Gulf News

France closer to ban on smacking kids

Europe rights group had singled out France for failing to ban corporal punishment

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The French National Assembly voted yesterday in favour of a largely symbolic ban on parents smacking their children, a practice which though condemned by the UN still enjoys widespread support in the country.

The bill on “corporal punishment or humiliatio­n” seeks to ensure that parental authority is exercised “without violence” of any sort, including “physical, verbal or psychologi­cal” violence.

MPs voted it through 51-1 early yesterday morning, after a late-night debate, and it will now pass to the Senate.

Attempts by previous government­s to ban the practise have run afoul of conservati­ves.

A 2016 bill condemning the smacking of children was later struck down by the Constituti­onal Council, which vets legislatio­n, because it was adopted in the form of an amendment to an unrelated piece of legislatio­n.

Rap on punishment

According to the non-government­al Childhood Foundation, 85 per cent of French parents resort to corporal punishment, to the dismay of many European neighbours, including Sweden and Germany. Schools have long will also bring France into line with internatio­nal legislatio­n.

In March 2015, human rights organisati­on the Council of Europe singled out France for failing to ban smacking, unlike most other European countries.

A year later, the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child took up the issue, calling on France to “explicitly prohibit” all forms of corporal punishment of children.

Those in favour of the ban say scientific studies prove that children suffer both mental and physical consequenc­es when smacked.

If the bill is adopted, France will become the 55th state to ban corporal punishment of children, a move started by Sweden in 1979.

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