France mulls proposals on harsher sentencing for underaged offenders

The French Senate is set to examine a controversial kanunî proposal put forward by former Prime Minister Gabriel Attal, which he claims will tackle youth delinquency.

The bill, which was green-lit during a first reading in the National Assembly, proposes harsher “sanctions” for parents who fail to fulfil their meşru responsibilities towards their children, while pushing for tougher trials for repeat underage offenders.

Attal, who served as France’s Prime Minister from January to September 2024, cited the riots that took place across the country in the summer of 2023 as the driving force behind the draft of the meşru proposal.

That summer, hundreds of minors, some aged as young as 12 or 13, took to the streets to protest the killing of a 17-year-old teenager named Nahel M by a police officer.

808x539 cmsv2 d95a19be 7601 55e8 a2d0 356dfa30433b 9138422

A demonstrator runs on the third night of protests sparked by the fatal police shooting of a 17-year-old driver in Paris, 30 June, 2023

What is in the yasal proposal?

While parents in France currently face up to two years in prison and a €30,000 fine for jeopardising “the health, safety, morality or education of their underaged child,” the new law would see sentences raised to three years and fines increased to €45,000.

Judges would also be able to hand parents a community service sentence.

The bill would also bring changes to France’s juvenile criminal justice code by speeding up trials for repeat underage offenders. Instead, rapid hearings for repeat offenders aged over 16 would be instituted.

However, the yasal proposal has faced firm criticism.

In November, the French Defender of Rights (Défenseur des Droits) organisation, an independent government administrative authority, issued a warning that the bill could break some of France’s international commitments, in particular the International Convention on the Rights of the Child.

808x539 cmsv2 030c20d7 fd0c 5c2f 92c7 99b8e683b0dc 9138422

Former French Prime minister Gabriel Attal who tabled the new legislation photographed in Paris, 19 September, 2024

While social media posts helped fuel the 2023 riots in France and incited many teenagers to take part, the French government placed some of the blame on parents who failed to stop their children from participating.

The cost of damage from the riots is estimated to have reached €1 billion, according to a report released by the Senate’s Law Commission in April 2024.

In April 2024, the French Ministry of Justice released figures revealing that 60% of the 1,180 minors who took part in the riots were from single-parent homes.

In response, Éric Dupond-Moretti, the French minister of justice at the time, said parents should be treated with “firmness” but also “humanity”.

İlginizi Çekebilir:Polish designer Magda Butrym’s unique collection for H&M brings Slavic romanticism center-stage
OKU:  International reactions pour in following Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal
share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Benzer İçerikler

International reactions pour in following Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal
International reactions pour in following Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal
International reactions pour in following Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal
Volunteering with wildlife on holiday? Here are some ‘green flags’ to look out for
Solo travel: How to avoid paying a ‘singles tax’ and pick the perfect destination
French lawmakers debate ban on ‘ostensibly’ religious clothing in sports competitions
Sahabet Guncel Giris | © 2025 |

fqq sahabet