The French government is pursuing legislation to set the age for sexual consent at 15

Paris – The French government wants to set the age of sexual consent at 15 and make it easier to punish long-ago sexual abuse of children, amid mounting public pressure and a wave of online testimony about rape and other sexual assaults by parents and authorities. The Justice Department called such treatment of children “intolerable” and said in a statement that “the government is determined to act quickly to bring about the changes our society expects”.

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Protesters hold placards that read ‘Rape (does not equal) consent’, ‘Rape = crime’ and ‘Solidarity with Julie’, November 18, 2020 in Paris during a demonstration called by feminist groups after a French court passed legal classification of “sexual offense” in the charges of three firefighters over relationships with a 14-year-old minor “Julie” in 2009. The Versailles appeals court rejected a request to reclassify the charges as “rape”.

THOMAS SAMSON / AFP / Getty


“An act of sexual penetration by an adult of a minor under the age of 15 is considered a rape,” Justice Minister Eric Dupond-Moretti said on France-2 television on Tuesday. Consent could no longer be cited to reduce costs, but exceptions would be made for teens who have consensual sex, he said.

The change should still be enshrined in law, but the announcement is an important step after years of efforts to bolster French protections for children who are victims of rape and sexual violence.

Scandal is driving momentum

A press to set France’s first age of consent three years ago, in the wake of the global # MeToo movement, it failed due to legal complications.

The effort has gained new momentum since allegations of incestuous sexual abuse emerged last month involving a prominent French political expert, Olivier Duhamel. That sparked off an online # MeTooInceste movement in France that sparked hundreds of similar testimonials.

Olivier Duhamel Portrait Session
Constitutionalist and French political scientist Olivier Duhamel poses during a portrait session in Paris, France, March 30, 2019.

Eric Fougere / Corbis / Getty


The Justice Department says it is in talks with victim groups about tougher punishment for incest and extending or removing the statute of restrictions on child sexual abuse, preventing prosecution in several high profile cases in France in recent years.

It also says it “wants to ensure that victims of the same perpetrator do not receive different legal treatment,” which could increase the possibilities to prosecute people accused of abusing multiple people over decades.

In the Duhamel case, the Paris prosecutor opened an investigation into alleged “ rape and sexual abuse by a person in custody ” of a child following public allegations in a book by his stepdaughter that he had abused her twin brother in the 1980s, when the siblings were 13 years old.

Duhamel said he was “the target of personal assault” and resigned from his many professional roles, including as a respected TV commentator and head of the National Foundation of Political Sciences.

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