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Femen fights for right to protest topless in France

The Paris-based topless feminist group Femen is fighting for its right to protest bare-chested, saying the laws preventing its members from displaying their upper bodies to get their messages across are nothing short of discrimination against women.

Femen fights for right to protest topless in France
Zhdanova was the first Femen activist to be convicted of topless protesting in France. Photo: AFP file picture

Iana Zhdanova was the first Femen activist to be convicted of a topless stunt in France.

But she is determined to fight the 2014 conviction for sexual exhibitionism claiming it is based purely based on discrimination against women.

“For us at Femen, our chests are our weapons,” she was quoted as telling French daily Le Parisien.

“Women’s chests are used to advertise perfumes or in TV shows, and that’s OK. But when it has anything to do with activism, it’s suddenly shocking,” she said.

Zhdanova, who was forced to seek political asylum in France after similar protests in her native Ukraine, was convicted of “sexual exhibitionism” by a French court in 2014 after stabbing a waxdoll of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin at Paris’s Grévin museum.

She had the text “kill Putin” written across her naked chest.

But she argues that she shouldn't be convicted of sexual exhibitionism, given that she is protesting and that men would not be subject to same charge if they bared their chests.

Her lawyer, Marie Dosé said that the ruling against her client was running against all principals in regards to equality between men and women.

“In the ruling it’s written in black and white,” she said.

“It clearly states that a woman who shows off her torso in public can be subject to prosecution, while a man won’t be, unless he shows off his genitals.”

During France's anti-gay marriage protests a right-wing group of men,who named themselves Hommen protested bare-chested. None of them were prosecuted for sexual exhibitionism.

Zhdanova’s appeal is due in court on Thursday.

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FRANÇO

Topless Femen activists disrupt rally of Franco fans in Madrid

Bare-breasted protestors from the feminist activist group Femen on Sunday disrupted a rally of some 200 people in Madrid to mark the anniversary of the death of Spain's former dictator Francisco Franco.

Topless Femen activists disrupt rally of Franco fans in Madrid
Police officers subdue a member of feminist movement Femen as she protests against a demonstration marking the anniversary of the death of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco in Madrid. Photo: AFP

Police said nearly 200 Franco supporters had gathered in the Plaza de Oriente where he addressed the throngs during his 1939-75 military dictatorship.

Many bore flags, umbrellas and ties with the colours of the Franco-era Falangist party.

Three women interrupted the rally, their torsos daubed with the words “legal fascism” and “national shame”, before being arrested by police.

Some in the crowd reacted angrily, trying to assault the women.

The pro-Franco event came as the socialist government of Pedro Sanchez draws up plans to exhume the dictator's body from the Valley of the Fallen basilica just outside Madrid.

The family of the late dictator, who died on November 20th, 1975, wants his
remains placed in the family crypt at Madrid's La Almudena Cathedral.

Sanchez wants to move the former dictator's remains to a more discreet spot where it will be harder for Franco followers to pay homage.

Pro-Franco demonstrator Dori Grande told AFP that people from both sides of Spain's civil war were buried at the Valley of the Fallen site, which was created ostensibly to reunify the country.

“This year more than ever, we have to defend our homeland, our history, because history is there. You cannot erase it,” he added.

The remains of some 37,000 victims of the civil war, both republican and nationalists, are buried at the Valley of the Fallen basilica.

But many of the families of the dead were not notified and the site itself was partly built by republican prisoners, some of whom died in the process.

READ ALSO: Spanish parliament approves exhumation of General Franco