- Warhammer maker Games Workshop enters London's top stocks index
- Iran Nobel winner released for three weeks, 'unconditional' freedom urged
- Red Cross marks record numbers of humanitarians killed in 2024
- Johnson's Grand Slam 'no threat', says World Athletics boss Coe
- Qatar's emir and UK's Starmer talk trade as state visit ends
- Cuba suffers third nationwide blackout in two months
- Russia, Ukraine to send top diplomats to OSCE summit in Malta
- Spanish royals to attend memorial service for flood victims
- LPGA, USGA new policy requires female at birth or pre-puberty change
- Stick to current climate change laws, US tells top UN court
- British Museum chief says Marbles deal with Greece 'some distance' away
- Pope Francis receives electric popemobile from Mercedes
- Gaza civil defence: thousands flee Israeli strikes, evacuation calls
- Trump names billionaire private astronaut as next NASA chief
- Pidcock to leave INEOS Grenadiers at end of season
- Seoul stocks weaken, Paris advances despite political turmoil
- South America summit hopes to seal 'historic' trade deal with EU
- DAZN awarded global TV rights for Club World Cup
- Top executive shot dead outside New York hotel
- Vaping while still smoking unlikely to help quitters: study
- British Museum chief says Parthenon Marbles deal with Greece 'some distance' away
- 'Creating connections': Arab, African filmmakers gather at Morocco workshops
- Iran frees Nobel winner for three weeks, sparking calls for 'permanent' release
- Brazil's Minas cheese gets added to UNESCO list
- Top US executive shot dead in New York City: media
- Trump's nominee to run Pentagon hangs by a thread
- GM announces more than $5 bn hit to earnings in China venture
- World chess champ Ding, teen challenger tied past halfway mark
- Georgia police raid opposition offices as PM vows to curb protests
- S. Korea opposition begins push to impeach president
- Syrian army fights rebel offensive with counterattack
- France court upholds Polanski acquittal in defamation case
- UK bans daytime TV ads for cereals, muffins and burgers
- Palace's Guehi to face no formal action over 'Jesus' message on rainbow armband
- UK faces trade balancing act with Trump, EU
- Iran releases Nobel Peace laureate Mohammadi on medical leave: lawyer
- UNESCO grants heritage status to Aleppo soap as Syria war flares
- Ghana's illegal mining boom seeps into presidential election
- Inconsistent Spurs 'progressing in all aspects': Postecoglou
- France's Orano says Niger junta controls uranium firm
- Seoul stocks weaken, Paris edges up tracking political turmoil
- China reports warmest autumn since records began
- French marine park to close over law banning killer whale shows
- Thousands march demanding S. Korea president resign over martial law debacle
- Taiwan romance novelist Chiung Yao dies at 86
- In Angola, Biden promises to invest differently to China
- Syrian army launches counteroffensive against rebels
- Evenepoel says 'long journey' ahead after postal van collision
- South Korea's day of rage as Yoon's martial law founders
- UK police question killer nurse Letby over further baby deaths
RYCEF | 1.46% | 7.55 | $ | |
RBGPF | -1.64% | 61 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.15% | 24.596 | $ | |
NGG | -1.19% | 62.23 | $ | |
BCC | -0.49% | 145.72 | $ | |
SCS | -0.71% | 13.425 | $ | |
RIO | -0.12% | 63.435 | $ | |
AZN | -2.29% | 66.525 | $ | |
RELX | 0.88% | 47.902 | $ | |
GSK | -1.06% | 34.535 | $ | |
VOD | -0.4% | 8.795 | $ | |
JRI | -0.59% | 13.46 | $ | |
BCE | -1.81% | 26.825 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.16% | 24.35 | $ | |
BTI | 0.42% | 37.185 | $ | |
BP | -1.25% | 29.085 | $ |
French mass rape victim tells court she is 'broken' but determined
Gisele Pelicot, whose ex-husband and dozens of other men are on trial in France accused of raping her while she was drugged, told the court Wednesday she was "broken" by her ordeal, but also determined to "change society" for sex assault victims.
The 71-year-old has become a feminist icon in France since the trial of Dominique Pelicot and 50 other men opened last month in the southern French city of Avignon.
The case has sparked horror, protests and a debate about male violence in French society, with the country keenly following the harrowing testimonies in court.
"I am a woman who is completely broken," Gisele Pelicot told the court in her second address to the court on Wednesday.
But she expressed her "determination to change this society" in terms of how it deals with sexual assault.
Gisele Pelicot insisted from the start that the trial should be open to the public to draw attention to the use of drugs to commit sexual abuse.
And she has encouraged other women who have been sexually assaulted to come forward.
"I wanted all women who are rape victims to say to themselves: 'Mrs Pelicot did it, so we can do it too'," she said.
"It's not us who should feel shame, but them (the perpetrators)", she said.
Gisele Pelicot addressed the court on Wednesday at the invitation of presiding judge Roger Arata, who asked for her "impressions" of the trial so far.
"I don't know how I'm going to rebuild myself," she said. "I'm 72 soon and I'm not sure my life will be long enough to recover from this."
- 'Immeasurable betrayal' -
She then addressed her former husband who was sitting in the dock without looking at her, asking him to explain what made him drug her over almost a decade, rape her and enlist strangers to do the same.
"I'm trying to understand how my husband, who was the perfect man, became like this. How my life changed. How you could allow these people into our house knowing that I disliked swinging.
"For me, this betrayal is immeasurable. After 50 years together... I used to think I was going to be with this man until the end."
She added, looking steadily at her husband, who looked away: "I always tried to lift you higher. You plumbed the depths of the human soul, but unfortunately you made your own choices."
Her ex-husband, also 71, remained seated without any apparent reaction bar lowering his eyes.
His six other co-defendants whose cases are being studied by the court this week likewise stayed silent, surrounded by their counsels.
Gisele Pelicot, who was greeted with applause by the audience as she arrived Wednesday, has attended the trial most days.
In mid-September, she dropped her usual reserve to talk of her humiliation and her anger towards several lawyers who had made insinuations about her ordeal.
"A rape is a rape," she said.
- Abuse on film -
Dominique Pelicot filmed much of the abuse against his then-wife and also took meticulous records of the strangers visiting their home, which subsequently helped police uncover the crimes.
He has admitted to drugging her and inviting men to rape her between 2011 and 2020.
But he insists he is no different from the dozens of other men he recruited online to take part in the sexual abuse, alleging they all knew what they were signing up for.
Many of his co-defendants deny this, accusing him of manipulating them into raping his spouse of half a century.
Forty-nine other men are accused of raping or attempting to rape Gisele Pelicot -- with nearly none of them admitting guilt.
One has admitted to sedating his own spouse so that he and Dominique Pelicot could sexually assault her.
The trial is scheduled to last until December.
M.Furrer--BTB