MADRID (Reuters) - Thousands of people took to the streets in Madrid and Barcelona on Friday evening in marches to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.
In Madrid, protesters, many wearing purple, marched down the Gran Via in the city centre carrying banners and chanting "no is no, anything else is rape", and "we women are not goods". In Barcelona people banged drums and lit flares.
Since 2003, when statistics started to officially count fatalities, 1,171 women have died as a result of gender violence in Spain, according to the Ministry of Equality. So far in 2022, 38 women have died.
"I've come here because of the problem of gender violence, because of all the deaths that are occurring, the mistreatment of women..." said teacher and Madrid resident Susana Rita, 42.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez asked men on Friday to step forward to stop machismo.
"Male violence is a tragic reality that shames us every day," he said at a Socialist Party event.
The protests come after it emerged that some men have had prison sentences reduced because of a loophole in a new law governing penalties for sexual abuse, causing fury and heated debate among politicians.
The law, known as the "only yes means yes" law, classifies any non-consensual sex as rape but also sets lighter minimum sentences for certain sexual crimes.
At least 11 convicted sexual abusers have had their prison terms reduced and five men have been released from prison, according to Europa Press news agency.
Chants of "only yes means yes" rang through the crowds on Friday evening. (This story has been refiled to fix a typo in the third paragraph)
(Reporting by Elena Rodriguez, Guillermo Martinez and Horaci Garcia; Additional reporting by Jessica Jones; Editing by Marguerita Choy)