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Tuesday, July 02, 2013
Tell the men with you who have wives: never trust a woman.

Ishaq: 584
 xena 

Anti-harassment groups report 46 sexual assaults during Egypt's anti-President Morsi protests; request volunteers to protect women on Monday protests

A Dutch journalist has been raped by a group of five men in Cairo's central Tahrir Square as millions of protesters take to the streets to demand the removal of President Mohammed Mursi, according to reports.

The woman is believed to have undergone surgery for horrific injuries sustained in the attack, as a volunteer vigilante group formed to protect women in Tahrir Square reported a new wave of sexual violence by groups of men targeting women.

Sexual harassment, mainly in the form of mob assaults, has become an issue that plagues Tahrir Square during political protests.
More than 99 percent of hundreds of women surveyed in seven of the country's 27 governorates reported experiencing some form of sexual harassment, ranging from minor harassment to rape, says the UN, Egypt's Demographic Centre and the National Planning Institute in a report in April.
Read those numbers again... "More than 99 percent".
Does that mean ALL Muslim women are sexually harassed? I bet it does!

Bet you didn't know that Muslim men can multitask... oust Morsi and rape women at the same time.

I tell my kids that Muslims have their gonads embedded in their frontal lobes... near their perpetually titillated 'God spot'.
Forty-six sexual assaults are reported by Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment (OpAntiSH) during the huge protests covered by international media in Tahrir Square that intend to oust Egypt's President Morsi.
"There [were] men with sticks at the entrance of the metro station across from KFC in Tahrir who are attacking women," reports OpAntiSH, a volunteer group that works to combat sexual violence in protests within the square's perimeter in downtown Cairo.

Hundreds of thousands gathered in Tahrir Square on Sunday in a mass rally against President Mohamed Morsi demanding he step down and call for early presidential elections.

Sexual harassment, mainly in the form of mob assaults, has become an issue that plagues Tahrir Square during political protests. OpAntiSH asks any volunteers to join them on Monday, since protests are expected to continue.



Sexual harassment, mainly in the form of mob assaults, has become an issue that plagues Tahrir Square during political protests.
The group, along with Tahrir Bodyguard, another grassroots initiative fighting harassment, urged women to stay away from Tahrir Sunday night.

"The area is not safe and we recommend leaving, if possible," Tahrir Bodyguard tweeted.

Virtual arguments between anti-harassment activists and the Brotherhood's media outlets peaked on Sunday, when Morsi supporters holding a counter-demonstration in Nasr City, a Cairo suburb, criticised the sexual harassment at the the opposition protests.

The Brotherhood English-language site 'Ikhwanweb,' retweeted reports by activists on harassment.

Noting this, activists and Twitter users said the Brotherhood are retweeting only to tarnish the image of the anti-Morsi rally in Tahrir Square.

OpAntiSH retorted to Ikhwanweb: "Good you are RTing [retweeting] us, this way it is clear to the world that the ruling party knows, thus the regime knows & still does nothing."

On Friday, a foreign reporter was sexually attacked in Tahrir Square.
Meanwhile, no sexual assault cases were reported at the anti-Morsi rally at the Ittihadiya presidential palace or at the ongoing pro-Morsi demonstration at Rabaa Al-Adawiya Mosque in Nasr City district.

On Friday, a foreign reporter was sexually attacked in Tahrir Square. In a press conference on Sunday, Egypt's presidency spokesperson Ihab Fahmy condemned the incident saying that the state will not deal lightly with such acts.

More than 99 percent of hundreds of women surveyed in seven of the country's 27 governorates reported experiencing some form of sexual harassment, ranging from minor harassment to rape, says the UN, Egypt's Demographic Centre and the National Planning Institute in a report in April.

In January, the second anniversary of the 2011 uprising, there were a reported 19 women sexually assaulted by groups of men in Tahrir Square. Seven were hurt so badly they needed immediate medical attention.

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