Times Colonist

Fines for sex harassment on streets approved in France

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PARIS — French lawmakers gave final passage Wednesday to a bill that expands the criminal definition of child rape and outlaws sex harassment on streets, measures the government described as a signal of deep social change.

The legislatio­n approved in the lower house of the French parliament classifies relations between an adult and a child under age 15 as rape resulting from an “abuse of vulnerabil­ity,” if the victim lacked the ability to consent. It would be up to a judge to determine whether a child was capable of giving sexual consent.

The revision followed recent cases that provoked public outrage. In both cases, French courts ruled men who had sex with 11-year-old girls could not be prosecuted for rape because authoritie­s could not prove there was coercion.

The bill also extends the statute of limitation­s for sex crimes, allowing prosecutio­n for 30 years instead of 20 after a purported victim turns 18 years old.

The new law also allows for fines of 90-750 euros ($140 to $1,140 Cdn) for gender-based harassment on streets and public transporta­tion. It bans sexual or sexist comments and behaviour that is degrading, humiliatin­g, intimidati­ng hostile or offensive.

Junior minister for gender equality Marlene Schiappa said she is convinced the measure will act as a “deterrent.”

A video of a man striking a woman after she responded to obscene sounds he made as she passed by him in Paris went viral in France this week. The Paris prosecutor has opened an investigat­ion, but the man seen in the video has not been arrested.

The bill also steps up sanctions for cyberstalk­ing and outlaws taking pictures or videos under someone’s clothes without consent. The practice, known as “upskirting,” will be punishable by up to one year in prison and a fine of 15,000 euros ($22,740 Cdn).

President Emmanuel Macron’s government pushed for the changes in the legislatio­n in the wake of the #MeToo movement and said they would take effect in September.

 ??  ?? At a demonstrat­ion in Lyon, central France, last year, a woman holds a banner that reads “Rape Culture” to support the wave of testimonie­s denouncing cases of sexual harassment. French lawmakers voted on Wednesday to expand the definition of child rape...
At a demonstrat­ion in Lyon, central France, last year, a woman holds a banner that reads “Rape Culture” to support the wave of testimonie­s denouncing cases of sexual harassment. French lawmakers voted on Wednesday to expand the definition of child rape...

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