European Parliament backs EU-wide consent-based definition of rape


FILE PHOTO: A European Union flag flutters outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium Februrary 26, 2026. REUTERS/Yves Herman//File Photo

BRUSSELS, April 28 (Reuters) - European ⁠Parliament lawmakers voted on Tuesday in favour of a consent-based definition of rape — known ⁠as "only yes means yes" — and urged the European Commission to propose legislation establishing ‌EU-wide rules.

The EU adopted minimum standards to combat violence against women for the first time in 2024, but a proposed article to create a common definition of rape was dropped after opposition from several member states.

"Silence, lack of resistance, the ​absence of a 'no', previous consent, past sexual conduct, or any ⁠current or previous relationship must not ⁠be interpreted as consent," the Parliament said in a statement after the vote on the report.

The ⁠report ‌also recognises two trauma responses, clarifying that neither can be interpreted as consent. It identifies the "freeze response", a reaction to fear or threat that can lead to temporary paralysis ⁠and a loss of the ability to speak, and the "fawn ​response", which is a survival ‌strategy.

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EU countries apply different legal definitions of rape, even among those ⁠that have ratified the ​Istanbul Convention, an international treaty designed to protect women that criminalises rape based on the absence of consent.

France updated its rape laws last year to include "freely given and informed" consent following the Gisele Pelicot mass ⁠rape trial. Previously, French criminal law did not include ​the concept of consent and defined rape as sexual acts using "violence, coercion, threat or surprise".

German law uses the absence of "no" while Austria relies on a force-based definition. Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Lithuania, and ⁠Slovakia have not ratified the convention while in October, Latvia's parliament voted to withdraw from it.

"Most rapes are committed by someone the victim knows, at home, without physical violence, and most victims are paralysed by fear rather than fight back. For years the law has been built around the ​wrong picture of rape entirely," Swedish lawmaker Abir Al-Sahlani with the ⁠Renew group said in a statement.

"This report also names rape culture for what it is, not ​a collection of bad individuals but a system of attitudes ‌and norms that normalises sexual violence and protects perpetrators."

Some ​447 lawmakers voted in favour of the report, 43 abstained, and160 parliamentarians voted against. Opposition came largely from conservative and far-right groups.

(Reporting by Julia PayneEditing by Ros Russell)

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