Grassroots organizations have been flowering in Egypt\'s first post-revolutionary year and at least one is coming back to life. The Egyptian Feminist Union, first founded in 1923, was shuttered just shy of 30 years later by the onset of Egyptian military rule. Now, after registering as a nonprofit a month ago, it is ramping up to give women the voice they\'ve been lacking for so long, organizers say. \"We have to defend whatever rights we have and we have to go forward to equality and equity,\" says Hoda Badran, chair of the group, which represents a collection of nongovernmental organizations tackling women\'s issues in every governorate. \"Womenshould have a say if any public issue or decision has to be made.\" That mission has been made harder, if anything, by recent events. Before the Jan. 25 revolution, Badran says, the country counted three female cabinet ministers. \"Later the military council came and now it\'s been reduced to one. So we are going backwards,\" she says. Female demonstrators in the past year have also been targeted by security forces for virginity tests, electric shock, harassment, military tribunals and open brutality during December\'s most recent clashes, centered in Cairo. Little Action Human rights groups and women\'s organizations have fiercely objected but little action has been taken against the accused perpetrators. The National Council for Women, a state-run group, has said little and been criticized for trying to monopolize the handling of women\'s issues and stifling other organizations. In 1952, Egypt\'s armed forces wrested control of the country away from Britain, ending decades of colonization. To secure control of the Arab world\'s largest country, Egyptian generals introduced military rule and shut down many nongovernmental organizations, including the Feminist Union. At that time, the union\'s mission focused on suffrage, universal education and equality under the nation\'s personal status laws. Badran has a long history of taking up such causes. In the past, she served as president of the United Nation\'s Committee on the Rights of the Child for two terms and is a member of numerous sustainable development, cultural and child protection organizations and councils in Egypt. She has two bachelors of science degrees -- one in sociology from the American University in Cairo and the other in social work from Helwan University -- and also serves as president of the Alliance for Arab Women, a Cairo-based organization that has operated throughout Egypt since 1987 to educate and train women on their rights. She says Egyptian women have won some rights since the 1950s, including the right to vote in 1956. But compared to their male counterparts, they remain undereducated, underemployed, politically unorganized, underrepresented in government and experience more extreme rates of poverty.
GMT 10:41 2018 Tuesday ,23 January
80 pc school janitors found working without work visaGMT 09:45 2017 Wednesday ,20 December
Jailed or in exile, leaders wrap up Catalan election campaignGMT 11:32 2017 Thursday ,16 November
Autopsies of 26 migrant girls find that most drownedGMT 09:22 2017 Wednesday ,15 November
First hijab-wearing Barbie to honor US fencer Ibtihaj MuhammadGMT 09:27 2017 Wednesday ,08 November
#MeToo campaign resonates with Egyptian women battling harassmentGMT 22:22 2017 Friday ,03 November
US woman arrested in Zimbabwe, accused of insulting MugabeGMT 18:09 2017 Thursday ,26 October
Artist duo to wed 24 times to highlight gay marriageGMT 18:26 2017 Wednesday ,25 October
Erdogan opponent launches new political party in TurkeyMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©