ref: Untuk melihat video footage TV Alajazeerah, click : 
http://www.aljazeera.com/video/middleeast/2013/02/20132623514913956.html


http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/1308/24/Tainted-by-sexual-harassment.aspx

 

06-02-2013 01:56PM ET

Tainted by sexual harassment

Women are being scared off Tahrir Square by mob attacks, writes Reem Leila

 
      
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“It happened abruptly and very quickly,” said Yasmine Al-Baramawi, a female 
protester assaulted in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. “All of a sudden, dozens of men 
were running after me and my friend, who managed to escape. But I fell to the 
ground. I found myself alone in the middle of them. Suddenly, they started 
hitting me and tearing off my clothes. They were touching every single part of 
my body. Countless hands were under my shirt and inside my underwear,” 
Al-Baramawi said, still traumatised at the memory.

“I was so angry at being physically assaulted. The harassers molesting me made 
me feel helpless as a woman,” she added.

Soha, another victim of aggressive sexual harassment in Tahrir Square, was 
hospitalised for three days after she was attacked. She had gone to Tahrir 
Square on 25 January for the anniversary of the 25 January Revolution. 
“Suddenly, I found myself in the middle of a circle and surrounded by what 
seemed to be hundreds of men. The circle was getting smaller and smaller around 
me. I started screaming for help, but no one heard me. Their voices were louder 
than mine. As I tried to escape, they grabbed my clothes, tearing them apart. 
Dozens of hands were touching my body,” Soha said, still shocked by the 
experience.

Soha continued by saying that “people were screaming at the harassers to make 
them stop, and eventually I escaped. However, worse was to follow, as the ones 
I thought were my rescuers turned out to be other molesters who also wanted to 
have their share in groping me. I guess I must have fainted, but before passing 
out a group of men carried me away to one of the nearby stores.”

There have been increasing numbers of reports of sexual assault during 
demonstrations in Tahrir Square over recent weeks. More than 20 women were 
sexually harassed on 25 January during the demonstrations in and around Tahrir 
Square. Many of the assaulted women suffered from wounds and cuts as a result.

It was on 25 January itself that eyewitnesses reported the most important 
attacks, with many women being violently molested and groped in sensitive areas 
of their bodies. Some women had their clothes torn off by gangs of attackers. 
Hundreds of men assaulted three other women near Al-Dobara Palace Church, then 
being used as a field hospital. The women fled their harassers to the Mugamma 
building, where employees locked the doors to prevent the harassers from 
following them.

At the same time, other demonstrators holding a sit-in in the square beat the 
harassers with sticks and threw rocks at them to make them leave the square. 
The assaulted women were later taken to hospital for medical care.

It seems that such sexual attacks are on the rise, and there have been more 
this year than there were two years ago, when the 2011 attacks sparked the 
formation of several groups and organisations aiming to prevent such attacks, 
rescue women who were harassed, raise awareness about the issue and instruct 
women on how to protect themselves against assaults.

Among such organisations are the Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment (OpAntiSH), 
the Harassmap, Tahrir Bodyguard, and the Egyptian Initiative for Personal 
Rights (EIPR). These organisations have since been cooperating with other women 
rights’ organisations, such as the Egyptian Centre for Women’s Rights (ECWR) 
and the National Council for Women (NCW).

Nevertheless, despite the work of these and other organisations Tahrir Square 
has become a place where women feel unsafe during demonstrations, and the 
attacks on them have become more frequent and more brutal. Mohamed Al-Khatib, a 
volunteer for OpAntiSH, said that men should not stand by, as the violence 
against women was increasing. “Our mission is not an easy one, but it’s a fight 
we must continue. We must not allow the harassers to win,” he said.

This year’s attacks have not been the first of their kind. In 2011, there were 
also reports of sexual assaults in Tahrir Square, though these were not as 
brutal as the current ones. CBS reporter Lara Logan was sexually assaulted in 
Tahrir Square on 11 February 2011, the same day that former president Hosni 
Mubarak renounced power. The Logan incident, the first in which a female 
foreign reporter had been attacked, made international headlines as the first 
sexual assault in Tahrir Square.

According to Al-Khatib, the anti-harassment organisations are cooperating with 
each other, as well as with women rights’ organisations, in efforts to end the 
attacks. People working for the organisations divide themselves into groups 
when they are working in Tahrir Square, he said, in order to cover the widest 
possible area. The anti-harassment groups wear special clothes with a logo 
reading “anti-harassment personnel”.

