Egypt Independent
Hands off: Initiatives grow fighting sexual harassment in Tahrir and elsewhere
Sat, 08/12/2012
Jano Charbel
“Don’t go there” and “Stay out for your own safety” have
been the menacing messages from alarmist male protesters with which many
women are welcomed into Tahrir Square, the cradle of the Egyptian
revolution.
The reason: rampant cases of sexual harassment, assaults and even rape of women in and around the square.
Seen as a way of deterring women from participating in
protests, sexual harassment has become a focus for activist groups,
filling the gap of inaction by the state.
“Harassers are not allowed entrance” was the message hung
up by some of these groups in the square. But the problem is bigger than
banners.
The problem
Tahrir, which was the focal point of the uprising that
deposed Hosni Mubarak last year and remains a central gathering point
for major protests since the 25 January revolution, has been plagued
with numerous incidents of sexual harassment and physical assaults
against women, including female protesters, journalists and passers-by.
These cases appear to be perpetrated by individuals as
spontaneous outbursts of mob violence, and organized harassers working
in tandem to assault females in the square.
Dina Farid, founder and coordinator of the Banat Misr
initiative, says “there is a concerted effort to scare away people from
the square — especially female protesters.” The group has reported about
a dozen cases of sexual harassment or assault within just three days.
“We have reported both individual [and] isolated acts of
harassment and organized mob harassment,” Farid says, clarifying that
mobs of harassers act in groups to encircle and assault females.
Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment Coordinator Aalam Wassef
also suggests there is a deliberate attempt to scare women away from the
square.
“Harassers are targeting women with the intent of making
the square feel threatening and unsafe,” he says, adding that organized
harassers also seek to tarnish the image of Tahrir Square.
“Some cases of harassment are spontaneous, like the
everyday cases of harassment against women that take place across
Egypt’s streets,” Wassef says.
However, many cases of mass harassment are attributed to
“mob mentality,” or, in some cases, “mobs that work in coordination to
collectively harass women.”
“In previous occupations of Tahrir Square, we’ve noticed
that coordinated and organized mobs of harassers often carry weapons
with them. They are quite likely paid and armed to do so,” Wassef says.
He comments that organized acts of sexual harassment or
assault were utilized against protesters during the rule of ousted
President Hosni Mubarak, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces and
presently under the regime of President Mohamed Morsy.
Reem Labib, another volunteer from Operation Anti-Sexual
Harassment, also sees a conspiracy in the widespread harassment in
Tahrir.
“Egyptian women are subjected to harassment on a daily
basis, yet organized harassers in the square utilize violence to target
not only women, but also the revolution. They use both physical and
psychological violence against protesters in the square,” Labib says.
In her film “Sex Mobs and Revolution,” filmmaker Ramita
Navai reveals that harassers hailing from a low-income Cairo
neighborhood were previously paid by men tied to the Mubarak regime to
disrupt protests, and that they are still paid to do the same. But they
refuse to identify who is paying them now.
Perpetrators’ use of arms is further fueling suspicion
about conspiracy, while the victim can be a mother, a veiled or a
conservatively dressed woman.
“Some of the [group] harassers apprehended have been found
to be carrying knives, while others have been found with drugs and
pills,” says Farid.
Mohamed al-Azaly, lawyer and volunteer with Banat Misr,
says that “while some have been found carrying drugs, most of the
harassers are sober and are well aware of the acts they are committing
against women.”
“It doesn’t make a difference whether a woman has her hair
uncovered, or is wearing a hijab or even a niqab,” Azaly says. “All
these women have been harassed here in the square.”
He says he had helped pull out two women donning the full face veil from a collective assault against them in the square.
“They were a mother and her daughter, both of whom were
dressed in conservative Islamic attire, and nonetheless they were
attacked,” Azaly says.
“Many of the women harassed have violently had their clothes ripped off in these assaults,” Farid adds.
Solutions
Over the course of the past week, three volunteer groups
have emerged in Tahrir to patrol and protect women and girls from sexual
harassment and assault in and around the square.
