Ref:  Rupanya ada banyak  serigala di Mesir.

http://dawn.com/2013/02/02/in-egypt-bodyguards-protect-protesters-from-sexual-assault/

In Egypt, ‘bodyguards’ protect protesters from sexual assault
AP

 
In this Friday, Feb. 1, 2013 photo, Tahrir Bodyguard volunteers gather in 
Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt during a Friday protest, one week after the 
square was the site of attacks on more than 25 women on the second anniversary 
of the uprising. Wearing neon vests and hardhats, the group, which calls itself 
Tahrir Bodyguard, aims to deter potential assailants and evacuate women under 
assault by crowds. — AP Photo

CAIRO: With bright neon vests and hardhats gleaming at dusk, a dozen Egyptian 
volunteers fanned out through Cairo’s crowded Tahrir Square. Their project: end 
a surge in sexual assaults on women that activists say has become the darkest 
stain on the country’s opposition street movement.        

Patrolling on Friday, the men and women have joined Tahrir Bodyguard – one of 
several informal groups that have arisen to protect female demonstrators after 
women were stripped, groped and assaulted in a string of attacks this past 
year. Over the past week alone, while mass protests filled city squares around 
the country, over two dozen new sexual attacks have been reported – a wave that 
activists call the worst in years.

Soraya Bahgat said she founded the group using online social media after seeing 
television footage last November of a mob of men attacking a woman and tearing 
off her clothes. She had been on the way to a demonstration at Tahrir herself, 
but instead stayed in, gripped with fear.

”It was sickening. They were dragging her through the street,” said the 
29-year-old, who works as a human resources manager. ”I couldn’t imagine 
something so horrific, and something that fundamentally would keep women from 
exercising their right to assembly like anyone else. No one should be prevented 
from demonstrating.”

Such is the concern that the United Nations on Thursday demanded authorities to 
act to bring perpetrators to justice, saying it had reports of 25 sexual 
assaults on women in Tahrir rallies over the past week.

Another Egyptian organisation that also patrols the square, Operation 
Anti-Sexual Harassment/Assault, reported 19 incidents on one day alone. It was 
January 25th: The second anniversary of the start of the uprising that toppled 
autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

Extraordinary violence has been used in some of the attacks. Human rights 
campaigner Amnesty International says that some meet the definition of rape, 
including penetration with fingers and sharp objects.

Frequently, fights with knives and blunt weapons break out when people try to 
stop the attacks, blurring the lines between those helping and the perpetrators.

”Testimonies from victims and those attempting to save them paint a frightening 
picture: tens if not hundreds of men surrounding the victims with countless 
hands tearing-off clothes and veils …” Amnesty’s Egypt researcher Diana 
Eltahawy wrote in a blog post on Friday.

The activists say they can expect little help from the police, who rarely 
intervene in such cases and who they accuse of failing to properly investigate 
allegations. Uniforms are almost never seen at Tahrir during demonstrations 
except at the fringes, where riot police regularly clash with rock-throwing 
youths.

Sexual harassment in Egypt is not a new phenomenon. Women on the streets 
frequently are subjected to everything from stares to cat-calls and attempts to 
grab them. In previous years, there were instances of young men ganging up to 
grope girls in parks or on main boulevards during public holidays when large 
crowds are on the street. The trend however has worsened since the 2011 
uprising, which saw a general collapse in security and rise in crime after the 
fall of Mubarak.

This past June, as women marched through Tahrir demanding an end to harassment, 
a crowd assaulted them, overwhelming their male guardians and molesting several 
of the female marchers. And in October during Eid al-Azha, Islam’s biggest 
holiday, activists trying to protect women were harassed themselves, as hordes 
of all-male onlookers shouted taunts and blew air horns at them.

Experts, activists and media have attributed the harassment to a wide range of 
possible factors. Some blame widespread unemployment or underemployment among 
youth. Others cite an attitude in the conservative nation that women should not 
be out in public and thus those who are fair game.

Activists have speculated that some attacks are planned, aiming to discredit 
the protesters or to dissuade women from joining them.

The patrols, which aim to deter potential assailants and evacuate women under 
assault, have prompted a backlash from harassers.

”We’ve had people beaten up, and in one instance a crowd – some of whom were 
carrying knives – tried to break into one of our locations,” said Hussein 
ElShafei of Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment/Assault. ”Threats are a regular 
occurrence.”

In Tahrir on Friday, the neon-vested team said they had only had to make three 
interventions during the day’s protest, which they attributed to their high 
visibility and a smaller turnout in the square than usual. With other groups 
present, including the one ElShafei works for, dozens of volunteers could be 
seen in the crowds. Violence that night was concentrated on the other side of 
the city, where thousands of protesters denouncing the president marched on his 
palace and clashed with security forces firing tear gas and water cannons.

It was the eighth day of the country’s latest wave of political violence. 
Around 60 people have been killed in protests, rioting and clashes over the 
past week, the worst period of crisis since the fall of Mubarak. Observers say 
the protests are taking a dangerous turn as rival groups supporting and 
opposing Morsi’s backers have taken matters into their own hands.

“I think people are getting more violent. It’s been two years now and they are 
battle hardened,” said Mohammed Osama, a 35-year-old computer engineer and 
black belt in judo who said he joined the bodyguard group after being slashed 
with a knife in street violence in his hometown of Alexandria. He said that 
after experiencing violence himself, he wanted to do something to prevent it 
from striking others.

“Individual efforts aren’t enough — organization is needed. And it’s the 
honorable thing to do,” he said in measured tones, a scar visible under his eye.

As for the perpetrators of the attacks, he described them as a “social disease.”

“Sometimes attacks are organised, other times it’s people profiting from chaos 
on the streets, said Osama. “Ignorance and poverty is part of the problem, but 
for those who seek to victimise others, they now have another thing coming.


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