
-
G7 urges Iran de-escalation as Trump makes hasty summit exit
-
Verdict due for Sweden's 'Queen of Trash' over toxic waste
-
Israel, Iran trade missile fire as Trump warns Tehran to 'evacuate'
-
Thunder hold off Pacers to take 3-2 NBA Finals lead
-
Soft power: BTS fans rally behind Korean international adoptees
-
Dominant Flamengo open with victory at Club World Cup
-
Oil prices jump after Trump's warning, stocks extend gains
-
UK MPs eye decriminalising abortion for women in all cases
-
Yen slides ahead of Bank of Japan policy decision
-
Ecuador pipeline burst stops flow of crude
-
China's Xi in Kazakhstan to cement Central Asia ties
-
Despite law, US TikTok ban likely to remain on hold
-
Venezuela's El Dorado, where gold is currency of the poor
-
US forces still in 'defensive posture' in Mideast: White House
-
Trump makes hasty summit exit over Iran crisis
-
OpenAI wins $200 mn contract with US military
-
AFP photographer shot in face with rubber bullet at LA protest
-
Boca denied by two Argentines as Benfica fight back
-
Rise in 'harmful content' since Meta policy rollbacks: survey
-
Trump to leave G7 early after warning of Iran attack
-
'Strange' to play in front of 50,000 empty seats: Chelsea's Maresca
-
Netanyahu says 'changing face of Middle East' as Israel, Iran trade blows
-
Mexican band accused of glorifying cartels changes its tune
-
G7 leaders urge Trump to ease off trade war
-
Trump presses Iran to talk but holds back on joint G7 call
-
Colombia presidential hopeful 'critical' after shooting
-
Main doctor charged in actor Matthew Perry overdose to plead guilty
-
Chelsea defeat LAFC in poorly-attended Club World Cup opener
-
Tiafoe crashes out, Rune cruises through at Queen's Club
-
Netanyahu says campaign 'changing face of Middle East' as Israel, Iran trade blows
-
What's not being discussed at G7 as Trump shapes agenda
-
UK apologises to thousands of grooming victims as it toughens law
-
Iran state TV briefly knocked off air by strike after missiles kill 11 in Israel
-
Trump urges Iran to talk as G7 looks for common ground
-
Canada wildfire near Vancouver contained
-
Four Atletico ultras get suspended jail for Vinicius effigy
-
England's top women's league to expand to 14 teams
-
Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease
-
UN refugee agency says will shed 3,500 jobs due to funding cuts
-
US moves to protect all species of pangolin, world's most trafficked mammal
-
Kneecap 'unfazed' by legal problems, says friend and director
-
Electric fences, drones, dogs protect G7 leaders from bear attack
-
The name's Metreweli... Who is UK MI6's first woman chief?
-
Oil prices fall, stocks rise as Iran-Israel war fears ease
-
Fighter jets, refuelling aircraft, frigate: UK assets in Mideast
-
Iranian Nobel laureates, Cannes winner urge halt to Iran-Israel conflict
-
Struggling Gucci owner's shares soar over new CEO reports
-
Khamenei, Iran's political survivor, faces ultimate test
-
Ireland prepares to excavate 'mass grave' at mother and baby home
-
France shuts Israeli weapons booths at Paris Air Show

Defence lawyers plead to judges in French mass rape trial
A lawyer for the chief defendant in a French mass rape trial on Wednesday urged the court to recall his good side after prosecutors demanded lengthy jail terms for the dozens of suspects.
The main defendant, Dominique Pelicot, has admitted enlisting dozens of strangers to rape his then-wife while she was drugged and unconscious.
Prosecutors have called for a maximum 20-year jail term for the 72-year-old, who has been on trial in the southern city of Avignon since September with 49 other men for organising the repeated rape and sexual abuse of Gisele Pelicot.
"With your verdict you will make clear that there is no such thing as ordinary rape," lead prosecutor, Laure Chabaud, told the court Wednesday.
"You will deliver a message of hope to the victims of sexual violence" and "return a part of humanity to Gisele Pelicot that she was robbed of", she said.
Kicking off closing arguments by some 30 defence lawyers -- scheduled to last until December 13 -- was Beatrice Zavarro, the lawyer for Dominique Pelicot.
He has been described as the "conductor" behind the sexual abuse of his former wife, the details of which have shocked France.
- 'Accepted and admitted' -
Beginning by addressing her "deep respect" for Gisele Pelicot, her ex-husband's lawyer spent around an hour recalling that Dominique had been a "good husband, father and grandfather" according to all who knew him.
Zavarro plunged back into his traumatic childhood -- which he claims included sexual abuse -- and shaky mental state to explain his "perversity".
"People aren't born perverted, they become it," she said, repeating her client's own words from his first courtroom questioning.
"Dominique Pelicot has accepted and admitted the harm of which he is accused," Zavarro said.
But she insisted that he was not the "conductor" many of the other defendants painted him as, some claiming they were under his domination or even themselves drugged.
"What comes next is of course the sentence you will issue, perhaps distancing yourselves a little from the strongest requested by prosecutors," she told judges.
"He has been hoping to apologise 1,000 times, I don't know if you will listen to him, Madame, but he's saying it again," Zavarro added to Gisele Pelicot.
"Keep in mind the first Dominique, the one you cherished, hugged and loved deeply," she told Gisele and her children, who are co-plaintiffs in the case.
Earlier in the hearings, the court had heard how Gisele Pelicot told police her then-husband was a "super guy" before learning of the abuse.
- 'Devil's advocate' -
Dominique Pelicot's decade-long abuse was only uncovered after he was arrested for filming up women's skirts in public.
The probe led investigators to his meticulously-kept records of the visitors to the family home in the town of Mazan.
Their trial has made Gisele Pelicot, who insisted the hearings be held in public, a feminist icon in women's fight against sexual abuse.
Pelicot is the only one of the 50 men to have fully confessed to the the crimes he is accused of.
Observers say his lawyer Zavarro has an impossible task on her hands.
If convicted, her client would be considered one of France's worst-ever sex offenders.
But Zavarro has refused to describe her client as a "monster", insisting instead that she represents a man who has committed "monstrous" crimes.
"I have become the devil's advocate against my will... as I have often told you, it's the two of us against the whole world," she told her client in court.
Lawyers for Pelicot's co-defendants are to lay out their closing arguments starting Thursday.
Most are expected to argue that their clients were manipulated by Dominique Pelicot to sexually abuse his wife.
Some have already argued that they assumed Pelicot had his wife's consent, and that they were playing a part in a libertine sex game.
The verdicts in the case are expected by December 20.
P.Tamimi--SF-PST