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Calls increase at France's new helpline after the verdict of Gisele Pelicot mass rape trial

It’s one of the numerous ripple effects of the Mazan mass rape trial that made all the international headlines.

Since the verdict last week, calls have been multiplying at a call centre located in a Paris hospital (APHP).

The specialists that work there help victims of chemical submission - the act of administering drugs to someone to assault them. The centre receives up to ten calls per day.

At 9 am sharp, Leila Chahouachi, a pharmacist and head of the department, starts calling back victims just like Gisèle Pelicot, who believe they have been drugged and assaulted.

Gisèle Pelicot's now ex-husband, Dominique, was found guilty of drugging and recruiting men to rape her without her knowledge for over a decade.

He and the fifty men he recruited to sexually abuse Gisele Pelicot were sentenced for their crimes last week.

"Nobody's allowed to touch you. There's no such thing as a right to rape or to assault someone," replied Leila Chahouachi, with a calm but firm tone, after one victim explained that she thinks she has been drugged and assaulted.

Although she encourages victims to file a formal complaint with local authorities, she understands that some victims may not yet be ready.

"I don't want to pressure anyone. I want to guide them because sometimes all they need is someone to listen to them," she told Euronews.

Victims then can have their hair analysed for traces of drugs as part of a national research program carried out by the centre.

"Three strands of hair are removed for testing. One goes to analyse for cannabinoids, one for medication and narcotics, and one for GHB (known as the date rape drug). We'll give victims the results back in 2 months," explained the director of the centre.

The Pelicot mass rape trial

Read more on euronews.com
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