Lihat videonya..

http://www.france24.com/en/20130607-sexual-harassment-egypt-disease-violence-women-tahrir

 
________________________________
 
Sexual harassment, an Egyptian disease
By Sonia DRIDIcorrespondent in Cairo, Egypt the 07/06/2013 - 11:48

On June 8th, FRANCE 24 brought you a 
special programme on sexual harassment in Egypt. FRANCE 24’s Sonia Dridi 
interviewed one of the few women brave enough to come forward after 
being raped in Tahrir Square, the epicentre of the Egyptian revolution. 
It happens almost 
every time they stroll along the banks of the Nile, meander through 
downtown Cairo, go grocery shopping or simply ride the bus: Egyptian 
women must endure indecent remarks and groping.
Whether they wear the Muslim veil or not, whether they are 
high-school students or housewives, sexual harassment is an everyday 
blight on the lives of Egyptian women.
According to a study published by a UN group in April of this year, 99.3% of 
women surveyed 
say they have experienced some form of sexual harassment in the past, 
with the vast majority of them saying it came in the form of touching. .
Trapped in Tahrir Square
I was struck by this problem on my first trip to Egypt in 2008.
When I returned to the country in February 2011, 
as a correspondent for FRANCE 24, I realized that the worrying situation had 
not gone away.
In fact, it had reached alarming proportions, 
especially in Tahrir Square, the epicentre and one of the battlegrounds 
of the revolution that overthrew the authoritarian government of Hosni 
Mubarak.
Since the beginning of the 2011 uprising, hundreds of thousands of women
 joined the protests in Tahrir, but they became easy prey for attackers 
who took full advantage of the lack of security.
Tahrir became the scene of many sexual assaults. Some – directed 
at journalists and foreigners – were reported in the international 
press, but the vast majority targeted anonymous Egyptian women and have 
gone mostly unnoticed.
I myself was assaulted after a live report to 
FRANCE 24 from Tahrir in 2012, but escaped a far worse fate thanks to my 
colleague Ashraf Khalil who stepped in and led me to safety.
Unfortunately, the situation I experienced is commonplace in Egypt and many 
women do not escape their attackers.
Sexual assaults peaked on January 25, 2013, the 
second anniversary of the revolution, with at least 20 women attacked in Tahrir 
Square.
Some activists even say the assaults are part of an orchestrated campaign to 
keep women from participating in protests.
A woman speaks up
The depressing figures spurred Yasmine El Baramawy to come forward.
Baramawy was raped on November 23, 2012, on the 
sidelines of a protest against a draft constitution drafted mainly by 
Islamists. Her ordeal lasted more than one hour.
Her case would have also gone unreported, but 
earlier this year she bravely shattered taboos by telling her story on a 
popular Egyptian talk show.
Since then she has embarked on a daily struggle to raise awareness of sexual 
harassment in Egypt – a disease that rather 
than being treated is too often accepted, and even encouraged. Like many other 
activists, Baramawy blames the government for ignoring the issue.
I met her in February 2012 during an anti-sexual 
harassment march in Cairo. I asked her to once more recount the 
nightmare she lived through and explain her new crusade. I have also 
sought out other leaders, academics and activists to help understand the source 
of the problem.
***
This 26-minute report was followed by a live debate on FRANCE 24 (watch the 
video above).
________________________________
 
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20130607-sexual-harassment-egypt-disease-violence-women-tahrir

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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