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Have your say: sexual harassment in Egypt, to solve or to punish?


Sexual harassment in Egypt is back in the spotlight after the sentencing of an aggressor to 3 years hard labor for harassing the young filmmaker Noha al-Ostaz on the streets of Cairo. Met with great relief by many victims, the sentence also provoked opposite reactions describing it as excessive and disregarding the root cause of the nation-wide social problem.

Is it enough to punish the offenders in order to fight this growing phenomenon in Egypt? Do you think that 3 years hard labor in a country suffering from an alarming economical crisis is a “fair” punishment? Or are we to look for a solution to the root causes of the problem? And what in your opinion are the causes of this alarming social problem?

A while back the Egyptian Center for Women's Rights published a report about sexual harassment in Egypt describing the phenomenon as the “Cancer of Egypt” and exposing that at least 83% of women in Egypt had been the victims of some form of sexual harassment. The issue soon became one of the hottest topics in Egypt prompting even the Governmental newspaper Al-Ahram to publish a special report about the subject on the “awareness day for sexual harassment”, meanwhile alarming videos of sexual harassment on the streets of Cairo were hitting the internet.

Various groups launched campaigns that seemed to be blaming the victims and encouraging women to wear the veil even though the study showed that the veil did not prevent harassment.

Most recently an Egyptian man was sentenced to three years hard labor for sexually harassing the young filmmaker Noha al-Ostaz in what was described as a victory for women’s rights activists. But the sentence, even though opening the way for the punishment of aggressors was also described as both excessive and disregarding the root causes of the spread of sexual harassment in Egypt.

WATCH AL JAZEERA'S 'EVERYWOMAN' SPECIAL ON THIS ISSUE

Tags: egypt, harassment, sexual, society

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Let's not get carried away
On October 23rd, 2008 Farah said on Menassat:
3 years with hard labour and a fine is a bit harsh for the poor van driver don't you think?!!!! any research into who is going to support his family now if he has one?

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It is assault not harrassment
On October 26th, 2008 leila said on Menassat:
I am glad about this verdict, He did not harrass her but assaulted the girl. I am moved by her courage

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Maybe HE should've thought
On October 25th, 2008 Khaled said on Menassat:
Maybe HE should've thought about his family before doing something like this (after all, we are not talking about an honest mistake). The women who get harrassed also have families and people who love them. Personally, I think the main problem in Egypt is that people count too much on this mentality of "Ma3lesh" and being forgiven because he's "Ghalban sa7eb 3eyal". P.S. Even my 73 year old mother has her fair share of harrassment on the streets of Cairo, and I don't like it one bit just as I think no one should....

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sexual harassment in Egypt
On October 28th, 2008 jocelyne mohsen said on Menassat:
Sexual harassment in Egypt has been more than common on the streets of Cairo, in theatres, in offices and so on. It is about time to have these men respect women wherever they are. It is regrettably to say that the only way for them to stop doing so is only if they are punished publicly. Thinking it is only an amusing act to them they do not want to realise how degrading it can be for a woman. They might finally be forced to respect themselves and the women they come across with. It will make them think twice before bringing disgrace to their own family too.

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well, In my openion it's not an excessive punishment! If those people don't get punished seriously they might just go for more. And I think the solution for this social problem in Egypt is to oblige women to carry protecion in their bags and to have serious sentences to prison and hard labor just like the case of the man who assaulted the filmmaker.
And like the say "Al wikaya khayru 3ilaj"

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I think that the sentence is both justified and too long, especially for his family, they are not responsible for his crime. I am in favor of a shorter sentence in exchange for some kind of public humiliation, apologizing on TV, for instance, or cleaning the streets in his neighborhood, carrying a sign 'I have assaulted a woman and I deserve to be punished", or any other shaming punishment. Perpetrators of his kind love to humiliate women, but they hate to be humiliated, this would make them think twice!
uniondesvictimesdeletat.com

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it is true that the man's family will have to suffer during his absence, but that is inevitable despite their innocence. he must be punished, making an example of him is important.
but there is a significant consideration to take into account here. egyptians know that 95% of the time, the law is not properly enforced. For example, if you are rich and an important social persona, you can literally get away with murder. Also, it is hard to keep tabs on this kind of crime, expecially if a woman is too scared to report it. these offenders oftentimes know they can get away with anything even if it has a punishment because chances are they wont get caught. what i mean is more has to be done. egypt needs a whole attitude revolution..a shift in mentality to fix this kind of problem.
in the meantime, i say: Get your ass busy for three years serving your country if you want to harass a woman. You deserve it.

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O course, you're right about the importance of "making an example" of each sex offender. But again, with the new 45-year jail sentence for this sexual predator who had assaulted nine women (no rapes) I think that shorter prison/hard labor sentences, under very hard conditions + public humilaition are more proportionate to the crime. Many people seem to believe that severe sentences of that kind might actually lead to the sex offender killing his victim, so that it becomes more difficult to identify him.
In our websites www.sos-bizutage.com ("bizutage" means hazing in French, the site has a section in English) and www.uniondesvictimesdeletat.com, we advocate taking bullying and sexual harassment seriously very early, in school. Light punishment for first offenders who beat weaker pupils or harass girls must be imposed, but the guilty boy (or more and more often girl, in Europe, America or Asia) should also have to apologize publicly to the victim. More severe punishments for repeaters, of course. For instance, since Egypt has conscription at least for part of the male population, threatening the boys to send them to disciplinary military units would be a powerful deterrent. It has been suggested here by a leading Socialist politician, Madame Ségolène Royal, who ran unsuccessfully for president against Sarkozy.
And I suppose that the Egyptian Armed Forces are not short of female drill instructors, who might take care of the offenders, it would help the boys forget their macho instincts. Am I wrong?

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