Albuquerque Journal

France, Italy grapple with violence against women

- BY ELAINE GANLEY AND FRANCES D’EMILIO

PARIS — French President Emmanuel Macron on Saturday launched an initiative to combat violence and harassment against women in France, aiming to erase a sense of shame that breeds silence among victims and changing what he said is the country’s sexist culture.

In a nearly hourlong speech at the Elysee Presidenti­al Palace, Macron noted that 123 women died in attacks against them in France last year. Holding a moment of silence for them, he declared: “It is time for shame to change camps.”

In neighborin­g Italy, the head of the Chamber of Deputies marked Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence Against Women by noting with dismay that the “Weinstein case” hasn’t inspired women to speak out on workplace harassment or assault like it has in the United States and other parts of Europe.

“The Weinstein case lifted the lid on the shame of (sexual) abuse” in the glamorous world of U.S. cinema, “setting off an avalanche in many other areas of society,” said Laura Boldrini, addressing a special gathering in which all the 630 seats, usually occupied by lawmakers in Parliament’s lower house, were instead filled by guests who came to speak of their rebellion against being victims of men.

Among the invited: a woman who survived being stabbed repeatedly in the back by an exbeau; the mother of a college student who was strangled and her corpse set ablaze by her former lover after she broke up with him; a woman whose child was slain by her estranged husband to avenge their failed marriage; a Moroccan immigrant whose abusive husband burned down their home after she found the courage to flee to safety with their children; a Nigerian who was trafficked into a prostituti­on ring the day she set foot in Italy.

Boldrini lamented that Italy hasn’t seen a similar outpouring of accusation­s of workplace harassment.

“In Italy, this certainly hasn’t had the same effect,” she said, adding: I’d like to think that this has happened because there aren’t molesters, but I’m afraid that’s not the way it is.”

She explained the tendency toward silence, including about rape, saying that women “know that in this country there persists a strong prejudice against them” in terms of their credibilit­y.

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Women take part in a march marking the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence against Women, in Rome on Saturday.
GREGORIO BORGIA/ASSOCIATED PRESS Women take part in a march marking the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence against Women, in Rome on Saturday.

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