Tunis (AFP)
- Viral images of a Tunisian lawmaker allegedly masturbating outside a high
school have sparked the country's own #MeToo moment, with sex abuse victims
breaking taboos under the hashtag #EnaZeda.
Discussion
of sexual harassment had previously been limited to a few edgy TV shows, but
now thousands of women in the North African nation are sharing their
experiences from lecherous remarks to paedophilia.
A video
showing the moustachioed politician sitting in a car with his trousers dropped
to his knees was shot last month by a student who shared it online alongside
accusations of harassment.
The newly
elected lawmaker denies inappropriate conduct and has said he was urinating due
to a medical condition -- even threatening his accuser when pursued by
prosecutors.
#EnaZeda --
Tunisian Arabic for #MeToo -- was inspired by the huge global movement that
bloomed in 2017 in the wake of sexual assault allegations by multiple women
against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein.
It has
given some in Tunisia the confidence to confront their harassers face-to-face.
"Tonight,
I have cried all the tears from my body. Tonight, I was harassed and nobody
took the trouble to react," wrote one internet user Lina Kaboudi.
But
"unlike all the other nights, I dared to respond to the perpetrator. I did
not keep walking, pretending I had not heard.
"I
stopped, and I held him to account".
Breaking
taboos
Tunisia is
considered a pioneer on women's rights in the Arab world and was the first
predominantly Muslim country to abolish polygamy in 1956.
But the
taboo on confronting sexual misconduct remains strong, especially within the
family.
It is rare
for victims to pursue formal complaints, despite sexual harassment in public
places being punishable by a one-year prison term and a fine of 3,000 dinar
(around 1,000 euros) since July 2017.
To
catalogue the avalanche of testimony, Tunisian activists have set up private
Facebook groups including one simply named #EnaZeda, which has more than 20,000
members.
Poignant
accounts, some anonymous, are shared daily in the group -- ranging from rape
and incest to inappropriate behaviour by teachers or celebrities and
molestation on public transport.
Activists
say they have been surprised by the volume and variety of the stories, and NGO
Aswat Nissa (Voice of Women) says it has collected more than 70,000
testimonies.
"Then
women, and sometimes men too, shared their stories, so now we are trying to
organise workshops with psychologists."
Bouattour
said she has received messages from parents who have "broken the family
taboo by talking about sexual harassment with their children, after reading
testimonies about paedophilia".
'Didn't
lift a finger'
Traditional
attitudes and apathy among some in power mean the nascent #EnaZeda initiative
faces an uphill battle.
Kaboudi --
the woman who called out street harassment -- laments the passivity of the
police, who "were a few feet away" and did not "lift a little
finger" to help her when she was harassed.
She also
despairs of witnesses who similarly "did nothing".
In an
attempt to break the silence, in October the Centre for Research, Study,
Documentation and Information on Women (Credif) launched an awareness campaign
about sexual harassment on public transport.
Dubbed
"the harasser #MaYerkebch (does not ride) with us", the initiative
includes an app that uses a chat bot to speak to a harasser on behalf of a
victim of witness and remind them of the law.
Najla
Allani, director of Credif, told AFP the app states out loud the type of sexual
misdemeanour and location, in a voice that speaks firmly in local dialect to
"intimidate and scare the harasser".
"People
dare not speak (themselves) out of fear, but with this voice app, they will be
better able to react", Allani said.
An
evaluation of the experimental initiative later this month will decide if it
continues, so long as "the financial means allow it", she added.
It remains
to be seen how big a contribution #EnaZeda will make to Tunisia's battle
against sexual harassment, but one thing is sure -- the shroud of silence is no
longer so suffocating.
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