Tunisian women perform Chilean song against rape to denounce sexual harassment

Tunisian women perform Chilean song against rape to denounce sexual harassment
The event comes as numerous women in Tunisia have complained of sexual harassment on social media, under the hashtag #EnaZeda - the local incarnation of the #MeToo movement.
2 min read
14 December, 2019
The Tunisian event comes as numerous women have complained of sexual harassment. [Getty]
Around 60 Tunisian women on Saturday performed the feminist flash-mob song "The rapist is you!", a Chilean choreography that went global, in front of the seat of government in Tunis.

"We are here to denounce all forms of violence... social, institutional (and) domestic violence" said participant Shames Radouani. 

The Tunisian event comes as numerous women in the North African nation have complained of sexual harassment on social media, under the hash-tag #EnaZeda - the local incarnation of the #MeToo movement. 

The posts were sparked by a video that went viral in October showing a newly elected lawmaker allegedly masturbating outside a school. The footage was shot by a young girl. 

The lawmaker, Zouheir Makhlouf, said he is diabetic and had been urinating into a bottle.

He walked free after being investigated for alleged sexual harassment and public indecency.

Launched in late November in Chile by feminist collective Las Tesis, the anthem against violence "The rapist is you!" is a very visual dance, involving wearing a black blindfold and a scarf.

Read more: No longer silent: Why Lebanese women took to the streets against sexual violence

The women arrange themselves in line, singing their refusal to tolerate excuses for unwanted sexual advances, culminating in the words "the rapist is you!", sung with accusing fingers pointed forwards. 

The mobilisation in Tunis on Saturday follows dozens of similar performances around the world, including in Paris, Madrid, Beirut and New York.

The Tunisian activists who took part in the flash-mob performance were responding to a call by local feminist group "Falgatna", an AFP journalist said.

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