There is a tendency in Egypt, though, to not report rapes due to the fear of
social rejection as well as cultural reasons. Although that has recently improved significantly due to social awareness by TV shows and by the president Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi himself. Rania Hamid from Centre for Egyptian Women's Legal Assistance (CEWLA) says that no one tells that they have been raped, saying "Girls consider it to be quite enough that a few people know about the rape." Rania Hamid further describes the problem, that even if a girl were to reveal that she has been raped, the whole issue would evoke the issue of honour: "There are problems of honour. Sometimes a brother or cousin may kill her, saying 'you wanted this, you encouraged this, you’re not honourable, and what is that you are wearing?...' Of course it’s not her fault, but who are you going to tell that to? The girl, or society?".
Honour crimes are not specifically mentioned in Egyptian law but are specifically condoned in some sections of the criminal code. Statistics for honor assaults and killings do not exist common in Egypt but there are individual reports of them in rural areas and local media reports of their occurrence in Upper Egypt. According Seif el-Dawla who runs a center in the country told that "Sexual molestation and harassment ... is routine for women who come across police". The
Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights (ECWR) has called the problem "social cancer" and suggested that dress code is not deterrent at all.
ECWR carried out a survey in 2008 which found that 83 percent of Egyptian women and 98 percent of foreign women within Egypt had experienced sexual harassment at some time, and only 12% had gone to police for complaining such issue. Over 62% of Egyptian men admitted harassing women, and 53% of Egyptian men have blamed women for 'bringing it on.' A CNN opinion piece cites a 404 error page claiming the
United Nations Entity for Gender Equality on May 23, 2013, reported that an estimated 99.3% of Egyptian women said they faced some form of sexual violence. The source was a 2013 UN report which estimated that 99.3% of women aged 10-35 had been sexually harassed (including wolf whistles, dirty looks, and other non-violent harassment) and 90.9% had been raped. Activists in 2012 alleged that the
Muslim Brotherhood pays for raping women and beating men who gather to
protest. In August 2020, Egypt's public prosecution was seeking to arrest nine suspects accused of gang-raping a woman at
Fairmont Nile City hotel in Cairo in 2014; however, lack of action for six years was due to the fact that six men involved in the incident were from powerful families. although that did not stop people from talking about them and the Egyptian media city produced a series called "El Tawoos" which talked about the families and their abuse of power and how they dodge the law, the series was under pressure to be shut down but many actors and Egyptians online refused to let the series get shut down and it continued to air and raise awareness. Later in May 2021, the public prosecutors announced the release of four suspects who were arrested with involvement in the
Fairmont Hotel rape case. The reason for their release was cited as lack of evidence and contradictory testimonies gathered from the 39 people interviewed for the statement. The news was followed by criticism expressed by Egyptians on social networking platforms such as
Facebook, although the investigation is temporarily stopped to gather evidence. == Security forces ==