“The groups usually carry bags of clothes and medical supplies which women may 
need if they are harassed,” he said. “Other groups actively protect women 
against assaults, and they also take any attacked women to safe houses.”

Groups are also stationed beside landline telephones to receive calls for help, 
and all the anti-harassment organisations routinely man hotlines to receive 
calls. “They immediately report any incidents to group members on site in order 
to move swiftly and rescue the harassed person,” he said.

However, some members of these organisations have themselves been attacked 
while carrying out their work. Ingy Ghozlan of Harassmap said that she believed 
that the attacks had been carried out by thugs paid by the Muslim Brotherhood 
to scare women away and stop them from going to Tahrir.

According to Ghozlan, listening to the testimonies of the harassed women and 
the statements of eyewitnesses was enough to make one understand that the 
attacks were planned. Most of the incidents have followed the same technique, 
she said. “The harassers start by gradually isolating the victim from her 
group. Then, they beat her and tear off her clothes. They start groping and 
touching every part of her body in a very humiliating way,” Ghozlan said.

Sally Zohni, a protester, has now decided not to go to Tahrir Square because of 
the attacks. “Things are going seriously bad in Tahrir,” she wrote on her 
Twitter account. “It kills me that a couple of years after the revolution, 
women cannot spend time in Tahrir Square.”

Another protester, Mariam Ali, who has been present in Tahrir for most of the 
protests over the past two years, wrote on her Facebook account that “Tahrir 
Square has become a dangerous area. Women are being stripped and beaten. This 
feels like the worst days Egyptian women are now witnessing.”

Two years of lobbying against government inaction on the issue has pressed the 
police to intervene more forcibly against such attacks, and Nihad Abul-Qomsan, 
head of the ECWR, commented that “sexual harassment is now at the forefront of 
issues being dealt with by the centre.” Sexual harassment in public areas is 
not limited to a specific age category or social class, she said, adding that 
the centre was leading the campaign against this “social cancer and unwelcome 
behaviour of a sexual nature that is making women feel uncomfortable and 
unsafe.”

According to a recent study released by the ECWR, 62 per cent of Egyptian men 
have admitted to sexually harassing women, and 83 per cent of Egyptian women 
have reported being harassed. Half of the women surveyed said that sexual 
harassment happened every day, while 53 per cent of the Egyptian men blamed 
women for “inviting” sexual harassment.

The survey found that 98 per cent of foreign women visitors had also 
experienced some harassment. The study, the first of its kind, had revealed 
that “harassment is a real issue, and it has been becoming worse over the past 
decade,” Abul-Qomsan said. “People say that up until the 1970s there was very 
little harassment in Egypt, but things are very different now.”

Abul-Qomsan added that some foreign embassies now consider Egypt to be one of 
the worst countries for sexual offences against foreign women, warning their 
female nationals to be “extra cautious” in public places, especially when 
alone. Abul-Qomsan said that in the light of such reactions Egyptians needed to 
re-evaluate their value system and school curricula, in order to ensure that 
the rule of law prevailed and offenders were not allowed to walk free because 
of a failure of basic notions of right and wrong.

“This phenomenon requires immediate attention from the government. What is 
happening in Tahrir is directly linked to Egypt’s endemic social problems of 
daily sexual harassment against women,” she said.

Female activists have also complained about the alleged police failure to take 
action against harassers even when they are given details about the 
perpetrators. “Most police officers simply ask about the identity of the 
harasser, without taking any action against him,” said Hussein Al-Shafei, a 
volunteer for Tahrir Bodyguard.

According to Al-Shafei, some of the harassers are even policemen themselves. 
“Although they are in the lowest ranks, they should be the ones protecting 
women. They shouldn’t be participating in such shameful acts,” he said. “Other 
police officers sympathise with the harassers and blame women for going into 
the streets on such occasions.”

The OpAntiSH group, another anti-harassment group operating in Tahrir, has 
rescued and treated some 16 women, while Tahrir Bodyguard has helped in saving 
another nine, thus making a total of 25, with the two teams hearing reports of 
at least nine more attacks.

Meanwhile, there is uncertainty about who is behind the attacks, though the 
representatives of the anti-harassment organisations believe that they are 
organised by those opposed to the protests. “What we are sure about is that 
these attacks are organised, because they happen most of the time in the same 
spots of Tahrir Square using the same techniques,” Al-Shafei said.

