a crime" and then it should be taken care of.

Court of Appeal lawyer Åke Thimfors, one of the five who ruled in the case, does not want to appear in a taped interview, but defends the verdict.

He states that they did not have the opportunity to ask clarifying questions to the girl and that the prosecutor would have had to present additional evidence for a conviction.