
France steps closer to defining rape as lack of consent
The case drew renewed attention to the widespread crime of rape and the issue of consent.
The bill passed this week redefines all sexual assaults -- including rape -- as "any non-consensual act".
France's lower house of parliament approved a slightly different version of the bill in April.
Wednesday's vote is not the final legislative hurdle. A joint committee of senators and lower-house MPs is expected to draft a joint text prior to the final adoption of the law in both houses.
"Consent is not saying no," said Equality Minister Aurore Berge, but "saying yes, an explicit yes, freely, without constraint or ambiguity".
The vote is a "decisive step towards a genuine culture of consent", she added.
The bill passed by both chambers defines consent as "free and informed, specific, prior and revocable", adding that it "cannot be inferred from the victim's silence or lack of reaction alone".
France's current legal definition of rape defines it as "any act of sexual penetration... by violence, constraint, threat or surprise" but this bill would specify that there is "no consent" under these conditions.
While Wednesday's vote shows an emerging consensus, some lawmakers and activists have expressed concerns about the change.
Advocates say this will enable the law to better hold perpetrators accountable.
But opponents say they fear the change will lead investigators to focus excessively on the victim's behaviour.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

LeMonde
12 minutes ago
- LeMonde
Palestinian student in France probed over 'hateful' online posts
A Palestinian student from Gaza suspected of posting "hateful" anti-Semitic messages, which led to her losing her place in a French university, is being investigated and will have to leave France, officials said on Thursday, July 31. France's prestigious Sciences Po university in the northern city of Lille canceled the student's accreditation on Wednesday. On Thursday, Lille's chief prosecutor, Carole Etienne, told AFP a probe had been opened against the student for allegedly trying to "justify terrorism" and "justify a crime against humanity." A French diplomatic source said that, given those developments, the student "should now leave (French) national territory as soon as possible." Screenshots of posts the student allegedly shared in September – published by pro-Israel accounts on X, formerly Twitter – include an image of Adolf Hitler and words appearing to call for the death of Jews. The account attributed to the student has been taken offline, after French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau demanded it be closed down. Retailleau said that "Hamas propagandists" should not be in the country, referring to the Palestinian militant group that rules Gaza. Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot on Wednesday described her as "a Gazan student making anti-Semitic remarks" and pledged an inquiry into how she gained a student visa. The Lille prosecutor's investigation comes against a background of heightened online rhetoric related to Israel's war in Gaza. France is home to both the biggest Muslim and Jewish communities in the European Union. The Sciences Po university told AFP that the Palestinian student had been welcomed to its campus "at the recommendation of the French consulate in Jerusalem." The French diplomatic source said the student arrived in France on July 11 on a scholarship based on "academic excellence" and after "security checks." France has helped more than 500 people leave Gaza since the latest war started, included wounded children, journalists, students and artists. French President Emmanuel Macron last week said his country will recognize Palestinian statehood in September, as international alarm grows about the plight of the more than two million Palestinians facing hunger in the Gaza Strip. But Paris has urged a post-war plan for Gaza to exclude Hamas, which the European Union deems to be a "terrorist" group.
LeMonde
an hour ago
- LeMonde
Portugal 'considering' recognition of Palestinian state in September
Portugal will consider whether to recognize the State of Palestine at the United Nations in September, Prime Minister Luis Montenegro's office said Thursday, July 31. Portugal "is considering recognition of the Palestinian state, as part of a procedure that could be concluded during the high-level week of the 80 th United Nations General Assembly, to be held in New York in September," the statement said. This decision was made after "multiple contacts" with partners, given "the extremely worrying developments in the conflict, both from a humanitarian perspective and through repeated references to a possible annexation of Palestinian territories" by Israel, the statement said. France, the United Kingdom and Canada have all in recent days voiced, in some cases qualified, intentions to diplomatically recognize a Palestinian state. The moves have come as international concern and criticism has grown over worrying malnutrition in Gaza. Last week, French President Emmanuel Macron said his country would officially recognize a Palestinian state at the United Nations General Assembly in September, hoping to create collective momentum in this direction. "The government took a very carefully considered decision in consultation with its European and other partners," Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa responded immediately after the executive's announcement. A UN-backed international hunger monitoring organization on Tuesday that a "worst-case famine scenario" was underway in Gaza.


Euronews
an hour ago
- Euronews
Not even the EU knows if wine and spirits will be hit by US tariffs
The EU executive has touted the new asymmetric tariff agreement with the Donald Trump administration, announced on Sunday, as a step toward predictability. Yet, less than a day before the US is expected to implement a new tariff ceiling of 15% on EU industrial goods, crucial details for several sectors, including wine and spirits, remain unresolved. Industry stakeholders are still holding out hope for exemptions, but no official list has been released. A Commission spokesperson admitted on Thursday that wine and spirits are likely to be subject to the tariffs. 'It is not our expectation that wine and spirits will be included in the first group of exemptions announced by the US tomorrow,' the spokesperson said. 'We're still negotiating,' they added, noting that both sides are working to finalise a joint statement based on the agreement reached between Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and US President Donald Trump. Securing an exemption for the wine and spirits industry remains a top priority for the EU negotiating team in Brussels. This industry is seen as strategic—especially for France, which, along with Italy, Spain, and Ireland, is actively lobbying for these products to be spared. 'We are continuing to negotiate with the Americans so that, if possible, spirits, perhaps wine, and other sectors can be exempted. It's a work in progress,' said French Economy Minister Éric Lombard in a radio interview on Wednesday. The US and China are the top export markets for European wine and spirits. In France alone, the industry supports nearly 550,000 jobs across its value chain. Chinese tariffs are already impacting the sector, and new US duties would be a further blow. Both EU and US trade officials, along with major industry associations such as the Distilled Spirits Council and the Comité Européen des Entreprises Vins, have advocated for a 'zero-for-zero' tariff arrangement on wine and spirits. However, the EU's negotiating position has weakened, and Brussels no longer has effective leverage over these products. The past ability to threaten retaliatory tariffs on iconic American exports like bourbon or Californian wine often kept EU wine and spirits off the US target list. That option disappeared with the latest agreement reached in Scotland, leaving the EU less inclined to jeopardise the broader deal over a single sector. Adding to the uncertainty, the Commission spokesperson declined to confirm whether tariffs would be imposed as early as Friday, saying only that they had a 'clear understanding' the US intends to proceed via executive order, possibly overnight.