Kuwait Times

France fines more than 700 in year of ‘cat-call’ law

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LONDON: French authoritie­s have fined more than 700 men for harassing women in public since the introducti­on of a law a year ago to stop cat-calls, lewd comments and gestures. Those breaking the law face potential on-the-spot fines of up to 750 euros ($839) or 1,500 euros if there are aggravatin­g circumstan­ces such as the victim is under 15. Predatory remarks and wolf-whistles are fairly commonplac­e in France. The law, introduced as part of tougher legislatio­n to fight sexual violence, penalizes sexist or sexual words or behavior that are hostile, degrade, humiliate or intimidate.

The office of gender equality minister Marlene Schiappa, who spearheade­d the legislatio­n, said more than 700 fines had been issued. “Street harassment: over 700 fines,” Schiappa tweeted. “It is no longer permissibl­e and must no longer be tolerated to insult, to follow, to humiliate women by harassing them in the street, on transport or in public space!” But French feminist Anais Bourdet said that while the law was important on a symbolic level, it was ineffectiv­e as men do not harass women when police are around.

Bourdet said the small number of fines was “ridiculous” given the scale of the problem, adding that she had received 15,000 testimonia­ls from women reporting harassment since setting up a project to highlight the issue in 2012. “This law is a dressing on a gaping wound ... and we cannot be content with a symbol,” she said. Bourdet said the key was to invest in education and prevention as behaviors were learnt at a very early age, often in the playground. The law came into effect last August days after outrage erupted in France when a man hit a woman after she confronted him for wolf-whistling her outside a Paris cafe.

A man who slapped a woman’s bottom on a bus near Paris and made lewd remarks became the first person to receive a fine under the law last September. He was jailed for the assault and fined 300 euros for the comments. The anti-harassment law is backed by 90% of the French public, according to a survey last year by polling company Ifop. France’s problem with street harassment was highlighte­d in a 2017 Thomson Reuters Foundation poll to find the world’s most female friendly megacity, which ranked Paris behind London and Tokyo.

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