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View Full Version : Gisèle Pelicot rape trial: the ripple effect



Eric J (Viking)
19th December 2024, 09:13
Let’s hope the ripple effect goes far and wide…


Gisèle Pelicot is the French woman at the centre of the Mazan mass rape case. From 2011 to 2020, her husband, Dominique Pelicot, covertly drugged and raped her and also invited men he had contacted on the internet to rape her while she was unconscious.

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The high-profile criminal trial of Dominique Pelicot is wrapping up. The French man is accused of drugging and raping his 72-year-old wife, Gisèle Pelicot, and also inviting 50 other men to rape her while she was unconscious.

What’s captured global attention isn’t just the sensational allegations in the case, but Gisèle Pelicot’s decision to publicly appear before the court and to speak with the media.

Pelicot has been praised as a feminist hero in France.

“I’ve decided not to be ashamed, I’ve done nothing wrong,” Pelicot told the court in October 2024.

Above all”, she said that same month, “I’m expressing my will and determination to change this society.”

Using their voices

Courts around the world, including in France, provide special measures to shield the identity and testimony of rape survivors, including the use of protective screens in the courtroom or prerecorded testimony.

Vulnerable witnesses in France and elsewhere also have the right to testify in closed proceedings, and news organizations generally do not name and identify victims when they report about rape. These measures aim to protect survivors from face-to-face confrontations with perpetrators, as well as from victim blaming and shaming.

But the Pelicot case and others show how some sexual assault survivors across the globe are rejecting these legal protections and are choosing to reveal their names, faces and voices. Their decisions don’t just challenge perpetrators – they challenge the courts, rape culture and the way people often understand shame.

As a former lawyer and a researcher on sound and voice, I study how rape survivors and their allies speak out about sexual violence, in and out of court. Filmmaker Bremen Donovan and I are working on a documentary film, “Big Mouth,” about women’s testimony against sexual violence in the West African country of Guinea.

A rape survivor in Guinea speaks out

Some aspects of the Pelicot case resonate with recent events in Guinea, where a rape survivor named Fatoumata Barry chose to testify on live television in a major criminal trial in 2023.

Barry’s high-profile testimony took place in a trial against Moussa Dadis Camara, the former president of Guinea, and his top military commanders. In 2009, Camara oversaw mass violence against pro-democracy supporters in the capital, in which Guinean soldiers killed 157 people and raped more than 100 women.

A Guinean court found Camara and other leaders guilty for these crimes in July 2024.

The trial included dozens of victims and witnesses who testified. But while rape survivors were allowed to testify in closed proceedings, Barry chose instead to testify publicly.

In the Guinean case, defense lawyers in court repeatedly tried to shame Barry for appearing before the cameras. One lawyer accused her of “embarrassing” herself and the country by bringing the case before the media.

Barry saw through this well-worn silencing tactic and said on the stand that she spoke out for justice.

A ripple effect

Sexual assault survivors are often deeply vulnerable. Many of them fear being threatened and intimidated, or publicly blamed and shamed. Legal protections are hard-won rights that exist for a reason, and many survivors continue to need and use them. But some decide otherwise.

While the #MeToo movement started a cultural shift in 2017 around the world by encouraging survivors to tell their stories, public testimony goes even further, as survivors show their faces and broadcast their voices while under the glaring scrutiny of a trial.

Other sexual assault survivors, including Adji Sarr in Senegal and Nikita Hand in Ireland, have also publicly testified in recent years.

In Senegal, Sarr has faced death threats since 2021, when she accused a prominent politician, Ousmane Sonko, of assaulting her. She reaffirmed her accusations on television a month later, and she and her supporters called for a televised trial. Sonko was acquitted of rape in June 2023 but was found guilty of “corrupting youth” for having had a sexual relationship with Sarr before she turned 21.

Further reading

https://theconversation.com/rape-survivors-like-gisele-pelicot-are-choosing-to-speak-out-refuting-the-idea-that-they-should-feel-shame-243659

rgray222
19th December 2024, 19:52
I greatly admire Gisèle Pelicot for choosing to waive her right to anonymity and highlight the crimes orchestrated by her husband. Often these same laws that protect the victim are also responsible for keeping these stories in the shadows.

For those that are not aware her husband Dominique Pelicot drugged his wife and invited men to rape her for over a decade. It was revealed that Pelicot only learned of the horrors she endured when police started an investigation into her husband after a security guard caught him filming up the skirts of women with his smartphone. Investigators found videos on her husband’s devices that suggested she had been the victim of a major crime. Her husband was sentenced to 20 years.

A total of 51 men were tried and found guilty, 46 were found guilty of rape, two of attempted rape and two guilty of sexual assault in the high-profile case. They ranged in age from 26 to 74 and were handed sentences from three to 13 years. Collectively, they will serve more than 400 years.

Under French law, she could have asked for the trial to be kept behind closed doors. Instead, she asked for it to be held in public, saying she hoped it would help other women speak up and show that victims have nothing to be ashamed of. We can only hope that more women worldwide come forward to expose this horrific crime. So often in many locations around the world, these rape cases are treated as an inconvenience to men instead of a hideous crime.

We must exorcise this behavior from society if we wish to survive.