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Gisèle Pelicot’s first televised interview: 5 takeaways from the French woman raped dozens of times over a decade

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating
Gisèle Pelicot leaves a courthouse in Avignon

By Saskya Vandoorne, CNN

Paris (CNN) — Gisèle Pelicot emerged as a global feminist hero in 2024 by transforming her horrific, personal story into a public battle against rape culture.

On December 19, 2024, her former husband, Dominique Pelicot, was convicted of orchestrating her rape dozens of times by various men over nearly a decade after a trial that shocked France and pushed the country to examine systemic sexual assault. Fifty men were found guilty of rape or sexual assault that day.

Outside the southern French courtroom where her rapists were convicted and sentenced, Pelicot said: “Shame must change sides.” It became a rallying cry that helped shift the narrative around sexual violence in France and beyond.

As her new memoir, “A Hymn to Life: Shame Has to Change Sides,” is set to hit the shelves next week, Pelicot, 73, is speaking out and revealing what she had so far shared only in court. On Wednesday, she gave her first televised interview since that trial to public channel France 5.

Here are the top takeaways.

1. The moment she learned she’d been raped

Pelicot described her shock when police officers summoned her and delivered the bombshell that her husband of 50 years had been crushing sleeping pills into her food and drink, then inviting strangers to rape her while he recorded the assaults.

“I don’t recognize myself in those photos. I said, ‘That’s not me,’” she said of the images investigators showed her. “Then I put on my glasses, and there I discovered this lifeless woman with a man she doesn’t know on her bed. I think my brain disassociated.”

2. Red flags

Looking back, Pelicot said, there were warning signs, but at the time she didn’t allow herself to confront them.

She remembers noticing a yellow stain on a pair of trousers shortly after she and Dominique Pelicot moved to the southern French village of Mazan. “I asked him whether he might be drugging me, and then he started crying.
Was it my subconscious? I don’t know.”

Another incident involved a white beer that appeared to change color after Dominique Pelicot added what he claimed was mint syrup. When she questioned it, he poured the contents down the sink. “At the time I didn’t think anything of it,” she said.

3. Visiting Dominique Pelicot

Despite the harrowing ordeal Pelicot endured, she said she still intends to visit her ex-husband in prison as part of her “healing process.”

During the trial, she never addressed him directly, she said. Now, she wants “to look him directly in the eye and ask him, ‘Why did you do that?’”

Her view of their 50-year marriage is complex. While she described feelings of betrayal and indignation, she said she still wants to hold on to happy memories, because they are all she has from her life.

4. Estranged children

Pelicot’s interview was an opportunity for her to address the cracks that have formed within her family since the revelations. She said it’s wrong to think that “a tragedy brings a family together.” Her relationship with her daughter Caroline is slowly headling, but her son David “needs more time,” she said.

“I chose to live with Mr. Pelicot,” she explained. “They didn’t choose their father, so they’re in a different position, and I think the journey will take longer.”

5. New boyfriend

Pelicot never imagined she would fall in love again, nor even want to. Yet in 2023, she met a man sh

Remesas a México caen en 2025 y rompen racha de más de una década en medio de la ofensiva migratoria de Trump

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Por Rocío Muñoz-Ledo, CNN en Español

El envío de remesas a México cayó en 2025 terminando con una racha de crecimiento de más de una década, que los expertos atribuyen a cambios en el perfil demográfico de los inmigrantes mexicanos en Estados Unidos y al impacto de las deportaciones en medio de la dura ofensiva migratoria del Gobierno de Donald Trump.

Según el reporte más reciente del Banco de México, el país recibió US$ 61.791 millones en 2025, frente a los US$ 64.746 millones registrados en 2024, una caída de 4,5 %.

Se trata del primer descenso anual desde 2013 y del más pronunciado desde 2009, cuando las remesas disminuyeron 15,5%, según el análisis de BBVA Research basado en datos del Banco de México.

Aunque el año cerró con números negativos, diciembre ofreció un respiro: los envíos alcanzaron US$ 5.322 millones, un crecimiento anual de 1,9% respecto al mismo mes de 2024.

Las remesas —los envíos de dinero que los inmigrantes en Estados Unidos envían a sus familias en México— son una fuente importante de ingresos para cubrir necesidades básicas como alimentación, educación y vivienda, por lo que cualquier disminución puede afectar la economía diaria de los hogares que las reciben.

Expertos señalan que la reducción se debe principalmente a dos factores: los cambios demográficos de la comunidad mexicana en Estados Unidos y las deportaciones, que según el Gobierno de Trump, sumaban 500.000 desde enero hasta octubre de 2025.

Históricamente, la población mexicana ha sido el mayor grupo hispano en Estados Unidos. En 2024, sumaron 38,9 millones (11,5 %), un importante aumento comparado con los 35,9 millones contabilizados en 2020, según los datos del Censo.

