"Five
or six surrounded me, groped and prodded my breasts, grabbed my genital area
and I lost count of how many hands tried to get into my trousers. Yes
sexual assault. I’m so used to saying harassment but those f*uckings assaulted
me. #CSF [Central Security Forces] My
left arm and right hand are broken according to x-rays." ~ Mona Eltahawy, attacked and beaten last week in Tahrir Square
The other night I posted photos of events in Egypt. The most repulsive was the bottom one of soldiers stomping on and beating a young woman whose body was exposed; they had pulled off her abayah. They were laughing as they committed this atrocity. I did not realize that women, period, were targeted in this demonstration as the photos below will show. This is also becoming the situation in Bahrain, women being targets although, to be honest, for sheer brutality, the Egyptian thugs are beyond brutal.
We know NATO or the US will not consider intervention or sanctions since this destabilization process is already going along so swimmingly in Egypt.... according to plan.
One shudders to consider the treatment these women received once behind locked doors with those obscene bullies.
December 19, 2011
Shocking images revealing
the brutality of Egypt’s armed forces in quelling protests caused outrage around the world
yesterday.
In a video broadcast on the internet, security forces dressed in riot
gear are seen chasing a woman and beating her to the ground with metal bars
before stripping her and kicking her repeatedly. One soldier stamps his foot
hard on her chest.
Other images showed women beaten unconscious.
Brutal: This shocking image shows Egyptian army soldiers
dragging this helpless woman on the ground and kicking her hard in the chest
after ripping her clothes from her body
The woman who was dramatically photographed as she was beaten
stripped and beaten senseless by Egyptian soldiers does not want to come
forward because she is ashamed by her treatment.
Footage and stills of the woman being beaten to the ground,
kicked and stamped on as her hijab was torn off in Tahrir Square have made
front page news around the world.
Moments earlier, she had been struck countless times on the head
and body with metal batons by a ten-strong mob before losing consciousness and
slumping to the floor.
Soldiers then continued the assault, revealing her bra after her
abaya was virtually pulled off during the assault.
Hassan Mahmoud, a journalist for the newspaper Al Badeel, was
near the woman as she stumbled and was then set upon by military police.
He told The Guardian: 'They wanted to take her away from us but
then a few brave protesters came in and started hurling stones and that was the
one thing that saved her from their hands.'
The unnamed woman was treated for hand and leg injuries, before
she was taken home where she is said to have been left feeling wretched after
her ordeal.
Outnumbered: This woman screams in pain as she is surrounded by
five male soldiers during protests in the Egyptian capital
and beaten with poles
After being viciously
beaten by the ten-strong mob, the woman lies helplessly on the ground as her
shirt is ripped from her body and a man kicks her with full force in her exposed
chest.
Moments earlier she had
been struck countless times in the head and body with metal batons, not content
with the brutal beating delivered by his fellow soldier, one man stamped on her
head repeatedly.
She feebly tried to
shield her head from the relentless blows with her hands.
But she was knocked
unconscious in the shameful attack and left lying motionless as the military men mindlessly continued
to beat her limp and half-naked body.
Before she was set upon
by the guards, three men appeared to carry her as they tried to flee the
approaching military.
But they were too slow
and the soldiers caught up with them, capturing the women and knocking one of
the men to the ground.
The two other men were
forced to abandon their fellow protestors and continued running, looking
helplessly back at the two they left behind being relentlessly attacked as they
lay on the ground.
Brutally injured: This woman is left barely
conscious and splattered in blood after being beaten the military in violent
clashes between rock-throwing protesters and military
police
Shameless: Egyptian army soldiers use brutal
force to arrest this female protester and drag her by her hair during clashes
with military police near Cairo’s Tahrir Square
Violent:
The heavy handed Egyptian army soldiers drag the arrested a woman protester off
by her hair
This is just one of the hundreds of shameful injustices seen in
Cairo’s Tahrir Square where Egypt’s military took a dramatically heavy hand on
Saturday to crush protests against its rule.
Clashes with security forces continued for a third day yesterday
near Egypt’s parliament. Soldiers erected huge concrete barricades, but an
exchange of stones and firebombs continued. The army also used water tanks to
spray the crowd and fired gun shots in the air.
At least ten have been killed in the violence, including two children
aged 12 and 13. Two died after their skulls were fractured by stones thrown
during the battles and at least six were shot dead, despite army and government claims that no live fire
was being used.
In Tahrir Square, centre of the violence, demonstrators demanding
an end to military rule have been camped out for the last few weeks. A
14-year-old girl pushed back her headscarf to reveal a bloodied bandage.
She was struck on the head by a stone thrown by a soldier on a rooftop.
Her mother said they had come every day to protest against the
brutal methods of the military council which has controlled the country since President Hosni Mubarak was ousted
following mass street protests last February. ‘There is no justice in Egypt any
more,’ she said.
Aya Emad said that troops dragged her by her headscarf and hair
into the Cabinet headquarters. The 24-year-old said soldiers kicked her on the
ground, an officer shocked her with an electrical prod and another slapped her
on the face, leaving her nose broken and her arm in a sling.
Man-handled: Egyptian soldiers clash with this
female protester and two male protestors near Cairo’s Tahrir Square
Protection: A female and two
male Egyptian protesters use a metal sheet as a shield as they throw rocks at
military police, unseen, behind the gates and inside the Parliament building
near Cairo’s Tahrir Square
Brave:
Two women join protesters as
they shout anti-military council slogans near the cabinet in Cairo
Mona Seif, an activist who was briefly detained Friday, said she
saw an officer repeatedly slapping a detained old woman in the face.
