Thousands protest at UCD over 'naked, bruised' images shared of student
Around 4,000 students attended a rally on the campus of University College Dublin after a ânaked, bruised and unconsciousâ image of a student was widely shared across the university.
The studentâs life was âshattered in a secondâ when gardaĂ informed her that someone had sent the image to 171 UCD staff email accounts.
The young student, Maeve (not her real name), said she received little support from the university after her alleged rape in 2023. She did not report the incident to gardaĂ at the time because she believed she would not be believed.
In the DĂĄil last week, People Before Profit-Solidarity TD Ruth Coppinger said the student had to take UCD to the High Court after the university refused to allow her to sit her exams that year as a âresult of being raped".
âShe became pregnant, and she had to get a termination, and she had to miss some of her medical exams, having to schedule that,â Ms Coppinger said.
âShe asked UCD if she could sit her exams in the summer. UCD said no, and they attempted to make her drop back a year.
âShe hasnât been able to continue her medical degree since 2023, as UCD has blocked her from doing so,â Ms Coppinger claimed.
In April last year, someone circulated images of Maeve ânaked, bruised, and unconsciousâ to university staff through an unidentified ProtonMail account.
The medical student said she only learned the images had circulated when gardaĂ contacted her. She said she was told blocks and filters would be applied to prevent further distribution.
However, last summer, Maeve began receiving similar emails again in her student inbox on multiple occasions. She informed gardaĂ and personally blocked all emails originating from ProtonMail.
âI had been under the impression that the abusive Proton mail emails had been blocked and/or filtered by UCD,â she said.
In November 2025, someone again circulated the same photo of Maeve in her year groupâs School of Medicine WhatsApp chat, which has at least 300 members. The message came from an unrecognised number.
Maeve claimed she received no support from UCD in relation to the alleged image-based sexual abuse.
On Wednesday afternoon, thousands of students gathered for a âNot in Our UCDâ rally organised by UCD Studentsâ Union (UCDSU) in partnership with the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre (DRCC).
The studentsâ union said the rally was ânot focused on one incident alone, but on what they describe as deeper issues in institutional response from classroom practices to senior decision-making structures.âÂ
The contacted UCD for comment but did not receive a reply.
However, the university told it had not conducted an internal investigation into the image sharing because An Garda SĂochĂĄna has the forensic, technical and legal expertise and powers to do so, and said it is supporting the force as the appropriate authority to carry out the investigation.
It also said Maeve "has had the full and proactive support of the Head of the University's Advisory Service for some time and several different pastoral and academic supports in the School of Medicine".
Chief Executive of the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre, Rachel Morrogh, said the protest sends a "message of zero tolerance of sexual violence to all those who have experienced this form of abuse and gives hope that we can chart a different course for the future."
"It underlines that survivors should never have to face sexual violence alone and that students and staff want to carry the burden with her in solidarity for all she has endured. Together, we are all stronger," Ms Morrogh added.
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