صدى البلد البلد سبورت قناة صدى البلد صدى البلد جامعات صدى البلد عقارات
Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie
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Media Union Refers Yasmin Ezz to Interrogation


Mon 16 Jan 2023 | 05:33 PM
Yasmin Ezz
Yasmin Ezz
Israa Farhan

Chairman of Egypt's media union Mohamed Wadie Ghozzy has referred Egyptian journalist Yasmin Ezz to interrogation on accusations of inciting violence, following formal complaints made by women's councils about her TV show.

Two women's rights bodies in Egypt have filed formal complaints against Ezz after a series of offensive comments she has made about women.

On 11 January the Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights filed one of the complaints and made an official statement rejecting abusive content presented by the TV anchor on Kalam El-Nas, People's Talk, her show on MBC Egypt.

The Egyptian Council said Yasmin's programme is "an insult and is full of contempt for women and belittles and harms them."

"It includes incitement to violence against Egyptian women and the normalisation of humiliation and beating of wives by husbands and that women must accept violence and humiliation."

"Ezz takes advantage of individual cases circulated on social media to normalise domestic violence, spreading ideas that destroy the Egyptian family – the pillar of society," the National Council for Women said in an official statement calling for the show to be axed.

The NCW is an official government entity which aims to end discrimination against women. However, it has been criticised for only offering limited support to organisations advocating for the rights of women that have been targeted by the government.

Their complaints follow a widely shared Facebook post by Maya Morsi, the President of the National Council for Women, in which she said an "unnamed journalist," widely considered to be Ezz, should remember that her comments will be watched by her children and grandchildren, who will not be proud of what she has said.

The journalist responded on her own Facebook page to say that she would be proud for her children to watch her programme and that the main goal of her programme is to "preserve the family unit."

"When did we forget to glorify our husbands? If your husband is named Mohamed, you can't just call him Mohamed. You have to call him Mr Mohamed," Ezz said, in one episode of her show.

Ghozzy said, "In another, she said that a girl should never refuse to make a cup of tea for her brother. She is supposed to bring him a bell at home, and when this bell rings, he finds tea and coffee in front of him immediately."

Ezz added that at home, her sister is obliged to do everything her brother asks of her.

Women's rights have been under the spotlight in Egypt for months now as a series of violent murders of women who turned down marriage proposals has drawn attention to a lack of legal and social protection that has left women vulnerable to attacks, harassment, and sexual violence.

Last year 21-year-old student Naira Ashraf was stabbed 19 times outside Mansoura University.