French protest 'tampon tax'

  • 12/11/2015
(iStock)
(iStock)

About 100 people have gathered in Paris to protest a French tax on tampons and sanitary pads, as anger grows among women worldwide, including Australia, over high taxation of the essential items.

Men and women, some dressed up as giant vaginas and bloodied tampons, joined the rally on Wednesday (local time) in central Paris, brandishing colourful flags and banners reading: "No tax on my uterus", "Each time I bleed, the State wins" and "let us bleed without over-charging us".

One feminist group at the protest hung pairs of women's underwear soiled with fake menstrual blood from a clothes line.

"What is not right is that at a time when women are underpaid, when they are more likely to be unemployed, when they are paid less than men, each month, they have to pay a tax on their uterus: the tampon tax," said Ophelie Latil, who founded the French feminist collective Georgette Sand.

Georgette Sand called for the protest after France's National Assembly last month rejected an amendment to reduce the VAT on tampons and other feminine sanitary products to 5.5 percent from the current rate of 20 percent.

The amendment was rejected after the government said changing the tax would cost €55 million.

Georgette Sand countered by saying that such a tax amounted to overcharging women for what is a "basic need", estimating a woman will spend €1500 in her lifetime on sanitary products.

The Senate is expected to discuss a new amendment on the issue on November 19.

The protest is the latest in a growing international movement of anger against what has become known as the "tampon tax".

Online petitions have collected hundreds of thousands of signatures in Australia, Britain, France and elsewhere calling for a tax reduction on feminine hygiene products, which Canada has scrapped.

In Britain, a government decision a few weeks ago not to scrap the five percent tax on sanitary products, with MPs arguing they were a "non-essential, luxury" item, sparked an uproar on social media.

Women posted pictures of tampons in champagne glasses and jewellery boxes under the #tampontax hashtag on Twitter and Facebook, while men also joined the chorus of disapproval.

In France, the #laissermoisaigner (let me bleed) and #taxetampon have been trending on Twitter.

Earlier this month another French protest called "Culotte Gate" (panty gate) saw women post hundreds of panties stained with fake blood to French President Francois Hollande and other members of government.

At the French protest, Axel Cassin, who was dressed in a Santa Claus suit and holding a sign that said "less taxes in our chimneys", said men should support women in their fight.

He highlighted one French MP's argument that equated women's sanitary products with men's shaving creams.

"A man can choose to shave or not to shave," Cassin said. "A woman on the other hand cannot choose whether or not to have her period."

AFP