‘It was a humiliating scene,’ Seif told the private TV network
Al-Nahar. ‘I have never seen this in my life.’
In Bahrain a similar pictured was emerging with a video clip
showing a female human rights
activist being hit by a policewoman during clashes between police and anti-government protestors.
Police fired teargas to break up a demonstration by several
hundred people on the outskirts of the capital, Manama where several women
staged a sit-in protest trying to block a main road.
After nearly 48 hours of continuous fighting in Egypt’s capital
more than 300 were left injured and nine dead, many of them shot dead.
The most sustained crackdown yet is likely a sign that the
generals who took power after the February ouster of Hosni Mubarak are
confident that the Egyptian public is on its side after two rounds of widely
acclaimed parliament elections, that Islamist parties winning the vote will
stay out of the fight while pro-democracy protesters become more
isolated.
Still, the generals risk turning more Egyptians against them,
especially from outrage over the abuse of women.
“Do they think this is manly?’ Toqa Nosseir, a
19-year old student, said of the attacks on women. ‘Where is the dignity?’
Grief: A woman mourns slain Egyptian protesters
who were killed during the latest clashes with Egyptian soldiers, while they
wait to receive their bodies in front of the morgue in Cairo.
Under-fire: Pro-reform female protesters run for cover as
heavy-handed police try to disperse them with tear-gas, in Abu Seba village,
north of Manama, Bahrain
Nosseir joined the protest over her parents’ objections because
she couldn’t tolerate the clashes she had seen.
‘No one can approve or accept what is happening here,’ she said.
‘The military council wants to silence all criticism. They want to hold on power … I
will not accept this humiliation just for the sake of stability.’
Nearby in Tahrir, protesters held up newspapers with the image
of the half-stripped woman on the front page to passing cars, shouting
sarcastically, ‘This is the army that is protecting us!’
‘No one can approve or accept what is happening here,’ she said.
‘The military council wants to silence all criticism. They want to hold on power … I
will not accept this humiliation just for the sake of stability.’
Nearby in Tahrir, protesters held up newspapers with the image
of the half-stripped woman on the front page to passing cars, shouting
sarcastically, ‘This is the army that is protecting us!’
‘Are you not ashamed?’ leading reform figure and Nobel Peace
laureate Mohamed El Baradei posted on Twitter in an address to the ruling military
council.
Egypt’s new, military-appointed interim prime minister defended
the military, denying it shot protesters. He said gunshot deaths were caused by
other attackers he didn’t identify.
The main street between Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the
anti-Mubarak protests, and the parliament and Cabinet buildings where the
clashes began early the previous morning looked like a war zone on Saturday.
Military police on rooftops pelting protesters below with stones
and firebombs and launched truncheon-swinging assaults to drive the crowds
back.
Young activists put helmets or buckets on their heads or grabbed
sheets of concrete and even satellite dishes as protection against the stones hailing down
from the roofs.
The streets were strewn with chunks of concrete, stones, broken
glass, burned furniture and peddlers’ carts as clashes continued to rage after
nightfall Saturday.
Detained: Activist Zainab al-Khawaja (Right)
screams while being arrested during a protest in Abu Seba village, north of
Manama
Heavy-handed: A Bahraini policewoman drags activist Zainab
al-Khawaja across the floor after arresting her fo taking part in sit-in
protest
The clashes began early
on Friday with a military assault on a 3-week-old sit-in outside the Cabinet
building by protesters demanding the military hand over power immediately to
civilians.
More than a week of heavy
fighting erupted in November, leaving more than 40 dead – but that was largely
between police and protesters, with the military keeping a low profile.
In the afternoon,
military police charged into Tahrir, swinging truncheons and long sticks,
briefly chasing out protesters and setting fire to their tents.
They trashed a field
hospital set up by protesters, swept into buildings where television crews were filming and
briefly detained journalists. They tossed the camera and equipment of an
Al-Jazeera TV crew off the balcony of a building.
A journalist who was briefly
detained told The Associated Press that he was beaten up with sticks and fists
while being led to into the parliament building. Inside, he saw a group of
detained young men and one woman.
Each was surrounded by
six or seven soldiers beating him or her with sticks or steel bars or giving
electrical shocks with prods.
‘Blood covered the floor,
and an officer was telling the soldiers to wipe the blood,’ said the
journalist.
Defiant: A brave woman shouts anti-government slogans as she
stands amidst tear gas fired by riot police to disperse a sit-in at a
roundabout on Budaiya Highway, west of Manama
As night fell in Tahrir,
clashes continued around a concrete wall that the military erected to block the
avenue from Tahrir to parliament.
In Bahrain, Zainab
al-Khawaja, 27, was arrested and dragged across the floor by her handcuffs
after police fired teargas to break up a demonstration by several hundred
people on the outskirts of the capital, Manama.
Ms al-Khawaja and several
other women staged a sit-in protest trying to block a main road. The other
women fled the scene but Ms al-Khawaja refused.
Riot police fired
tear-gas at the women, with dozens requiring hospital treatment after the
incident.
A report by a panel of human rights experts in November
found that Bahraini security forces had used excessive forces and carried out
the systematic abuse of prisoners, including torture, when the regime sent in
troops to crush the uprising in March.
I cried when I saw that. I couldn't believe the savagery. Each and everyone of those that were party of this deserve to be shot on the spot, no questions asked.
ReplyDeleteI hope each and every one gets their comeuppance. Each and everyone should be hunted down and killed. There is no redeeming such creatures that can do this.