The government has condemned the incidents, with Prime Minister Hisham Kandil 
describing the attacks as a “catastrophe” that threatens society. Kandil had 
previously announced that the cabinet would be legislating to impose harsher 
penalties for sexual harassment. However, nothing has yet been done.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has also called on President 
Mohamed Morsi to take swift action against the assaults as well as other 
violent actions against the demonstrators. “It is unacceptable and a 
dereliction of duty not to intervene when protesters are being attacked by 
thugs and when women are being raped and sexually assaulted,” Pillay said in a 
written statement.

On 3 February, the opposition National Salvation Front (NSF) joined 
anti-harassment organisations in condemning the incidents of sexual harassment 
that had taken place in Tahrir Square during the recent demonstrations. “The 
NSF declares its full support for all anti-harassment organisations. It also 
condemns the systematic violence used against female protesters which occurred 
on 25 January and over the following days in Tahrir Square as well as in nearby 
streets. The NSF also denounces the use of bladed weapons in cutting and 
injuring women in an unprecedented manner,” the statement read.

The NSF blamed Morsi, Minister of Interior Mohamed Ibrahim and the Muslim 
Brotherhood for not protecting the female protesters. It “declares its full 
political and judicial support for the female victims of these brutal events,” 
the statement said.

Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) member Hoda Ghaniya said on the Muslim 
Brotherhood’s website that “we condemn the increasing number of sexual 
harassment crimes against women in Tahrir Square. Women should not be 
intimidated by these incidents, and they should continue to play their leading 
role in the political and social arena,” the statement said.

Psychiatrist Mona Hammad said that the harassers were likely to be from a 
combination of personality types. “Some of them could be men with anti-social 
personalities who feel no sense of guilt for what they do. Others may feel hate 
or aggression towards women,” she said. 

There were also those who may be adopting a “mob mentality”, Hammad said, 
losing self-control as a result of being part of a crowd and so less likely to 
follow normal social restrictions. This could lead them to engage in a level of 
violence they would not engage in if they were alone, she said.

Although most women agree that it is better to speak out about such attacks, 
because of its sensitive nature the issue should still be addressed carefully. 
Hammad said that some of the women who have been subjected to sexual violence 
may feel stigmatised, and their reputations may be at risk if they speak out, 
even putting their own security and that of their families on the line.

“Some families, parents and partners could prohibit the victim from 
participating in any further demonstrations, or even from leaving the house. 
Such reactions are due to the families’ fear of exposing the girl to another 
attack,” Hammad said.

Unfortunately, in many cases of sexual harassment women were blamed for the 
incident, Hammad said. “The police, her family and her relatives might ask her 
questions such as, what were you wearing and were you alone? Was it late at 
night?” Hammad commented. Some people continue to believe that those women who 
have been attacked were targeted because of their behaviour or dress, she added.

At the same time, victims of sexual harassment could take months or even years 
to overcome the effects of such incidents. Many become overwhelmed by what has 
happened to them, even becoming psychologically unable to deal with the outside 
world.

“The victims often feel humiliated or vulnerable. Some may experience 
hallucinations, insomnia, or restlessness. Some sounds, especially loud voices, 
may become intolerable to them, and they may be fearful about going out into 
the streets,” Hammad said. “In extreme cases, the victims may completely avoid 
people.” One woman who was severely assaulted was in such a state of shock that 
she could not stop screaming, Hammad said, while another was unable to speak 
for a month.

Al-Baramawi said that in her case every time she sees the place where she was 
assaulted she feels uncomfortable. “I was not able to sleep for three days 
after the attack. Even now, I am not able to sleep properly, and I often have 
nightmares,” she said, adding that she hoped the trauma would lift soon.

In protest against the rise in the number of attacks, a Women’s March against 
Sexual Harassment, Assault and Rape took place yesterday afternoon, with 
demonstrators departing from the Al-Sayeda Zeinab district at 4pm and heading 
towards Tahrir Square.



How to protect yourself against harassment:

- Always stay in the middle of your friends and close to them.
- Never walk alone during the night in remote areas.
- Think about carrying a weapon to defend yourself, such as a self-defence 
spray.
- Wear double layers of clothes, for example two pairs of trousers, along with 
a belt that is hard to unfasten.
- Add the phone number/s of rescue teams to your mobile phone and ensure that 
you can be reached at all times.
- In cases of actual harassment, report the incident immediately to the police 
and try to remember any details about the harassers that will make it easier to 
identify them. 


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