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Related: About this forumIs the Egyptian state using sexual torture against women?
Is the Egyptian state using sexual torture against women?
The Arab spring promised freedom and justice to the 2011 protestors in Tahrir Square, but a damning new report claims that women are being brutalised by police, military and security forces at an unprecedented level
A Cairo mural commemorates those killed during Egypts uprising in 2011. Photograph: © Amr Dalsh/Reuters
Four years ago, Cairo was a giant billboard for human rights; the words freedom, justice and dignity were graffitied across the city, with the high hopes of Tahrir Square writ large on city streets. What remains today is a patchwork of paint covering up any hint of political protest.
This isnt the only whitewash in Egypt now. According to a devastating report published today, state-sanctioned sexual violence against Egypts women has increased dramatically since the military returned to power in July 2013. In Exposing State Hypocrisy: Sexual Violence by Security Forces in Egypt, the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) lays bare a vast array of sexualised torture by Egyptian police, military and state security forces. Interviews with scores of individual victims and NGOs in Egypt tell of sexual abuse at the hands of officials, ranging from harassment and rape to genital electrocution. And its not just women members of the now-banned Muslim Brotherhood and other political dissidents are being targeted, as well as run-of-the-mill arrestees, students and even children in juvenile detention.
There is nothing new in sexual violence being used by authoritarian regimes in Egypt and the wider Arab world. To break his eye is the local expression for humiliating someone, and sexual torture has been the instrument of choice throughout the ages. Because of the taboos surrounding sex in the region and its powerful association with shame, sexual violence is a particularly formidable tool of control. Women are especially vulnerable since their exploitation packs a one-two punch of not only disgracing them, but their families too; husbands, fathers and brothers are often still considered the guardians of female honour.
Protesters demanding the army hand power to civilians, Tahrir Square, Cairo, 2012. Photograph: Suhaib Salem/Reuters
The FIDH report maintains that the current government has turned up the temperature on such violence, as part of a strategy of consolidating power and clamping down on the opposition. It describes state-sponsored sexual abuse, from university campuses to secret detention centres on military bases. Gay and transgender people are squarely in the line of fire, with a recent rise in arrests and sentencing despite there being no law in Egypt explicitly criminalising same-sex activity or alternative gender identities. This, however, is more a question of political expediency than morality, allowing the government to walk a fine line between suppressing Islamist opposition and shoring up conservative support by cracking down on these often despised minorities.
By its own admission, FIDH has had trouble verifying many of its harrowing testimonials, as well as establishing the culpability of those accused. No wonder: Egyptian authorities are not exactly forthcoming on their failings these days. Authorities point to reforms, such as the countrys new sexual harassment law, as evidence of their strong stand against sexual violence which FIDH lambasts as hypocrisy. Mervat Tallawy, the outgoing head of the countrys National Womens Council, a governmental body charged with defending womens rights, for example, famously observed that it is impossible that a paramilitary organisation like the police would commit crimes of sexual violence in Egyptian prisons. The devil is in the detail; activists point out that most such abuse is, in fact, meted out by other agencies of the state security apparatus.
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http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/may/18/sexual-violence-egypt-women-report-shereen-el-feki