CAIRO: Egypt s deputy parliament speaker said women needed a law to protect them from sexual harassment which had reached savage levels in the country, Al-Dostour newspaper reported on Tuesday.
There must be a law to protect Egyptian society from collapse, the newspaper quoted Zeinab Radwan as telling a conference on sexual harassment on Monday.
There is a savage attack on Egyptian women with sexual harassment on the streets. It has gone beyond all limits with the harassment of children, she said.
Sociologist Ibtihal Rashad, who also attended the conference, agreed and said: There is no protection for the 18 million (female) citizens of Egypt who are affected.
Women s rights groups in Egypt have long campaigned against sexual harassment and assault in Cairo, accusing police of ignoring the phenomenon.
Convictions are relatively rare in Egypt, which does not have a law defining sexual harassment, but a court in 2008 sentenced a man to three years in jail for groping a woman.
According to the Egyptian Center for Women s Right, which organized the conference, 83 percent of Egyptian women and 98 percent of foreign women in Egypt had experienced sexual harassment.
The 2008 study said only 12 percent of the 2,500 women who reported cases of sexual harassment to ECWR went to the police with their complaint. ?AFP