Weekend Herald

Wolf-whistlers face on-the-spot fines

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Repeat wolf-whistlers face on-thespot fines of up to €750 ($1290) under a law against sexual harassment passed in France this week, amid outrage over film of a woman being punched in Paris.

MPs approved the law on its second reading on Thursday, days after security film footage showing a man punching Marie Laguerre, a Parisian student, went viral online.

However, feminist groups, and some police unions, criticised the new bill against “sexist outrage” as a “huge disappoint­ment” that would see more serious offences go unpunished and said that it was inapplicab­le in practice.

The new law creates fines of between €90 and €750 for genderbase­d harassment on streets and public transporta­tion, starting next month.

“Harassment in the street has previously not been punished. From now on, it will be,” Marlene Schiappa, Gender Equality Minister and architect of the new legislatio­n, told Europe 1 radio.

She said she was convinced the measure would act as a “deterrent”.

The law, which bans sexual or sexist comments and degrading, intimidati­ng or hostile behaviour, came as Laguerre, 22, launched a website to allow victims of harassment to recount their ordeal — with 200 posted within 24 hours.

The site, Nous Toutes Harcelemen­t (We are all harassed), aims to collect accounts of incidents “in the street, at work, in the private sphere”, she said.

France was appalled when security camera footage from a bar showed her being violently punched by a man in broad daylight after she told him to “shut up” for repeatedly harassing her with lewd advances.

She filed a complaint with police who have opened an investigat­ion, and she wrote that “we must no longer keep quiet”.

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