Women and activist
demonstrate on the streets of Nairobi to protest the recent
undressing of a young lady in Nairobi over indescent dressing by the
the touts. This was on 17/11/2014.
She screamed in
terror. They stood and watched. Nobody moved to rescue her.
The young
woman without a name was violated in broad daylight, in her country,
by men who thought her skirt was too short. Filthy male hands tore at
her, touched her in places no stranger should and savaged her in
public like a caged animal.
Similar scenes would be captured in
Mombasa, the Globe Cinema roundabout and inside a matatu in Githurai.
By last week, a male police officer was standing in the dock for
groping a 16-year-old girl in a matatu in Kayole. An evil wind was
spreading like a wild bushfire, causing stampedes and fear. Women
were outraged. However, the newly-formed Anti-Stripping Squad (ASS)
has so far swung into action and identified the Githurai matatu in
which the woman was molested, in addition to arresting the touts who
assaulted the woman in Kayole. Who are these men stripping women in
public? Who let the dogs out?
The answers are as shocking as the
repercussions of the women-stripping madness.
According to a survey
commissioned exclusively for The Nairobian and conducted by GeoPoll,
a research firm based in Washington DC in the United States, Kenyan
men are hitting back at women because they feel women are favoured by
the government.
More shocking is that women agree that they show too
much flesh these days, and that ladies should dress modestly in
public.
Asked whether men are retaliating against women because they
feel ‘sidelined,’ a whopping 60 per cent of the respondents drawn
from across the country - Lamu, Nyeri, Machakos, Meru, Kisii and
Siaya - agreed. Only 30 per cent of the men said they are neither
sidelined nor retaliating.
This could be a backlash against numerous
affirmative action initiatives aimed at uplifting women, and
particularly the girl child. Such initiatives, which include
government funds for investment, lower mark for admission to public
universities and the feeling that women applicants are favoured
during employment, have caused heat in the past.
Boycott sex
Early in November, Maendeleo ya Wanaume chairman Nderitu Njoka even
called on men to boycott sex to fight for their rights because, “Men
have been neglected by the government even in formulation of
policies, with many biased towards women and youth.”
Could this
perception that women are ‘having it too easy’ be driving jobless
and disgruntled male youth to harass young women in the pretext of
teaching them a lesson for dressing indecently?
Be that as it may,
this stripping saga caused such a national furore that 70 per cent of
Kenyans, both male and female, were aware of the #MyDressMyChoice
protests held in Nairobi by angry women and men. The awareness was
highest in Nairobi (84 per cent) and among women (73 per cent).
Curiously, more men
(56 per cent) polled in the survey by GeoPoll were supportive of
women dressing as they wish, against only 52 per cent of the women.
The survey shows that 59 per cent of Nairobians felt that women have
the freedom to dress as they please. Female youth aged between 15 and
24 supported this freedom more than any gender or group at 63 per
cent.
Perhaps because of safety concerns, 67 per cent of those
sampled (both men and women) said women should dress modestly.
Of the
women polled, 69 per cent were of the opinion that women should dress
modestly in public, which is higher than 65 per cent of the men.
Interestingly, 73 per cent of the respondents in Nairobi were in
favour of modest dressing.
It may, however, surprise Kilimani Mums,
who were at the forefront of organising the #MyDressMyChoice street
protest, that 57 per cent of the women polled felt that women are
baring too much flesh, against only 48 per cent of the men.
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