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The_Guardian_-_2016-12-29

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‘Total pardon for Jacqueline Sauvage’ – a protester at a demonstration calling for the release of<br />

Jacqueline Sauvage. Photograph: Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty Images<br />

Two different juries had sentenced Sauvage to 10 years in prison for fatally shooting her husband,<br />

Norbert Marot, three times in the back with a hunting rifle in 20<strong>12</strong>.<br />

During the trials in 2014 and 2015, Sauvage said her late husband had beaten her for 47 years. <strong>The</strong><br />

couple’s adult daughters also claimed Marot had abused them. Neither Sauvage nor the daughters<br />

ever filed a complaint against him.<br />

<strong>The</strong> three women said they were too humiliated to seek help and instead suffered violence that<br />

included sexual abuse silently behind closed doors.<br />

In a statement, the Elysée Palace said Hollande decided: “<strong>The</strong> place of Ms. Sauvage was no longer in<br />

prison, but with her family.”<br />

Women’s rights advocates, politicians and sympathisers around France had mobilised to support<br />

Sauvage, with a petition calling for her to be pardoned signed by hundreds of thousands.<br />

Nathalie Tomasini, one of Sauvage’s lawyers, told RTL radio the pardon was a “very strong message<br />

sent by François Hollande to all women victims of domestic violence.”<br />

Actress Éva Darlan, who chairs a support committee that advocated for Sauvage, said on BFM<br />

television that the presidential pardon is a “strong gesture toward men who hit [women]”.<br />

In January, Hollande granted a partial pardon to Sauvage, allowing her to seek parole. But two more<br />

courts made up of professional magistrates refused to free her. <strong>The</strong> president of the main union of<br />

French magistrates said Hollande made a “deplorable” decision “to please the public and to respond<br />

to a media request.”<br />

“It is a political decision … that challenges the functioning of our institutions,” Virginie Duval said<br />

on BFM.<br />

<strong>The</strong> French constitution allows a president to pardon convicts and to reduce prison sentences.<br />

This article was downloaded by calibre from https://www.theguardian.com/world/<strong>2016</strong>/dec/28/francois-hollande-

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