
France - April 2025
ECHR finds failure to protect three applicants in rape cases
On 24 April, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled that French investigators and courts failed to adequately protect three minors, aged 13, 14 and 16, who had reported rape. The Court found that the criminal proceedings lacked due care, failed to properly account for the applicants’ status as minors and the vulnerable situations at the time of the events. The judgment found violations of the prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment (Article 3) and the right to respect for private life (Article 8) in all cases. It also found a breach of the prohibition of discrimination (Article 14) in one case, due to the national authorities’ use of gender stereotypes and ’moralising and guilt-inducing statements’. France was ordered to pay around EUR 60,000 in financial compensation and legal costs. Parliament is currently considering legislation that would explicitly require ’free and informed’ consent in the Penal Code’s definition of rape.
Sources: AP News, European Court of Human Rights, La Depeche, European Convention on Human Rights, Jurist News, The Local, Amnesty International, Le Monde