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| Haneen Hossam (left) and Mowada al-Adham (right) were among those sentenced to jail in Egypt this week over content posted to TikTok (AFP Photo/Khaled DESOUKI) |
Cairo (AFP) - Social media has become a new and
dangerous battleground for women's rights in Egypt after young TikTok
influencers were jailed while a resurgent #MeToo movement decried male sexual
violence.
Last Monday, a court sentenced five female social
media influencers, Haneen Hossam, Mowada al-Adham and three others, to two
years in jail each on charges of violating public morals over content posted to
video-sharing app TikTok.
International digital rights group Access Now
described them as "all women, all young, all exercising their right to
freedom of expression online".
Just two days later, a court sentenced another young
social media influencer, Manar Samy, to three years in prison over TikTok videos,
deeming the clips in which she dances and lip-syncs to popular songs to be
"inciting debauchery".
Many in the deeply conservative country have cheered
on the arrests, as traditional social values clash with online content seen as
racy and sexually suggestive.
"The Egyptian government is on a campaign to
arrest and prosecute women influencers on... TikTok for violating 'the values
of the Egyptian family' and 'inciting debauchery and immorality,'" Access
Now said in a statement.
The Egyptian authorities "not only want to
control what citizens say, but also how they should dress, talk, and behave
online," said Marwa Fatafta, the group's Middle East and North Africa
policy manager.
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Young women posting testimonials about sexual
misconduct led to the arrest of
Ahmed Bassam Zaki, 22, a former student of some
of Egypt's most elite schools
and universities (AFP Photo/Khaled DESOUKI)
|
'Stronghold on the internet'
Egypt has in recent years enforced strict internet
controls as it walks a tight line between balancing the Islamic law that shapes
its governance and adapting to a rapidly shifting society with a penchant for
social media content.
Stringent laws were approved in 2018 allowing
authorities to block websites seen as a threat to national security and to
monitor personal social media accounts with over 5,000 followers.
"In the past, the Egyptian regime tightened its
stronghold on the internet... Now, the online repression extends to
non-political activity too," said Fatafta.
The six jailed women combined have millions of
followers.
Hossam was arrested after posting a clip saying that
girls could make money by working with her, a message that was interpreted as a
call for prostitution, while Adham had posted satirical videos on TikTok and
Instagram.
Aside from being a virtual battleground of competing
interpretations of morality, social media has also empowered young Egyptian
women to speak up about sexual assault, sometimes with negative consequences.
In May, a shocking video came to light of a young
woman sobbing, her face battered and bruised.
Menna Abdel-Aziz, 17, posted an Instagram video in
which she said she had been gang raped by a group of young men.
The authorities' response was swift: the six alleged
attackers were arrested -- but so was Abdel-Aziz. All were charged with
"promoting debauchery".
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In this photo taken on February 12, 2013, protesters
in Cairo demonstrate
against sexual harassment (AFP Photo/Khaled DESOUKI)
|
"She committed crimes, she admitted to some of
them," the prosecutor-general said in a statement. "She deserves to
be punished."
'More to come'
Since Abdel-Aziz's case surfaced, a revived #MeToo
movement among Egyptian women, mostly from affluent backgrounds, has sprung
into action.
A gang rape allegation made in late July stemming from
a prominent social media account has been one trigger.
Another was young women posting testimonials about
sexual misconduct that led to the arrest earlier in the month of Ahmed Bassam
Zaki, 22, a former student of some of Egypt's most elite schools and
universities.
But the movement faces an uphill battle.
Rights groups say the government of President Abdel
Fattah al-Sisi has been curtailing freedoms since he took office in 2014.
Comedians, academics, bloggers, journalists, political
dissidents, lawyers and activists are among those who have been jailed in
recent years, and a music video director has died in custody.
Imprisoning social media influencers, the latest group
to be targeted, "has nothing to do with protecting social values. It's
about internet policing and control," Access Now's Fatafta said.
"With the massive increase in content creators
and influencers on TikTok in Egypt, there is a high risk that more prosecutions
targeting this community are yet to come," the organisation added.
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