Egypt Tahrir Square Sexual Assaults Widespread, Women's Groups Warn

Horror At Widespread Sex Attacks In Egyptian Protests

As thousands of Egyptians thronged to Tahrir Square and cities across the country, women's groups and local activists warned of horrific sexual attacks on women attending the demonstrations.

Sunday marks the one-year anniversary of President Mohammad Morsi's inauguration but many are disillusioned with his rule and accuse him of failing to tackle security and economic problems.

A large group of women take to the front of a gathering of opposition supporters in Cairo, Egypt's Tahrir Square while waiting for President Mohammed Morsi

Operation Anti-Sexual Harassment, an Egyptian women's group set up in the wake of numerous sex attacks during Egypt's first round of protests, said it had 44 reported cases of assault on women in Tahrir Square, the highest number in their history, with one woman requiring surgery for her injuries.

Egyptian media have reported that a foreign journalist was raped numerous times in Tahrir Square, and said that Egypt's Prosecutor General Talaat Abdallah had sent staff to the hospital to take the woman's testimony.

The BBC's Jeremy Bowen said on Sunday night that women being pursued by gangs of attackers had taken refuge in the broadcaster's building.

The protests have been preceded by street fighting across the country, which has resulted in several deaths and numerous injuries. An American, 21-year-old Andrew Pochter, was killed in Alexandria on Friday.

Freelance Egyptian journalist Ghazala Irshad reported that she had been warned from going into the thick of the Tahrir Square protests by other male protesters - because of the risk of sexual assault.

"June 30 is the first day in two and a half years of covering Tahrir that I felt so uncomfortable and intimidated. And I didn't even make it past the entry point," she wrote on Twitter. "I've been at clashes frontlines and felt less nervous than I did by the display of testosterone at the entrance (Asr el-Nil) of Tahrir tonight."

The United Nations said in a report last month that it had around 25 reports of sexual assault in Tahrir Square from the beginning of the year - 19 of them in January 25 alone, which was the second anniversary of the protest, which sparked the toppling of Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak.

According to a report by the UN, the Cairo Demographic Center and Egypt's Institute of National Planning, more than 99% of the hundreds of Egyptian women who participated in the study reported some kind of sexual harassment or assault, from verbal abuse to rape.

The sexual harassment and assault of women during the Arab Spring uprisings in Egypt hit international headlines in February 2011 when reporter Lara Logan was attacked in Tahrir Square, stripped and sexually assaulted after being pulled away from her camera crew.

Supporters of Muslim Brotherhood President Morsi have been retweeting many of the reports of sexual assault, in an attempt to discredit opposition protesters.

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