Anonymous ID: 097a9d Jan. 7, 2019, 8:51 a.m. No.4646043   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6158 >>6227 >>6579 >>6664

'The Daughters of Egypt are a Red Line'

 

Sur 24, Vol. 13, No. 24, 2016

 

17 Pages

Posted: 1 Feb 2018

 

Mariam Kirollos

 

Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment & Assault (OpAntiSH)

 

Date Written: December 10, 2016

 

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to identify the impact of the rampant sexual harassment phenomenon on Egypt’s legal culture. Having been vaguely defined in Egyptian laws and largely condoned by the society and justice system, sexual harassment increased over the years in both occurrences and intensity of violence. As a result, legal initiatives and grassroots movements arose attempting to criminalise sexual harassment and end social acceptability of the issue. With the fall of Mubarak, the human rights movements optimistically continued the request for an anti-sexual harassment law, and with the continuing political turmoil, the battle was more arduous than expected. Three years after the uprising, sexual harassment was finally criminalised and efforts to change public attitudes toward it continue, but the will of the state to enforce the law, beyond statements and promises, is yet to be proven.