1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
CrimeFrance

France vows action on femicide after 3 more women killed

January 4, 2022

The killings of three women on the first day of 2022 have evoked massive outcry over France's growing problem of femicide. Activists have criticized the government's inability to rein in deadly domestic violence.

Paris - The march "Nous toutes" at the call of many associations, unions and political parties, against violence against women takes place in Paris
Feminist groups say government efforts should focus more on prevention of violence against womenImage: Sadak Souici/Le Pictorium/MAXPPP/dpa/picture alliance

The French government on Tuesday promised to step up the fight against femicide after three women were found dead in different parts of the country on New Year's Day, in suspected domestic violence attacks.

The incidents, which took place within a span of 24 hours, have sparked an outcry by feminist campaigners who accuse President Emmanuel Macron's government of having failed to protect women.

"There were more than 100 femicides in 2021 and already since the start of the year three new murders committed in scandalous conditions," Prime Minister Jean Castex told parliament on Tuesday.

"The government and the nation are completely committed to the fight against this scourge," he added.

In 2021 alone, 113 women were killed by men who were, in most cases, their male partners or ex-partners.

While families and friends celebrated the New Year, "three women have already been murdered because they are women," said French feminist collective Nous Toutes (All of us).

Who were the 3 women victims?

Police in the southern French city of Nice found the body of a 45-year-old woman in the trunk of a car after her husband turned himself in, confessing to having strangled her.

The same day, police in the eastern Meurthe-et-Moselle region found the body of a 56-year-old woman with a knife stuck in her chest. Her partner, a man in his 50s, admitted to killing her following an argument.

France: Tackling femicide

03:29

This browser does not support the video element.

In the early hours of Sunday, a 27-year-old woman, a soldier, was found lying with fatal stab wounds outside her home in a town near Saumur, western France.

Her 21-year-old partner, also a soldier, was arrested and a murder probe opened.

What do feminist groups say?

Nous Toutes denounced "the silence of Emmanuel Macron and the government in the face of sexist and sexual violence in France."

Following the widespread outrage, government ministers held an online meeting on Tuesday with officials from the town where one of the killings took place.

"We're all mobilized," junior minister for equal rights, Elisabeth Moreno said in a tweet deploring the killings.

Nous Toutes responded to her saying: "In 2022, there is no longer the time to lament, it is the time to act. These femicides could have been avoided."

"Three women killed in 24 hours and their only reaction is to organize a little meeting days later," Marylie Breuil of Nous Toutes. " No, their work isn't done."

She said that nearly two-thirds of victims had reported past abuse to police, adding that such killings are "just the top tip of the iceberg" of domestic abuse.

"There are so many signals you can notice" before such abuse turns deadly, Breuil said.

"The number of femicides from year to year is not falling, and that's very serious," she said.

What steps has the government taken?

The French prime minister said the government had taken several measures to combat femicide.

This includes setting up a 24/7 emergency hotline and sensitivity training for 90,000 police officers to improve the handling of mistreatment complaints from women, Castex said.

But activists argue that the police training doesn't reach enough officers and is often too cursory to make a difference.

Castex also said there would be an "equality week" at schools around March 8 International Woman's Day every year from now.

The government was spending €1 billion ($1.1 billion) per year on the fight against domestic violence, he added.

Calls grow for tougher stance on femicide in Germany

02:33

This browser does not support the video element.

adi/rt (AFP, AP)

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW