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CRIME

Ex French government minister jailed for rape after 10-year legal battle

After nearly 10 years of legal battles that initially led to an acquittal, a former French government minister has been jailed after a court found him guilty of raping an employee during "foot massages" in his office.

Ex French government minister jailed for rape after 10-year legal battle
Former minister George Tron is now behind bars. Photo: AFP

The conviction of Georges Tron, 63, comes as France is confronting a wave of sexual assault allegations that has pushed the government to promise tougher laws to protect victims and punish assailants.

Tron remained silent when the verdict was announced late on Wednesday by a Paris appeals court after 11 hours of jury deliberation, and handed his watch to his lawyer before police took him directly to prison to serve a five-year sentence, with two years suspended.

Tron was a cabinet minister under prime minister François Fillon when he was forced to resign in 2011 over allegations made by two women who worked for him while he was mayor of Draveil, outside Paris.

The women said that between 2007 and 2010, Tron, known for practicing reflexology as a hobby, imposed foot massage sessions that would involve groping and digital penetration, at times turning into threesomes with his deputy Brigitte Gruel.

Virginie Ettel and Eva Loubrieu testified that they felt powerless to resist the politician over fear of losing their jobs. Ettel later resigned, while Loubrieu was fired after being accused of theft.

But the court convicted Tron of raping only Ettel, saying he had applied “psychological constraint” because she was his direct subordinate at city hall.    

Gruel was handed a suspended two-year sentence.

“This is a huge victory for all women who face problems in the workplace,” said Ettel's lawyer Vincent Ollivier.

Tron was cleared of raping Loubrieu, who broke down in tears and rushed out of the courtroom upon hearing the verdict.

The appeal court verdict comes after a court ruling two years ago that found no use of force and said the women appeared motivated by a desire for “vengeance.”

Tron's lawyer at the time, Eric Dupond-Moretti, had declared “a victory for justice.”

But Dupond-Moretti, who is now President Emmanuel Macron's justice minister, is spearheading the government's pledge for tougher laws against sexual assault.

The country has seen thousands of women breaking their silence since last year's publication of “Consent” by Vanessa Springora, whose account of abuse by a prize-winning author while she was still a minor has just been translated to English.

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CRIME

Two girls wounded in knife attack outside French school

An assailant on Thursday wounded two girls aged 6 and 11 in a knife attack close to their school in the east of France and was later arrested, officials said.

Two girls wounded in knife attack outside French school

The 11-year-old was stabbed outside the school in the town of Souffelweyersheim, on the outskirts of Strasbourg, while the six-year-old was attacked by the same man nearby.

Both received superficial wounds, police said, adding the attacker did not appear to have any known links to radicals and was not previously known to the security services.

Both received superficial wounds, police said, adding the attacker did not appear to have any known links to radicals and was not previously known to the security services.

Both girls are being treated in a paediatric hospital. Parents were later in the afternoon allowed to pick up their children, who had been confined to the school in the immediate aftermath of the attack.

The attacker, born in 1995, was arrested in the area where he attacked the second girl, the police said. He no longer had the knife in his hand and did not resist arrest, it added.

The attack came as Prime Minister Gabriel Attal announced a series of measures aimed at cracking down on violence committed by schoolchildren against their peers. There was no indication so far that the attacker had a link with the school.

“I’m really scared. We’ve been reassured that the children are safe inside, but we don’t know when we’ll be able to get them back,” Sarah, a mother of an eight-year-old pupil, told AFP before the green light was given to collect the children.

“A friend called me. She saw the commotion in front of the school as she passed by. Her reflex was to call me so that I could pick up my son.”

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