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Egypt: Launching "A Shuttered Public Sphere" campaign

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Egypt: Launching "A Shuttered Public Sphere" campaign

Source: Nazra

Nazra for Feminist Studies launches a campaign entitled: “A Shuttered Public Sphere”, as part of the events of the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence Campaign that starts on the 25th of November each year, which is the international day for the elimination of violence against women, and ends on the 10th of December, international Human Rights Day.

The January 25 Revolution created spaces for women filled with opportunities to defend their right to a civil democratic state that preserves the dignity of its citizens and to maintain their right to create a change in private and public sphere that does not violate or discriminate against them. The history of this movement is shaped by women’s participation, who were able to benefit from it and paid the price for calling for change and for being women. Its history extends to their daily struggle within their smaller communities in the households and workspaces.

This year witnessed an escalating violence and backlash against women, women human rights defenders and feminist organizations that included massive wave of arrests for protestors, unlawful arrests and enforced disappearance of women human rights defenders. In addition, it encompassed the targeting of female activists and feminist organizations as well as launching smear campaigns defaming them.

Women and women human rights defenders face grave violations, torture and ill-treatments during detention and in prisons besides the smear campaigns that aims to cast them out socially, which creates a closed-off public sphere that threatens their safety and security.

Click here to read the full article published by Nazra on 25 November 2019.


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Nazra for Feminist Studies launches a campaign entitled: “A Shuttered Public Sphere”, as part of the events of the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence Campaign that starts on the 25th of November each year, which is the international day for the elimination of violence against women, and ends on the 10th of December, international Human Rights Day.

The January 25 Revolution created spaces for women filled with opportunities to defend their right to a civil democratic state that preserves the dignity of its citizens and to maintain their right to create a change in private and public sphere that does not violate or discriminate against them. The history of this movement is shaped by women’s participation, who were able to benefit from it and paid the price for calling for change and for being women. Its history extends to their daily struggle within their smaller communities in the households and workspaces.

This year witnessed an escalating violence and backlash against women, women human rights defenders and feminist organizations that included massive wave of arrests for protestors, unlawful arrests and enforced disappearance of women human rights defenders. In addition, it encompassed the targeting of female activists and feminist organizations as well as launching smear campaigns defaming them.

Women and women human rights defenders face grave violations, torture and ill-treatments during detention and in prisons besides the smear campaigns that aims to cast them out socially, which creates a closed-off public sphere that threatens their safety and security.

Click here to read the full article published by Nazra on 25 November 2019.


News
Region
Focus areas

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