Earlier this week, Safaa
Hegazy, the director of state-run Egyptian radio and television, barred eight
anchorwomen from appearing on the air for a month, saying they were overweight,
the state-owned Al-Ahram news website confirmed. Ms. Hegazy ordered the women
to go on a diet during their suspensions, Al-Ahram said.
Most Egyptian journalists
have had to watch their tongues and tone down their reporting over the past
three years to keep their jobs under a military-dominated government. Now, the
state is ordering some women working as television anchors to practice a similar
restraint with their weight.
Khadija Khatab, one of the
eight anchorwomen, said that she had not yet been formally notified of Ms.
Hegazy’s order, but added that she was recently told that “measures will be
taken against” those who fail to lose weight by mid-September, according to an
interview she gave to a privately owned television station.
Ms. Khatab said she was
offended that coverage of her ordeal included words like “fat” and similar
terms she called “unfair” and “insulting.” She also said that the pictures of
her that had been circulating and mocked on the internet and social media sites
were old and that she had lost weight since they were taken.
“I believe I am an ordinary
Egyptian woman who looks normal, and I don’t wear too much makeup,” Ms. Khatab
said, challenging people to contradict her.
Many did.
Alaa el-Sadani, a
commentator for Al-Ahram, said that she was “sickened by the disgusting and
repulsive” appearance of the eight suspended anchors, and that she believed the
rest of the country agreed with her.
Fatma al-Sharawi, another
Al-Ahram writer, welcomed the move as a way to improve the abysmal ratings of
the state channels. “Is a ban for eight enough?” she asked.
Viewership of state
television, long dismissed by many Egyptians as a comically biased news source,
fell significantly after the uprising that removed President Hosni Mubarak from
power in 2011.
“They don’t understand that
people don’t watch them because they have no credibility, skills or quality,”
said Mostafa Shawky, a free-press advocate with the Association for Freedom of
Thought and Expression. “It has nothing to do with looks. But it goes to show
that actual skill is not something they care about.”
Mr. Shawky said the
suspensions reinforced a widespread notion in Egypt that only women who meet a
certain definition of beauty should work in television journalism. “The fact
that it is a woman who is doing all of this just makes it all the worse,” he
said.

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