Mona Eltahawy – an influential Egyptian-American journalist and blogger and a
columnist for
The Jerusalem Report – was beaten and sexually assaulted during a
12-hour detention by Cairo police, she said Thursday.
The 44-year-old
revealed the ordeal on her Twitter account, recounting how she had been
blindfolded for two hours and had her hands broken.
RELATED:'Egypt ex-PM accepts to form new government' Analysis: Unrest mars Egypt army's once-sterling image Eltahawy
has more than 80,000 Twitter followers who received word of her arrest late
Wednesday, when she tweeted: “Beaten arrested in interior ministry.”
Her
account then went silent for nine hours, after which she recounted her ordeal in
the 140-character snippets that are the social media site’s signature. It
was unclear what she was doing immediately prior to her arrest.
Taken
inside the ministry building, she recalled, she was set upon by five or six police officers who
“groped, prodded my breasts, grabbed my genital area,” and tried to insert their
hands in her pants. She was then handed over to military police, who kept her
blindfolded for two hours.
Late Thursday, she posted an image of herself,
apparently in a medical facility, with both hands in casts. X rays revealed both
hands were broken, she wrote, though it remained unclear exactly how the
injuries occurred.
“It’s horrible, really horrifying,” said Eltahawy’s
cousin Randa El Tahawy, a Cairo-based blogger who frequently writes about issues
of sexual harassment and gender equality in Egypt.
“She’s a very tough
woman; she’s been through a lot of tough situations, so I’m sure she’d holding
up. But of course it’s a horrifying experience,” Tahawy told
The Jerusalem Post
by phone from the Egyptian capital.
“It’s one thing to be arrested for
protesting; it’s another to be beaten and sexually assaulted. That’s the
thing that really crossed the line. I think everyone should be appalled by this
violence – there’s no need for it,” she said.
The timing of the arrest,
she added, was inexplicable in that for years her cousin had been a vehement
critic of former president Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted in February after 18
days of popular revolt.
“All this time, while she lived here under
Mubarak, Mona was always controversial and she never got arrested. Then they
come and arrest her now?” she said.
Eltahawy was born in Port Said,
Egypt, spent several years elsewhere in the Middle East and in Britain and has
lived in New York since 2000. In addition to the
Report, she is a columnist for
the
Toronto Star and Denmark’s
Politiken newspaper, as well as a frequent
contributor to leading print and broadcast media outlets.
From 2004 to
2006, she wrote a weekly column for the London-based pan-Arab newspaper
Asharq
Alawsat, but was dismissed following a quarrel with its Saudi management. In a
2006 op-ed in the
International Herald Tribune, she attributed the dismissal to
her frequent criticism of Mubarak, a longtime Saudi ally.
Before moving
to the US, Eltahawy lived and worked in Jerusalem as a Reuters reporter – the
first Muslim foreign-born correspondent to work in Israel for a major
international news outlet.
Her journalistic range is broad – from women’s
issues to social and political issues in the Arab world to the Arab- Israeli
conflict. In a 2009 interview with
The Economist she described Israel as “the
opium of the Arabs... an intoxicating way for them to forget their own failings
or at least blame them on someone else. Arab leaders have [a] long practice of
using Israel as a pretext for maintaining states of emergency at home and
putting off reform.”
The same year, she was awarded the European
Commission’s Samir Kassir Award for Freedom of the Press.
In March,
speaking at the annual J Street conference in Washington, she challenged Israel
supporters to take advantage of the revolutions sweeping the Middle East to help
bring an end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The wave of “freedom and
dignity sweeping the region would not stop at the borders of Palestine,” she
said, prompting thunderous applause from the audience.
Eltahawy’s cousin
placed responsibility for this week’s ordeal squarely on the shoulders of the
Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.
“The SCAF is in charge of the
country. That means you’re responsible for taking care of everything happening
in the country, that you’re the highest authority,” she asserted. “Who’s
in charge now? They are.”
She said sexual harassment was “very, very
common in Egyptian society. It’s a problem that has to do with the image of
women. There’s also the fact that sexual harassment is often used by security
forces and authorities to intimidate women and push them away from being
involved in politics.”
On February 11, the day of Mubarak’s resignation,
CBS News correspondent Lara Logan was beaten and sexually assaulted in mob
violence at Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Between 200 and 300 men joined in the
attack, which lasted close to half an hour before Logan was rescued by women
protesters who summoned army soldiers to remove her.
“It’s both a problem
in society and a problem with the security forces who think women will be
ashamed about it and not talk about it,” Tahawy said. “But they chose the wrong
person – someone who has been so outspoken throughout her entire life about
these issues, especially sexual harassment and women’s rights.”