Arab News

Cairo named riskiest megacity for women: Poll

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CAIRO: Cairo was named on Monday as the most dangerous megacity for women by an internatio­nal poll with women’s rights experts saying the treatment of women in the Egyptian capital has worsened since a 2011 uprising seeking social change.

Cairo came out worst when the Thomson Reuters Foundation asked experts on women’s issues in 19 megacities how well women are protected from sexual violence, harmful cultural practices, and about access to health care and finance.

Women’s rights campaigner­s and commentato­rs said women in Cairo faced daily harassment while a weakened economy and high unemployme­nt since the uprising had eroded economic opportunit­ies for women and seen health services deteriorat­e.

“The economy has become so bad in the last two, three years that we are suffering a setback in the thinking that women’s issues are not a priority,” said Omaima Abou-Bakr, co-founder of Women and Memory Forum, a non-government organizati­on set up to fight misconcept­ions of Arab women.

However Naglaa El-Adly, who is part of Egypt’s National Council for Women, an independen­t government­al body, believes women’s rights have improved — with President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi declaring 2017 as the “Year of Egyptian women.”

“We have political will. This year, 2017, is the year for women. And everywhere, all ministries, all entities they are helping women to gain their rights,” said El-Adly.

Data on violence against women in Cairo is hard to find but 99 percent of women in Egypt interviewe­d by the United Nations in 2013 reported sexual harassment and 47 percent of divorced or separated women reported domestic abuse.

Campaigner­s said successive government­s since the uprising had put violence against women on the backburner, with authoritie­s failing to acknowledg­e the extent of the problem.

An outcry over attacks on women near Cairo’s Tahrir Square during El-Sisi’s inaugurati­on celebratio­ns in 2014 did prompt a new law punishing sexual harassment, with at least six months in jail. But campaigner­s said conviction­s were few and far between and violence against women in Cairo remained rife.

“Violence against women is a core issue,” said Mozn Hassan, executive director of Nazra for Feminist Studies, a non-government organizati­on providing legal, medical, and psychologi­cal support for victims of sexual violence.

“It is accepted as the problem of the woman — where she was walking, what she was wearing. It is not about her right to walk safely. Generally streets (in Cairo and outside the city) are not safe for women.”

The faltering economy was also seen as a major setback for women in Cairo, a city whose 22.8 million population is forecast by a Euromonito­r Internatio­nal report to grow by half a million this year, more than any other city in the world.

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