
‘La vérité sort de la bouche des enfants’: France’s Outcry Over Sexual Violence
Sparked by the rape and murder of 11-year-old Lyhanna, tens of thousands march in 110 cities demanding a comprehensive law and a justice system that protects victims.
Under a burning July sun in Paris, a 17-year-old named Eline broke away from the crowd to tell reporters what had happened when she tried to file a complaint. “The police officer told me that it wasn’t rape, that it could ruin the life of this man — he made me feel guilty and questioned everything I said.” Her voice, steady but urgent, cut through the march’s din as the column stretched from the Place de la Bastille toward Nation. Around her, others nodded: hers was not a solitary story but a thread in a gathering outrage.
The protest — one of some 110 across France that Saturday — was called by a coalition of 180 feminist and child-protection organisations demanding a “loi-cadre intégrale”, a holistic framework law to combat sexual violence from prevention to survivor support. The immediate catalyst was the killing of Lyhanna, a schoolgirl found dead in June after disappearing from Fleurance in the Gers. The main suspect, a 41-year-old father of a classmate, had already faced two formal accusations of child rape, yet both investigations had been dropped or stalled. That pattern — official inaction matching victim testimony — became the rally’s backbone.
In the Paris cortege, the slogans were visceral: “La vérité sort de la bouche des enfants” — truth emerges from the mouths of children — and “160 000 enfants, que faites-vous?” Organisers called it a historic mobilisation, one that bridged feminist and child-rights movements in a new “coalition féministe et enfantiste”. Anne-Cécile Mailfert, president of the Fondation des Femmes, noted that 94 % of rape complaints in France are dismissed without further action. “We cannot have an underfunded judicial system that protects attackers rather than victims,” she said, a judgement that drew grim supporting evidence from a 2022 government report revealing that in 70 % of child-abuse cases investigators did not search for material evidence after hearing a suspect.
The political class, caught off guard, has responded with a blend of contrition and prevarication. President Macron spoke of a fear that institutional failings were eroding public trust. Justice Minister Gérald Darmanin, after apologising for a “huge failure”, resisted calls for his resignation. The government announced a flurry of measures against paedocriminality and promised a debate on a comprehensive law for the autumn, while a bill tabled by socialist deputy Céline Thiébault-Martinez — inspired by the coalition’s 2024 blueprint — awaits a vote. Yet for the marchers, legislative timetables rang hollow against the urgency of the streets.
As the crowd dissolved at Place de la Nation, the chant “what are you doing for 160 000 children?” still lingered. François Rouillard, a 43-year-old father of two who had joined the protest in Rennes, said simply he had come to seek “a little more education in schools” and a wider conversation about respect between men and women. Behind him, the banners were being folded, but the question Eline had posed — how many reports must go unheard before the law catches up? — remained suspended in the warm evening air.
| Continental European press | +0.30 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Latin American press | +0.20 | neutral |
French civil society mobilizes for a law protecting women from sexual violence, demanding justice for Lianna.
The victim is personified to create empathy and legitimize the demand for reform.
Women and social movements in France raise their voices against sexual violence, inspiring global solidarity.
A parallel is drawn with local struggles to make the protest universal.
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