Hehehe... makin kuat Islamnya, makin doyan orang islam melecehkan cewek.

Islam melindungi cewek? Ini cuma kaing2 doang, faktanya justru sebaliknya.


http://www.bikyamasr.com/75724/egypt-women-fearful-of-attacks-as-eid-holiday-arrives/

Egypt women fearful of attacks as Eid holiday arrives
Joseph Mayton | 19 August 2012 | 0 Comments



CAIRO: The cafes are crowded early morning Sunday as Egyptians 
celebrate the end of the holy month of Ramadan, bringing in the Eid 
el-Fitr holiday with shisha, food and a joyous festival. But not 
everyone in the country is looking forward to the three-day holiday, 
especially not the country’s women, who in recent years have seen 
massive group-style attacks on women in the streets during the holiday.

“I just want to enjoy and relax so I came here this morning because I won’t be 
going out later,” said Assma, a 23-year-old recent university 
graduate. She told Bikyamasr.com that she and her friends are 
“concerned” that this Eid, more attacks against women will come.

“It’s always there, especially after the past year we’ve had that saw women 
stripped and violated at protests, not to mention that in other 
holidays in recent years we women have been attacked by gangs of boys 
and men for simply walking in public,” she added.

June this year saw some of the worst attacks against women, with both 
foreigners and Egyptians reporting that they had been sexually 
assaulted in the square take place following the disbanding of 
Parliament.

“I was walking in the square and was hoping to be part of the calls 
for the SCAF to leave power when a man behind me grabbed by butt and 
started saying disgusting things to me,” one woman told Bikyamasr.com.

“He asked if I was a slut and then swore at me when I yelled at him,” she added.

Others also reported being harassed on social media networks, highlighting the 
growing concern facing women in the country.

Earlier in the month, an anti-sexual harassment demonstration 
organized by over 20 Egyptian women’s groups in protest against the 
recent escalation of assaults in Cairo’s Tahrir Square was attacked 
about an hour and half after it began by unknown troublemakers.

The participants reported being attacked by a mob of “thugs” who 
attempted to throw rocks and glass at them, but the clash was over 
quickly as volunteers securing the protest intervened to stop it.

This was not the first time a women’s rights march was attacked in Tahrir 
Square.

Last March, and on International Women’s Day, a march of tens of 
women was attacked by a cynical mob of men who did not like women 
protesting for more rights.

Several female protesters were injured and one woman had to have 8 
stitches in her head. Almost all of them were groped and sexually 
assaulted in the attack.

A 2008 study by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights (ECWR) found 
that well over two-thirds of Egyptian women are sexually harassed daily 
in the country.

The participants held signs that read “It is my right to protest 
safely,” “Groping your sister is shameful for the square” and “Be a man 
and protect her instead of harassing her.”

“We are fed up,” protester Mai Abdel Hafez, 24, told Bikyamasr.com.

“We came to deliver a message that it is our right to protest and we 
will not avoid the square in fear of harassment,” she said right before 
the attack took place.

But with the Eid holiday arriving, women find it difficult to forget 
the beginning of the holiday “fear season,” when dozens of young men and boys 
grobed and mobbed women outside a downtown Cairo theater.

That event, in 2006, highlighted the issue of sexual harassment and 
sexual violence against women in the country, spurring campaigns and 
online debate. However, much of that debate and anger over the treatment of 
women seems to be silenced after a day or two, with many returning 
to what they call “more important issues.”

The issue of sexual harassment and violence has left many Egyptian women 
remaining at home during the holiday.

And on Sunday morning, groups of young men were already seen by 
Bikyamasr.com antagonizing women on downtown Cairo’s Qasr el-Aini 
street, where they got in the face of two female passersby.

“They just yelled horrible things at us and asked us for sex,” said 
one of the women. “This is what Egypt has become for us, especially 
during holidays.”


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