Gang rape or sex abuse? Spain eyes changes to its rape laws

Justice Minister Rafael Catala has begun consultations with legal experts.

sábado, 28 abr. 2018 07:00 pm
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Women shout slogans during a protest outside the Justice Ministry in Madrid. (Internet)
Women shout slogans during a protest outside the Justice Ministry in Madrid. (Internet)

The Associated Press
Madrid, Spain. The Spanish government is considering whether changes to the law are needed after a court rejected charges of gang rape against five men and convicted them instead on a lesser charge of sexual abuse, an official said Friday.

Street protests erupted across Spain on Thursday after a court in the northern city of Pamplona sentenced the five men to nine years each in prison for sexual abuse. Activists described the attack during the 2016 running of the bulls festival in Pamplona as a gang rape.

Government spokesman Inigo Mendez de Vigo said Friday that the Spanish government respects the independence of courts but added that it “has always been, is and will always be on the side of the victims.” He called the attack “despicable.”

"Has always been, is and will always be on the side of the victims".

Justice Minister Rafael Catala has begun consultations with legal experts to assess whether changes to Spain’s rape laws are required, Mendez de Vigo said. Also, a top prosecutor in northern

Spain said he will appeal the five men’s convictions. Jose Sanchez, the top prosecutor in Navarra province, said the attackers —who took pride in their actions on a WhatsApp group named “La Manada” or “The (animal) Pack”— should be punished for “sexual assault (rape) and not only for sexual abuse.”

The verdict by two judges in Navarra and a third’s dissenting vote to acquit the attackers has brought widespread anger and social debate in Spain. Many people are calling for legal reform and criticizing what they perceive as machismo in the judiciary.

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