Monday, September 03,
2012
And Obama is giving another billion dollars to these savages. Thank
you, Obama :)
More of the poisonous
fruit from his anti-freedom foreign policy. BBC is reporting that "sexual
harassment is reaching epidemic proportions, with a rise in such incidents over
the past three months. For many Egyptian women, sexual harassment - which
sometimes turns into violent mob-style attacks - is a daily fact of life."
Different story from the BBC when they were standing all misty-eyed in Tahrir
Square...
Egypt's sexual
harassment of women 'epidemic' BBC News,
September 3, 2012 (thanks to David)
Some Egyptian women are now scared to appear
alone or even with female friends in public places
Campaigners in Egypt say
the problem of sexual harassment is reaching epidemic proportions, with a rise
in such incidents over the past three months. For many Egyptian women, sexual
harassment - which sometimes turns into violent mob-style attacks - is a daily
fact of life, reports the BBC's Bethany Bell in Cairo.
Last winter, an Egyptian
woman was assaulted by a crowd of men in the city of Alexandria.
In video footage of
the incident, posted on the internet, she is hauled over men's shoulders
and dragged along the ground, her screams barely audible over the
shouts of the mob.
It is hard to tell who
is attacking her and who is trying to help.
The case was one of the
most extreme - but surveys say many Egyptian women face some form of
sexual harassment every day.
Marwa, not her real
name, says she worries about being groped or verbally harassed whenever she
goes downtown. She says it makes her afraid.
"This is something
that scares me, as a girl. When I want to go out, walking the street and
someone harasses or annoys me, it makes me afraid.
"This stops me from
going out. I try to be excessively cautious in the way I dress so I avoid
wearing things that attract people."
'Deeply rooted'
The day I met Marwa, she
was wearing a long headscarf pinned like a wimple under her chin, and a loose
flowing dress with long sleeves over baggy trousers.
But dressing
conservatively is no longer a protection, according to Dina Farid of
the campaign group Egypt's Girls are a Red Line.
She says even women who
wear the full-face veil - the niqab - are being targeted.
"It does not make a
difference at all. Most of Egyptian ladies are veiled [with a headscarf] and
most of them have experienced sexual harassment.
"Statistics say
that most of the women or girls who have been sexually harassed have been
veiled or completely covered up with the niqab."
Harassers are getting
younger, campaigners say
In 2008, a study by the
Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights found that more than 80% of Egyptian women
have experienced sexual harassment, and that the majority of the victims were those
who wore Islamic headscarves.
Said Sadek, a
sociologist from the American University in Cairo, says that the
problem is deeply rooted in Egyptian society: a mixture of what he calls
increasing Islamic conservatism, on the rise since the late 1960s, and old
patriarchal attitudes.
"Religious
fundamentalism arose, and they began to target women. They want women to go
back to the home and not work.
"Male patriarchal
culture does not accept that women are higher than men, because some women had
education and got to work, and some men lagged behind and so one way to
equalise status is to shock women and force a sexual situation on them
anywhere.
"It is not the
culture of the Pharaohs; it is the culture of the Bedouins," Mr Sadek
says.
Mr Sadek and women's campaign
groups also blame what they call the lack of security enforcement. They say the
police should do more to enforce laws protecting women from
harassment.
'Provocative dress'
And the harassers are
getting younger and younger.
On the Qasr al-Nil
bridge in central Cairo, a hotspot for harassment, I met a group of teenage
boys hanging out near street stalls blaring loud music.
When I asked them about
a recent case of mass harassment in which women at a park were groped by a gang
of boys, they told me the girls brought it on themselves.
"If the girls were
dressed respectably, no-one would touch them," one of them said.
"It's the way girls dress that makes guys come on to them. The girls came
wanting it - even women in niqab."
One of his friends told
me the boys were not to blame, and that there was a difference between women
who wore loose niqabs and tight ones.
A woman who wore a tight
niqab was up for it, he added.
But attitudes like these
horrify many Egyptian men - like Hamdy, a human rights activist.
"I really feel very
upset myself because I think about my family, my sisters and my mother,"
he said.
"Before Eid [the
festival at the end of Ramadan], I was downtown and I had my sisters with me.
It gets very crowded and I had my eyes everywhere, looking around and I shouted
at a pedlar who got in their way. In our religion this is something that is not
allowed."
The new government says
it is taking the problem seriously - although many campaigners argue it is not
a priority yet.
For women - like Nancy,
who lives in central Cairo - it is a question of freedom.
"I want to walk
safely and like a human being. Nobody should touch or harass me - that's
it."
Posted by Pamela Geller on
Monday, September 03, 2012 at 05:52 PM in Egypt, The Truth About
Islam
http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/09/savage-egypts-sexual-harassment-of-women-epidemic-violent-mob-style-attacks.html
Monday, September 03,
2012
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