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French MPs unanimously approved a bill in the National Assembly at the end of January to end the long‑standing notion of “marital duty” by clarifying that cohabitation creates no obligation for spouses to have sexual relations.
Backed by more than 120 deputies and co‑authored by Green MP Marie‑Charlotte Garin and Horizons lawmaker Paul Christophe, the text amends the Civil Code (article 215) to bar fault‑based divorce claims grounded on refusal of sex.
Approved on Jan. 28, the bill now goes to the Senate under an accelerated procedure and could become law by the summer if passed.
Supporters say the change aligns civil law with a 2025 European Court of Human Rights ruling and France’s expansion last year of the criminal definition of rape to include absence of consent.
Campaigners say the move will help deter marital rape and end judicial ambiguity after cases such as a 2019 divorce granted over lack of sex.
Advocates also point to surveys and domestic‑violence statistics showing high prevalence of unwanted marital sex and violence within couples.
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France 24 - International breaking news, top stories and headlinesFrench lawmakers approve bill to end ‘marital duty’ over consent concerns
France - BBC NewsFrance moves to abolish concept of marital duty to have sex






















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