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CRIME

‘Only yes means yes’: Spain moves to tighten consent laws against rape

Spain's cabinet approved a draft bill on Tuesday that strengthens the country's laws against rape by requiring explicit consent for sex acts, a move long demanded by assault survivors and women's rights groups.

'Only yes means yes': Spain moves to tighten consent laws against rape
Demonstrators shout slogans in Pamplona in 2018 during a protest against the acquittal of the 'wolf pack' rapists. Photo: Ander Guillenea/AFP

The proposed law “makes clear that silence or passivity do not mean consent, or that not showing opposition can not be an excuse to act against the will of the other person,” government spokeswoman María Jesús Montero told a news conference after the cabinet meeting.

The measure comes in the wake of the notorious 2016 gang rape of an 18-year-old woman by five men at a bull-running festival in Pamplona in northern Spain that shocked the country.

The men, who called themself “the wolf pack”, were initially only convicted of sexual abuse instead of the more serious offence of sexual assault which includes rape, since the court found no proof that they had used physical violence.

Two of the men filmed the assault, during which the woman is silent and passive — a fact the judges interpreted as consent.

The ruling highlighted how under Spain’s existing criminal code, rape must involve violence and intimidation, and it led to noisy demonstrations across the country to demand reform.

Dubbed the “only yes means yes” law, the bill will define rape as sex without clear consent, mirroring pioneering legislation which came into force in Sweden in 2018.

READ MORE:

Spain: All sexual acts that don’t begin with a ‘yes’ deemed illegal

The bill also proposes jail penalties for work-related sexual harassment and makes catcalling — sexually harassing a stranger in the street — a criminal offence for the first time.

It also qualifies forced marriage and genital mutilation as criminal offences and stiffens laws against pimping.

The bill still must be approved by parliament, with a vote expected in the chamber in September.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez heads a minority government but he is expected to cobble together enough support from smaller regional parties to pass the bill.

Spain is considered a pioneer in the fight against violence against women after it in 2004 approved Europe’s first law that specifically cracked down on domestic violence.

That law made the victim’s gender an aggravating factor in cases of assault.

Only about a dozen European nations have changed their legal definition of rape as sex without consent, according to Amnesty International.

They include Belgium, Denmark, Germany and Ireland.

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CRIME

Spain and France bust million-euro-a-day money laundering network

Spanish and French police said Friday they had smashed an international money-laundering network capable of handling a million euros per day, arresting five people in Spain, including its leader.

Spain and France bust million-euro-a-day money laundering network

Jointly run by France’s anti-fraud squad and the Spanish police with Europol’s support, the investigation began in February 2021 when French customs agents found more than 500,000 euros hidden in a car in southern France.

Led by a French magistrate, investigators discovered the existence of a “criminal scheme for laundering large quantities of cash across Europe”, which had been operating since at least 2019, a joint statement said.

This network, made up of Chinese nationals living in various European countries, was able to integrate huge sums of cash — more than one million euros ($1.1 million) per day — back into the legitimate economy.

“Their modus operandi was based on the existence of many collection points for money that was mainly coming from trading in counterfeit goods, tax and customs fraud, and pimping” sex workers, it said.

The money was then transferred to the network which then organised its distribution across Europe.

Spanish police arrested five people in Madrid, Valencia, Alicante and Barcelona, including a Chinese businessman who headed the network.

Investigators also searched various premises and homes, and by using sniffer dogs were able to find “almost 160,000 euros in cash hidden behind false ceilings and in portable refrigerators” and in other well-concealed places.

“This international operation… shows the leading role of Asian criminal groups in money laundering activities in Europe,” they said.

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