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Sweden gets cheeky safe sex toilet campaign

Toilets at Swedish airports are being plastered with messages designed to warn young people to practice safe sex when they jet off for their summer holidays.

Sweden gets cheeky safe sex toilet campaign
Swedes are being told to pack condoms as well as bikinis. Photo: TT

Swedish health care authorities are trying to stop under-30s from picking up sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) by posting cheeky messages on airport toilet seats, a project leader said on
Tuesday.

From June 15th, travellers using the loos at airports in central and southern Sweden, including Skavsta airport outside Stockholm, will be greeted with a message on the toilet seat that reads: “You won't catch chlamydia here. You'll catch it after the beach party on Rhodes. Take care of yourself this summer. Use a condom.”

“We wanted to rely on a new way of sending out a message. If we were to display the information in the ordinary spots, we would probably not get the same kind of attention,” Caroline Lundh, one of the people in charge of the campaign, told the AFP news agency.

The campaign, named “Ligg lugnt” in Swedish (“Get laid, get safe”), was being financed by eight counties and regional councils.

Lundh said it was aimed at 20 to 30-year-olds heading off on holiday who rarely use condoms, and who are the main group at risk of contracting the venereal disease chlamydia. Condoms are expected to be dispensed free of charge in the airports.

When returning from their holidays, travellers will be met by a life-size picture of a young woman in a short dress holding a sign reading: “You didn't bring back an STD in your luggage, did you? Take a test if you're worried.”

According to campaign organisers, around 38,000 Swedes contracted HIV, gonorrhoea or chlamydia last year. They did not provide specific statistics for each disease.

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France taken to European Court over divorce ruling that woman had ‘marital duty’ to have sex with husband

A case has been brought against France at the European Court of Human Rights by a woman who lost a divorce case after judges ruled against her because she refused to have sex with her husband.

France taken to European Court over divorce ruling that woman had 'marital duty' to have sex with husband
Photo: Frederick Florin/AFP

The woman, who has not been named, has brought the case with the backing of two French feminist groups, arguing that the French court ruling contravened human rights legislation by “interference in private life” and “violation of physical integrity”.

It comes after a ruling in the Appeals Court in Versailles which pronounced a fault divorce in 2019 because of her refusal to have sex with her husband.

READ ALSO The divorce laws in France that foreigners need to be aware of

The court ruled that the facts of the case “established by the admission of the wife, constitute a serious and renewed violation of the duties and obligations of marriage making intolerable the maintenance of a shared life”.

Feminist groups Fondation des femmes (Women’s Foundation) and Collectif féministe contre le viol (Feminist Collective against Rape) have backed her appeal, deploring the fact that French justice “continues to impose the marital duty” and “thus denying the right of women to consent or not to sexual relations”.

“Marriage is not and should not be a sexual servitude,” the joint statement says, pointing out that in 47 percent of the 94,000 recorded rapes and attempted rapes per year, the aggressor is the spouse or ex-spouse of the victim.

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