Jurors were told on Tuesday that Alshafe and Ahmadi took the woman to a location behind a beach shack and raped her “repeatedly”.
Although she could not definitively say whether she was also raped by Al-Danasurt, the prosecution alleges he was “fully aware of what was happening”.
Llewellyn-Waters said that DNA from Alshafe and Ahmadi matched samples from a forensic medical examination of the woman and forensic evidence related to Al-Danasurt was inconclusive.
The court heard that the woman said to police that she was spat on, kicked and her throat was grabbed during the alleged attacks, and that the men were laughing.
Llewellyn-Waters said that the woman “crawled off the beach” and was captured on CCTV leaving the beach alongside Alshafe.
“Google Translate entered into his telephone within a couple of minutes of them coming into shot details him telling her to ‘unlock it’, presumably her phone,” she said.
The prosecutor said she was “far from wanting to give him her number”.
All three defendants knew each other before the incident and were housed by the Home Office in the same hotel at the time, the jury heard.
The court was told that Ahmadi left the hotel the day after the alleged rapes and moved to an address in Crewe, where he was later arrested, without Home Office approval.
The jury was also told that Alshafe and Ahmadi entered the UK via small boat three months before the alleged rapes and that Al-Danasurt had entered the country a year before.
The trial is expected to continue for four weeks.