Egyptian members of the Go Bike group take part in a
bicycle ride in Cairo, on December 27, 2014 ©Mohamed El-Shahed (AFP)
|
Yasmine Mahmoud cuts a defiant figure as she weaves
her bicycle through the chaotic streets of Cairo, a place where few women dare
to pedal. Every day, like for the past four years, she takes her bicycle from
her 10th floor apartment and rides through the Egyptian capital, to the
astonishment of bystanders.
"Unfortunately, it's socially unacceptable in
Egypt for a girl to ride a bicycle in the street," said the 31-year-old
executive secretary, as she prepared to set off from the upscale Cairo
neighbourhood where she lives.
Women enjoy more freedom in Egypt than in deeply
conservative Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia, but the most populous Sunni
Arab country still considers it inappropriate for them to ride bicycles.
Unlike in many countries, the two-wheeler is
considered unsafe for travelling in Cairo's traffic-clogged roads.
Egyptian members of the Go Bike group take part in a
bicycle ride in Cairo, on December 27, 2014 ©Mohamed El-Shahed (AFP)
|
For Egyptian women it is all the more challenging
given the city's notorious sexual violence, and female cyclists in particular
are targeted by passers-by.
The majority of cyclists in Egypt are working class
men, preferring two wheels for running daily errands.
Mahmoud's family objected to her cycling initially,
but later started trusting her ability to cruise through the capital's traffic
bottlenecks.
"I used to ride a bicycle when I was a kid,
either near the beach where we went for holidays or in sports clubs," said
Mahmoud, dressed in a yellow sweater and blue jeans, and wearing bicycle-shaped
earrings.
"It took me a while to ride it again, but now
it's my daily companion."
- 'Saving time
and money' -
Mahmoud now refuses to drive her car unless she has to
travel far.
"A bicycle saves both time and the money required
for gas," she said. "This road would have taken at least half an
hour," she said, pointing to a queue of crawling cars at a roundabout,
which she quickly passes on her bicycle.
Mahmoud said Egyptian streets should have separate
lanes for cyclists given the risk of being mowed down by "scary"
microbuses breezing past recklessly.
In addition to traffic hazards, "verbal sexual
harassments and cynical passers-by are big problems too," said Mahmoud,
who still recalls how a young man once tried to forcefully jump behind her on
her bicycle.
"I just ignore them and ride on," she said
laughing.
Sexual assaults against women rose following the 2011
uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak, with hundreds of attacks
reported, activists say.
But this does not deter Mahmoud, who has taken her
passion to a new level. She is a member of Go Bike, a group that promotes
cycling.
Every Friday morning, the group arranges cycling
tours. Many participants are women keen to learn the sport and wanting to
follow Mahmoud.
"I am ready for the challenge," said Shaimaa
Ahmed, a veil-wearing 26-year-old pharmacist, as she brushed dust from her
clothes after falling off her bicycle minutes into her first attempt at
cycling.
Fifty-year-old amateur Wafaa Ahmed is proof that
cycling is not just for the young. "The only fear is harassment, more than
the chaotic traffic and lack of security on the streets," said the
mother-of-two, who wants to travel to her workplace by bicycle.
- Changing
perceptions -
Go Bike founder Mohamed Samy wants bicycles to replace
cars for travelling short distances.
"But what we need are separate lanes for
cyclists," he said.
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi threw his weight behind
promoting cycling just days after coming to office.
In July last year, Sisi took part in a cycling
marathon to encourage people to switch from automobiles.
Go Bike aims to "change society's
perception" about girls riding bicycles, said the group's spokeswoman
Hadeer Samy, wearing a bicycle-shaped necklace.
"We want bicycles to be a means for Egyptian
girls to break the moulds of customs and traditions."
For women still hesitating to ride on their own on the
streets, Mahmoud has some words of advice.
"Try
not to be scared. Forget those around you, challenge yourself and just
enjoy," she said, hopping onto her bicycle and pedalling off into Cairo's
busy streets.
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