Y es también el país latinoamericano que más ciudadanos ha visto regresar: más de 100.000 deportados, el 53 % de todas las deportaciones de latinos desde EE.UU., según un análisis de CNN del número de deportados latinoamericanos durante los primeros 10 meses de su mandato.

Manuel Orozco, director del programa de Migración, Remesas y Desarrollo del Inter-American Dialogue, explica que los inmigrantes mexicanos están cada vez más asentados y con vínculos familiares que, con el tiempo, reducen la necesidad de enviar dinero regularmente.

“Los mexicanos llevan en promedio 26 años viviendo en Estados Unidos, y el ciclo de envío es de 30 años. Por cada año que pasa, más del 2% de los remitentes deja de enviar, mientras que el crecimiento de nuevos remitentes es de menos del 0,8%”, dijo Orozco a CNN.

Orozco añade que muchos de los hijos de los migrantes ya residen en EE.UU., lo que disminuye la urgencia de transferir dinero. El informe “Flujos de transferencias de dinero desde EE. UU. en 2026: proyecciones preliminares” del Inter-American Dialogue confirma esta tendencia: los migrantes tienden a dejar de enviar dinero tras completar un ciclo de remesas cercano a 30 años, con los mexicanos representando la mayor proporción de esta población.

A estos cambios demográficos se suman las deportaciones que, a diferencia de años anteriores —cuando se concentraban principalmente en la frontera y afectaban a migrantes recién llegados o que intentaban cruzar—, ahora alcanzan a personas que llevan años viviendo y trabajando en Estados Unidos y enviando dinero a sus familias.

“Las deportacione

Republicans urge Trump to hold firm against Democrats’ DHS demands as clock ticks toward shutdown

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By Lauren Fox, Sarah Ferris, CNN

(CNN) — Republicans’ warning for President Donald Trump is growing louder with the Department of Homeland Security set to shut down in just days: Don’t feel public pressure to relent on an issue central to his campaign.

Even as the White House has engaged with Democrats over reforms to DHS, a growing chorus of members have urged Trump and his team to play hardball and instead fight for GOP priorities, like cracking down on so-called sanctuary cities in exchange for any Democratic demands on federal immigration enforcement.

One such appeal came from Missouri Republican Sen. Eric Schmitt, who golfed and watched the Superbowl with the president over the weekend. Schmitt’s view was the president didn’t need to yield to the other party’s demands, even with that critical funding deadline bearing down on Capitol Hill.

“We should not be, in any way, shape or form kneecapping ICE,” Schmitt told CNN. “President Trump ran on this issue. So again, I think this is a home game for us, and if the Democrats want to continue down this road, it’s just a loser for them.”

Bolstering Republicans’ resolve if that Trump’s signature policy bill last summer injected DHS with billions for immigration enforcement – enough, they argue, to cover operations for months, if not years, to come. The impact of a shutdown instead would be felt primarily by other program like FEMA and TSA — something they say would make it harder for Democrats to defend their position in a prolonged stalemate.

“I don’t know why we are entertaining policy initiatives on funding bills. If you want to have a debate and they want to put forth this stupid 20-point plan in legislation, let’s have the debate. They’ll lose,” Schmitt challenged. (Democrats have sent the White House a series of demands from requiring the use of body cameras for agents to reining in roving patrols.)

After the death of Alex Pretti, the window for a negotiation over the contentious and thorny issue of immigration enforcement tactics appeared to open in Congress, a rare but serious opportunity for lawmakers to find a middle ground on an issue that has befuddled lawmakers for decades. But after two weeks of fraught talks, stalled negotiations and public blaming, both sides appear to be recalcitrant, retreating to their long-held views on the issue.

The White House had pushed Republicans to fund the rest of the government while negotiating DHS funding separately, but conservatives are newly emboldened that the president can easily weather a partial shutdown with little political cost while blaming Democrats for being soft on immigration enforcement.

“I’ve made clear, I’m not gonna support anything that I think is detrimental to law enforcement,” Sen. Josh Hawley, a Republican from Missouri, recently told reporters on Capitol Hill.

Sen. Bernie Moreno said, in his view, “they [Democrats] can take the DHS appropriations bill or they can shut down FEMA, Coast Guard, TSA, Secret Service and CISA. That’s up to them.”

“I wouldn’t offer anything. That’s my point of view,” the Ohio Republican added.

Many Democrats, meanwhile, initially interpreted GOP comments about concerns over ICE tactics as a tacit recognition that the administration may have gone too far in its efforts to ramp up deportations in major cities around the country.

And many in the party see the death of Pretti and Renee Nicole Good at the hands of federal agents in Minneapolis as a moment of reckoning requiring them to force significant reforms to US Customs and Immigration Enforcement, even if it risks another prolonged shutdown just months after a historic shutdown yielded little in terms of concessions from the administration.

“It’s really important that Secretary Noem not allow a band of untrained officers –

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