Dutch sexism outcry after woman fined for peeing in public
The case of a Dutch woman fined €90 (£80; $105) for relieving herself in an alleyway in the centre of Amsterdam has turned into a debate about sexism.
Geerte Piening, 23, was caught short after a night out drinking in Amsterdam's vibrant Leidseplein in 2015. It was past closing time and the nearest public toilet was a couple of kilometres away, so she decided to find a quiet street while her friends kept watch.
She was caught by three police officers. "At the time I really didn't want to get involved in a discussion," she said. "But the next day I thought, just a minute, I'm going to fight this."
The judge, in this case a man, told her she should have used one of the men's facilities rather than resorting to urinating in public - an offence known as "wildplassen" in Dutch.
Amsterdam's city council said there had never been any policy on public toilets. "There are more men's than women's just because that's how its gone," Peter Paul Ekker, a spokesman for the deputy mayor, told the BBC.
"Obviously it should be equal and everyone will agree it can be done better, but what are the costs, is there space, and is it worth it?"
But this may not be the end of the story.
A Facebook group has been set up encouraging women to join a protest on Friday, taking up the judge's challenge of using the men's urinals.
More than 5,000 people have so far expressed an interest in attending the event.
Organiser Cathelijne Hornstra says she wants to show the absurdity of crouching "with my buttocks protruding under the edge while half-drunk".
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