Their work includes
both prevention by monitoring and protection by helping out victims and
intercepting the attackers.
The first to make its appearance was Banat Misr Khatt Ahmar
— literally translated as Egypt’s Girls Are a Red Line — which has been
involved in monitoring incidents of harassment around downtown Cairo
since the Eid al-Adha holiday in late October.
Banat Misr resumed its operations, this time exclusively in
Tahrir, on 29 November. The group has about 30 members, including males
and females, all of whom wear white T-shirts with the group’s logo
clearly emblazoned on them.
There are clearly more male volunteers in this group than
females. The female volunteers are said to be more involved in the
counseling and psychological assistance of women subjected to harassment
or assaults in the square.
Azaly explains the group’s tactics in weeding out harassers from the square.
“Together, we rush to the scene of the harassment. We form a
cordon around the harassers and pull them out. We then take them to our
tent, where we have them call their parents, or wives if they are
married, to come claim them from the square.”
Azaly adds that if the harassers do not cooperate, they
send them to Qasr al-Nil Police Station, and that most of these
harassers are “either released the same day, or are held in detention
for a day or two.”
“As of yet, no victims have been willing to press charges
against their harassers — perhaps from fear of stigmatization, a
drawn-out judicial process or other considerations,” Azaly concludes.
“We hope that women will be willing to follow through with these legal
steps against their harassers. If so, then the harassers may truly be
held accountable and brought to justice.”
Farid says they take photos of the perpetrators to identify
them in the future, and to keep them away from the square, but says
they have not taken down their names or personal ID information.
The Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment group, also known in
Arabic as Quwwa Ded al-Taharosh, made its first appearance on 30
November, when protests returned to Tahrir Square after Morsy’s
controversial constitutional declaration, through which he claimed
additional powers for himself. Mosireen, a revolutionary media
collective, and other volunteers established the group.
Consisting of 30-some members, Operation Anti-Sexual
Harassment also wear white T-shirts or sweatshirts with a red logo
reading “Against Harassment” on the front and “A Square Safe for All” on
the back. It uses the same group tactics employed by Banat Misr in
weeding out harassers.
Wassef says this group reported about five cases of harassment on its first day alone.
Both Banat Misr and Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment have
provided the public with social networking sites and telephone hotlines
through which people can report cases of harassment or assault and other
related information.
A third volunteer group known as Tahrir Bodyguards could
not be reached for comment. It has been reported that this group has
built wooden watchtowers from which to monitor incidents of harassment
within the square.
Protesters have climbed these watchtowers and protested from above, yet no volunteers could be seen on these towers.
Wassef explains that there should be wariness about the
terminology in use, which reflects the depth of the problem. He explains
that the word taharosh, or sexual harassment, has replaced the much
milder word, mo’aksa — roughly translated as heckling or chiding — to
describe “these unwelcomed actions” against women and girls.
In his group’s experience, there are several degrees of
sexual harassment, ranging from verbal to touching or groping, stripping
and other forms of violent action, as well as rape.
“Rape does not necessarily involve penetration with the
harassers’ genitals. Rape can be perpetrated with fingers or other
objects,” Wassef explains.
Nonetheless, many activists continue to use the term
“sexual harassment” as opposed to “sexual assault,” even when describing
cases where women have been physically or sexually attacked.
But other than volunteer-based initiatives to combat sexual assault, more wide-ranging activities are needed to end this plague.
Wassef thinks the state, through its Egyptian Radio and
Television Union, could be the most effective in combating sexual
harassment.
“If only they’d launch anti-harassment ads, public service
announcements, documentaries and awareness-raising programs, then we
would have a very effective tool with which to confront harassers,” says
Wassef. “Yet the authorities lack the will to do so.”
Banat Misr’s hotlines can be reached at 012-8034-4414 or 010-1687-6333.
Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment’s hotlines can be reached at 011-5789-2357, 012-0239-0087or 010-1605-1145.
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