The arrest in New York at the weekend of International Monetary Fund chief, Dominique Strauss-Kahn has caused shockwaves around the world, and once again raised the topic of whether sexual mores and relations between men and women in France are different to those in Anglo-Saxon-dominated cultures like our own.
The French financier is facing charges that he sexually assaulted a maid in his New York hotel room. The maid alleges Strauss-Kahn, or DSK as he is known in his homeland, emerged naked from the bathroom when she came into his Sofitel hotel suite, grabbed her from behind and pulled her into the bedroom and attacked her.
Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer has denied any wrongdoing by his client, saying the head of one of the world’s most influential financial institutions and aspiring French presidential candidate will “vigorously defend” the charges made against him.
The news has caused a storm of controversry in France where DSK was widely touted as the man most likely to topple the current – and widely unpopular – French President, Nicolas Sarkozy in next year’s election. It has also opened the gate on a flood of older sexual harassment complaints against Strauss-Kahn – including by the French writer, Tristane Banon who claims she was the victim of an alleged sexual assault at the hands of the politician in 2002.
DSK’s arrest has in turn sparked elaborate conspiracy theories in France, where newspapers, radio and the online sphere are buzzing with claims and counter-claims that the former economics professor – renowned for his weakness for women – was lured into a carefully staged, politically-motivated honey trap.
Strauss-Kahn’s wife, the accomplished and respected French TV journalist Anne Sinclair, has spoken publically in defence of her husband, asserting that the charges will finally be found to be false. The reaction of the French electorate seems to be evenly divided between outrage and indifference (with those in the latter camp electing to react to the news with the Gallic shrug for which their nation is renowned).