-
Rural India powers global AI models
-
Equities, metals, oil rebound after Asia-wide rout
-
Bencic, Svitolina make history as mothers inside tennis top 10
-
Italy's spread-out Olympics face transport challenge
-
Son of Norway crown princess stands trial for multiple rapes
-
Side hustle: Part-time refs take charge of Super Bowl
-
Paying for a selfie: Rome starts charging for Trevi Fountain
-
Faced with Trump, Pope Leo opts for indirect diplomacy
-
NFL chief expects Bad Bunny to unite Super Bowl audience
-
Australia's Hazlewood to miss start of T20 World Cup
-
Bill, Hillary Clinton to testify in US House Epstein probe
-
Cuba confirms 'communications' with US, but says no negotiations yet
-
Iran orders talks with US as Trump warns of 'bad things' if no deal reached
-
From 'watch his ass' to White House talks for Trump and Petro
-
Liverpool seal Jacquet deal, Palace sign Strand Larsen on deadline day
-
Trump says not 'ripping' down Kennedy Center -- much
-
Sunderland rout 'childish' Burnley
-
Musk merges xAI into SpaceX in bid to build space data centers
-
Former France striker Benzema switches Saudi clubs
-
Sunderland rout hapless Burnley
-
Costa Rican president-elect looks to Bukele for help against crime
-
Hosts Australia to open Rugby World Cup against Hong Kong
-
New York records 13 cold-related deaths since late January
-
In post-Maduro Venezuela, pro- and anti-government workers march for better pay
-
Romero slams 'disgraceful' Spurs squad depth
-
Trump urges 'no changes' to bill to end shutdown
-
Trump says India, US strike trade deal
-
Cuban tourism in crisis; visitors repelled by fuel, power shortages
-
Liverpool set for Jacquet deal, Palace sign Strand Larsen on deadline day
-
FIFA president Infantino defends giving peace prize to Trump
-
Trump cuts India tariffs, says Modi will stop buying Russian oil
-
Borthwick backs Itoje to get 'big roar' off the bench against Wales
-
Twenty-one friends from Belgian village win €123mn jackpot
-
Mateta move to Milan scuppered by medical concerns: source
-
Late-January US snowstorm wasn't historically exceptional: NOAA
-
Punctuality at Germany's crisis-hit railway slumps
-
Gazans begin crossing to Egypt for treatment after partial Rafah reopening
-
Halt to MSF work will be 'catastrophic' for people of Gaza: MSF chief
-
Italian biathlete Passler suspended after pre-Olympics doping test
-
Europe observatory hails plan to abandon light-polluting Chile project
-
Iran president orders talks with US as Trump hopeful of deal
-
Uncertainty grows over when US budget showdown will end
-
Oil slides, gold loses lustre as Iran threat recedes
-
Russian captain found guilty in fatal North Sea crash
-
Disney earnings boosted by theme parks, as CEO handover nears
-
Sri Lanka drop Test captain De Silva from T20 World Cup squad
-
France demands 1.7 bn euros in payroll taxes from Uber: media report
-
EU will struggle to secure key raw materials supply, warns report
-
France poised to adopt 2026 budget after months of tense talks
-
Latest Epstein file dump rocks UK royals, politics
Court refuses to drop rape charge against actor Gerard Depardieu
A Paris court on Thursday rejected a bid by Gerard Depardieu to have rape charges against him dropped, the chief prosecutor in the case said, raising the prospect of a trial for the iconic French actor.
Depardieu, 73, was charged with raping and sexually assaulting a young French actress at his home in Paris in 2018, an accusation he has called "baseless".
But Paris chief prosecutor Remy Heitz said in a statement that there was "serious and confirmed evidence that justifies Gerard Depardieu to remain charged" in the case brought by the actress, Charlotte Arnould.
The case will now go back to the prosecuting magistrate who is to resume her work on the case, Heitz said.
Arnould, who was present in the courtroom, declined to comment on the decision, but her lawyer, Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, told AFP that her client was "relieved".
Depardieu's lawyer, Herve Temime, declined to comment.
Arnould filed her complaint in the summer of 2018 when she was 22, saying she had been raped twice by Depardieu in his swank Left Bank mansion in the French capital a few days earlier.
Prosecutors dropped the case in June 2019, citing lack of evidence, but it was reopened the following year after the actress brought a civil case against Depardieu.
- 'Trying to survive' -
The actor was charged in December 2020 and ordered to be placed under judicial supervision, but not jailed.
One year later, Arnould revealed her identity on Twitter, saying: "I am Depardieu's victim. He was charged one year ago. He is working, while all I am doing is trying to survive."
Depardieu is a friend of Arnould's family and has known her since she was a child.
In 2001, Time magazine asked Depardieu about a 1978 interview in Film Comment magazine in which he described his rough childhood and was quoted as saying "I had plenty of rapes, too many to count".
Asked if he had participated in the rapes, he told Time that he had. "But it was absolutely normal in those times," the actor said.
Depardieu became a star in France from the 1980s with roles in "The Last Metro", "Police" and "Cyrano de Bergerac", before Peter Weir's "Green Card" also made him a Hollywood celebrity.
He later acted in global productions, including Kenneth Branagh's "Hamlet", Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" and Netflix's "Marseille" series.
In 2013, he sparked an outcry by leaving France and taking Russian nationality to protest a proposed tax hike on the rich in his homeland.
Depardieu, a friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin, last week came out against the war in Ukraine and called for negotiations.
"I am against this fratricidal war. I say 'stop the weapons and negotiate'," Depardieu said.
Depardieu currently stars in two films showing in French cinemas. In one he plays the role of Maigret, the fictional police detective created by writer Georges Simenon, who investigates the murder of a young girl.
In the other, "Robust", he plays an ageing, jaded actor who develops a relationship with a young female security guard.
G.Schulte--BTB