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Saudi men complain of harassment by women in shopping centre

Male shoppers complained about being cat-called and followed by women

Samuel Osborne
Thursday 31 December 2015 12:48 EST
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Saudi women waiting for their drivers outside a shopping mall in Riyadh
Saudi women waiting for their drivers outside a shopping mall in Riyadh (FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP/Getty Images)

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One of the biggest shopping centres in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, has officially recorded 16 cases of harassment of men by women.

Male shoppers complained about being cat-called and followed by women, with most of the complains relating to verbal harassment, the Saudi Gazette reports.

The centre's security department says CCTV footage supports the men's claims. The videos have been handed over to the police for further investigation.

The newspaper suggests the men did not file formal complains because they feared "social stigmatisation".

Men interviewed by the paper suggested the solution was to enforce even stricter punishments and restrictions against women in public.

In Saudi Arabia, religious police enforce a strict policy of gender segregation, often harassing women who do not meet conservative standards of dress in public, according to a 2005 report by the US Human Rights think-tank Freedom House.

Like many Gulf countries, Saudi Arabia has no laws against harassment. Most cases go unreported by women, Al-Araby Al-Jadeed reports.

However, over the past two years Riyadh's Justice Ministry recorded 4,000 cases of sexual harassment.

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