http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/egypt-year-after-virginity-tests-women-victims-army-violence-still-seek-justice-2012-03-09

9 March 2012

Egypt: A year after ‘virginity tests’, women victims of army violence still 
seek justice
 
Violence against female protesters by the Egyptian security forces has plagued 
public demonstrations in Egypt.

© FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images 



“
  Ever since this unacceptable episode, which is nothing less than torture, 
women protesters have repeatedly faced beatings, torture and other 
ill-treatment at the hands of Egypt’s army and security forces.
”
Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Director at Amnesty 
International. 
Fri, 09/03/2012  
The final session of the trial of an Egyptian military doctor accused of 
conducting forced “virginity tests” on Samira Ibrahim, a woman protester, will 
show if Egypt’s military courts are prepared to offer any redress for female 
victims of violence by the army, Amnesty International said today.

On Sunday, 11 March, a military court is expected to deliver a verdict in the 
case of the military doctor facing charges of “public indecency” and 
“disobeying military orders” for coercing women to undergo the invasive tests 
after they were arrested at a Cairo protest on 9 March, 2011. The initial 
charges faced by the doctor included rape but this charge has been dropped from 
the indictment.

In the year since then, violence against female protesters by the security 
forces has plagued public demonstrations in Egypt. 

“Ever since this unacceptable episode, which is nothing less than torture, 
women protesters have repeatedly faced beatings, torture and other 
ill-treatment at the hands of Egypt’s army and security forces,” said Hassiba 
Hadj Sahraoui, Deputy Middle East and North Africa Director at Amnesty 
International. 

“The ‘virginity tests’ trial is a rare opportunity for Egypt’s military to 
signal that torture by the army does not go unpunished and that perpetrators of 
human rights violations among its ranks will be held to account.”
 
“Yet this would only be an initial step. The military must fully respect a 
December 2011 administrative court decision which bans such ‘tests’ and the 
victims must be offered adequate reparation.”

‘Virginity tests’ targeting women
On 9 March 2011, when army officers violently cleared Tahrir square of 
protesters, they took at least 18 women into military detention. 

Seventeen of those women were detained for four days. Some of them told Amnesty 
International that during that time male soldiers beat them, gave them electric 
shocks and subjected them to strip searches. They were then forced to undergo 
“virginity tests”, and threatened with prostitution charges.

Before they were released, the women were brought before a military court and 
received one-year suspended sentences for a variety of confected charges.

The case against the military doctor arose from two complaints filed by Samira 
Ibrahim, 25, one of the women who endured the ‘virginity tests’. 

“Samira Ibrahim and all women who come forward to seek justice should be 
commended for their bravery, and the Egyptian authorities owe it to them to 
hold to account those responsible in fair and transparent trials,” said Hassiba 
Hadj Sahraoui. 

Ongoing violence against women protesters
Other women have filed recent complaints against Egypt’s Supreme Council of the 
Armed Forces (SCAF) for violence targeting women at public demonstrations, 
including protests in December 2011 in front of the Cabinet building in Qasr El 
Einy Street, where protesters were demanding an end to military rule and which 
left at least 17 people dead. 

A video of military police dragging two women, one of whose clothes had been 
torn off, along the ground before severely beating and stamping on them was 
circulated on the internet, provoking widespread outrage.

One of the women in the video, 49-year-old Azza Hilal, told Amnesty 
International that soldiers beat her when she tried to help the veiled woman 
protester beaten by soldiers, not moving, and with her body exposed.  Azza 
Hilal was repeatedly beaten with sticks on the head, arms, and back, causing 
her to bleed heavily and lose consciousness. 

Following the assault, she was hospitalized for three weeks and still suffers 
from memory problems. An X-ray later showed her skull was fractured. Last 
month, she filed a complaint with the Public Prosecutor’s Office against the 
SCAF for injuries she sustained 

Ghada Kamal, a 28-year-old pharmacist and member of the “6 April Youth” 
pro-reform movement, also told Amnesty International that she and other women 
were violently beaten and sexually harassed by the security forces on 16 
December. 

She believes she was targeted for beatings in the protests because of an 
earlier verbal argument with army officers in Tahrir Square, who according to 
her had threatened women protesters with sexual assault, making lewd gestures 
to women and unzipping their pants.  

Later the same day, soldiers hit Ghada Kamal on the head when she came to the 
aid of another female protester who had been beaten violently. 

She told Amnesty International that soldiers beat her with sticks and a 
whip-like object, and stamped on her with their boots. She said they also 
sexually harassed her while dragging her into the Parliament building. 

While Ghada Kamal was detained, the beatings continued, and she said she saw 
seven other women being verbally and physically attacked. The soldiers 
intentionally targeted women’s private parts, and she was herself threatened by 
rape, she said.

“[The sexual harassment] was meant to terrorize them,” Ghada Kamal told Amnesty 
International. “Women would rather die but not be undressed, raped or sexually 
harassed. They were very clever, they knew what mattered to the women, it was 
the limit." 

Despite SCAF’s apologies and promises to investigate the numerous reports of 
violence against women by the army and security forces, the victims have told 
Amnesty International that little has been done to bring those responsible to 
justice, or to provide these women with reparation.

Amnesty International said that these forms of torture and ill-treatment 
exploits the stigma attached to sexual and gender-based violence, and are being 
used to stereotype and marginalize women protesters, in an attempt to deter 
these women, and other Egyptian women and girls, from participating in public 
life.  

The organization called for thorough, impartial and independent investigations 
to be carried out into all complaints by women who faced this kind of brutal 
assault and for those responsible to be brought to justice. Amnesty 
International said that the victims must be fully provided with full 
reparation, including compensation and guarantees of non-repetition, for the 
harm suffered.


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