USA TODAY US Edition

France finally weighs setting age of consent

- Maya Vidon

PARIS – As a campaign to crack down on sexual harassment intensifie­s, France is considerin­g doing something long ago adopted in other Western nations: setting a minimum age of consent for sex.

In recent court cases, judges have refused to prosecute men for having sex with minor children because there was no proof of coercion.

“We want the irrefutabl­e presumptio­n that a minor cannot agree to engage in sex with an adult,” said Cather- ine Brault, a lawyer who defends child victims in Paris.

The measure is part of proposed legislatio­n to curb “lecherous” behavior in France, part of the fallout from the sexual harassment scandals that have erupted in the United States and since spread to France.

Adults now can be charged with groping and sentenced to a maximum of five years in prison if they’re found guilty of abusing a child under 15. The more serious charge of aggravated sexual assault or rape of a child carries a sen-

tence of up to 20 years — but coercion or violence must be proven.

As the law is written now, it can be interprete­d that “a girl can consent to a sexual relationsh­ip, but she cannot consent to groping,” Brault said. “This gap has been denounced for years.”

Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet has suggested a legal minimum age of 13 for sexual consent. Other French leaders have called for an age of 15. Adults violating the age of consent would immediatel­y face rape charges with or without signs of coercion.

In the USA, the age of consent set by the states ranges from 16 to 18.

The debate in France was prompted by outrage over recent cases. On Nov. 7, a 30-year-old French man was acquitted of rape after a jury found no evidence he had forced an 11-year-old into having sex. Jurors ruled that the elements that constitute rape such as “coercion, threat, violence and surprise were not establishe­d” because the girl had followed him willingly. The girl became pregnant and gave birth to a boy who has been placed in a foster home.

In another case in October, prosecutor­s declined to file rape charges against a 28-year-old man who had sex with an 11-year-old girl, stating they could not justify the charges because she had shown no resistance.

 ??  ?? An activist’s banner at a protest in Paris on Nov. 14 reads: “For him impunity, for her a life sentence.” CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP
An activist’s banner at a protest in Paris on Nov. 14 reads: “For him impunity, for her a life sentence.” CHRISTOPHE ENA/AP

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