The Independent

Violence against women in France is ‘getting worse’

‘Alarming’ misogyny needs emergency action, says watchdog

- STAFF

Five years into the MeToo movement, French society “remains very sexist in all of its spheres”, a government-establishe­d equality watchdog said in a report that also sounded the alarm about double-digit rates of sexual violence reported by women. The High Council for Equality between Women and Men called

for a national “emergency plan” to combat what it described as “the massive, violent and sometimes lethal consequenc­es” of sexism against women.

In a survey commission­ed by the council, one-third of women reported having been pushed by their partners into sexual acts that they didn’t want. Around one in seven of the survey’s women respondent­s said men had forced sex on them, and a similar number reported having been hit and shoved by their partners, the council said.

The council’s president, Sylvie Pierre-Brossolett­e, expressed particular concern about sexism among younger men “bathed in social media, digital (technology), pornograph­y”. She said sexism must be “fought from the youngest of ages”. The council will present its findings to French president Emmanuel Macron tomorrow, she added.

“Young people, in particular, are brought up digitally on these scenes of mundane violence, of relations between men and women that are completely of domination and dominated, and that has impregnate­d society,” Pierre-Brossolett­e told radio channel France Inter. “Uprooting sexism is very hard,” she added.

The council’s proposed 10-point plan of action included a call for tougher regulation of online content. Other suggestion­s included making training against sexism obligatory in workplaces and banning adverts that suggest some children’s toys are for boys and others for girls. France has made significan­t progress in some areas. Prime minister Elisabeth Borne is only the country’s second woman to hold the post, and parliament’s lower house also has its first-ever woman president, Yaël Braun-Pivet, since June.

Macron’s government has also increased police resources against domestic violence and offered free birth control to all women up to age 25. Lawmakers are also working to constituti­onally guarantee France’s abortion rights, with a bill intended to prevent any of the rollbacks in reproducti­ve rights seen elsewhere, including in the United States.

Still, the equality council described the overall situation for women in France as “alarming”. The council’s report said: “Sexism is not retreating in France. On the contrary, some of its most violent manifestat­ions are getting worse and the young generation­s are the most affected.”

AP

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 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? A demonstrat­ion in Tou l ouse on I nternation­a l Women’s Day to ca ll for greater rights
(AFP/Getty) A demonstrat­ion in Tou l ouse on I nternation­a l Women’s Day to ca ll for greater rights
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