Three feminist activists
have been arrested for holding a topless demonstration outside a court today in
protest against the jailing of a Tunisian member of
Ukrainian feminist group FEMEN.
FEMEN activist Amina Tyler, 19, was arrested at another protest
against Islam's treatment of women earlier this month after she sparked outrage
across Tunisia by posting topless pictures of herself online.
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| The naked truth: Amina Tyler, 19, caused outrage in her native Tunisia last week when she posted topless photos of herself on her Facebook page in a protest over women's rights |
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| Extreme views: Salafist preacher Adel Almi (pictured) called for Amina to be 'quarantined' and stoned to death after comparing her to someone with a contagious illness |
A Muslim preacher called
for the student to be stoned after the pictures, showing Tyler with the words:
'My body belongs to me' written across her bare chest in Arabic, were uploaded
to Facebook.
She was later taken into
hiding by her family after conservative preachers issued death threats against
her.
The 19-year-old said
last month she wanted to do one last topless protest before she left the
country to study journalism in France and was arrested May 19 in the religious center
of Kairouan where an ultraconservative Muslim group had hoped to hold a
conference before it was banned by police.
Tyler was charged with
carrying a dangerous object, apparently a canister of pepper spray, and will
appear before a judge tomorrow
Her supporters, three
foreign activists, today disrobed in front of the Justice Ministry to protest
against the court case.
The trio, one German and
two French, approached the entrance to the ministry wearing coats which they
took off, revealing naked torsos scrawled with 'Breasts Feed Revolution'.
Wearing just jean
shorts, the women chanted in English 'Free Amina' and 'Women's spring is
coming' as people in the crowd attempted to cover them.
The women then climbed
up on the gates of the Justice Ministry until police pulled them down and
hustled them shouting into the building as an angry crowd, many of them lawyers
there for work, gathered.
'This is against our
religion,' said Fatima Zahaouadi, a young woman wearing the black robes of a
lawyer but without a conservative headscarf.
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| Facing prison: The Femen activists face charges of threatening public order and attacking public morals which could carry up to a year in prison |
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| Agenda: Speaking ahead of the demonstration, one of the FEMEN activists called Inna said they were protesting against the treatment of women in Arab countries |
'For these women to take
off their clothes as part of freedom of expression is against our religion and
the traditions of Arab-Muslim Tunisian society.'
The crowd surrounded the
area where the women were being held and when the activists were transferred to
a nearby building the crowed surged forward before being fended off by police.
'The Ministry of Justice
is not a house of ill repute,' said Fawzia Dridi, an angry bystander.
The crowd also attacked
journalists attempting to cover the event as well as lawyers who tried to
protect the reporters. Police took several journalists into custody to take
statements from them as witnesses before releasing them.
Tunisia's prosecutor's
office later announced the women had been taken to main police station for
questioning before being charged, and their embassies have been informed. The
French consul visited the women and said they were in good spirits.
Lawyers said they could
be charged with an attack on public morals or threatening public order,
offenses which could carry up to a year in prison.
A member of FEMEN who
identified herself as Inna told The Associated Press that the activists were
protesting the treatment of women in the Arab world.
'We are attacking the
Ministry of Justice one day before the trial for Tunisian FEMEN prisoner Amina
to demand to let Amina free and to give up Islamists tradition judging women's
liberation,' she wrote.
'FEMEN is planning first
topless action in Arab country as a sign of a big changes ... Femen is
announcing the women's spring that (is) starting in Tunisia.'
Though it has the
reputation as one of the most progressive countries in the Middle East for
women's rights, overwhelmingly Muslim Tunisia is still a relatively
conservative society and there has been a rise of piety since the overthrow of
the secular dictatorship in 2011.
FEMEN, which has carried
out semi-nude protests in Europe, has only recently started focusing on the
Middle East, especially after Tyler's actions.
Middle East feminists,
however, have largely condemned their approach saying their tactics are foreign
to the largely conservative region and risk provoking backlash against women
and real concerns like achieving equality.
The protests come during
a particularly delicate period for Tunisia, where decades of progressive
legislation are being challenged by a rising trend of conservatism and there is
a struggle over the identity of this North African nation of 10 million.
Culled from DAILY MAIL

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