• NOVEMBER 21, 2009
DISPATCH PRINT  |   TEXT SIZE        |  EMAIL  |  SINGLE PAGE

She Wears the Pants

Lubna Hussein, the Sudanese woman found guilty of the crime of wearing trousers, may not have won her case, but she has done one important thing: made the Khartoum regime fear the world's response.

BY BEC HAMILTON | SEPTEMBER 8, 2009

Lubna Hussein's trial for the "crime" of wearing trousers went ahead in Khartoum yesterday morning. It was her third official court appearance -- on previous occasions the court delayed its decision in the hope that the international media attention on Lubna, the "Sudan trouser lady," would fade. The court's verdict was eminently predictable.

COMMENTS (1) SHARE:
Digg
 
Facebook
 
Reddit
 
Bookmark and Share More...

Trying to save face, the court played it both ways. The judge decided Lubna was guilty under Article 152 of Sudan's so-called indecency laws -- a nod to the government, which maintains that the law is just and that Lubna simply fell afoul of it. But the court decided to fine her 500 Sudanese pounds (about $200) rather than flog her -- a nod to the sensitivities of the global media watching from outside the courtroom, where Lubna's domestic supporters were once again protesting.

Presumably the court hoped that Lubna, grateful to be spared flogging, would happily pay the fine and the world could move on. Case closed. That was a miscalculation.

I spoke to Lubna by phone shortly after the verdict was handed down and was not surprised when the first thing she said was that she had no intention of paying the fine. While most of the media coverage of her story to date has focused on the most sensational part of the case -- the possibility of her facing a public flogging -- for Lubna, her decision to take on the government was a challenge to the justness of Article 152 in its entirety. From Lubna's perspective, paying the fine would legitimate an illegitimate law.

I lost contact with Lubna last night after she was jailed for refusing to pay the fine. But having spoken to her earlier in the day, I knew that going to jail to continue her protest of a vaguely worded law that allows for the harassment of women was something she was perfectly prepared to do. Lubna had advised friends and family that she did not want anyone to pay the fine on her behalf.

From the perspective of the Sudanese government, this was not a satisfactory result. With the "trouser lady" now in jail, how could the global media move on? Enter Mohideen Totawi, head of the Sudanese Journalists' Association (SJA). Totawi paid Lubna's fine and this afternoon she was forcibly freed.

If anyone thinks this was an act of solidarity by one journalist toward another, think again. Independent journalists in Khartoum refer to the SJA in the same scathing tone as they do the "Gongos," the governmental "nongovernmental organizations" that Khartoum runs to demonstrate to the West its robust civil society. Indeed, the links between the government and the SJA are too tight to claim anything approaching independent status. The truly independent association of journalists in Sudan is called the Sudanese Journalists' Network -- but you'll be hard-pressed to hear anything about it because any statements it issues are censored from Sudanese papers.

So, for today it looks as though the government has won. In effect, it paid the fine to shut down both Lubna's challenge to Article 152 and the unwelcome media attention that her act of civil disobedience spurred. But two questions remain. First, will it be this easy to stop the activism of Lubna and her many domestic supporters? My guess is no. Lubna's case is now part of a larger campaign by a group of similarly brave Sudanese women, working for women's rights from inside a repressive system. Second, will any Sudanese court again dare to flog a woman for wearing trousers? Let's hope not.

Save over 50% when you subscribe to FP.

ASHRAF SHAZLY/AFP/Getty Images

 

Bec Hamilton is the author of The Promise of Engagement, a forthcoming book on citizen advocacy in Sudan. She is an Open Society Institute fellow and a visiting fellow at the National Security Archives at George Washington University. 

SHARE THIS ARTICLE: Facebook|Twitter|Digg
  • The Al Qaeda Diaries

  • Boring Summits Are Better for Everyone

  • D.C.'s New Game: Who's Paying Your Pundit?

  • Lowering the Bar: The ABA's Ties to Despots

 (1)

HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE

JAY GETTY

6:30 AM ET

September 9, 2009

Sudans press sounds just like the USA press: abc, cbs, msnbc,cnn

"The American press: too filled with politically correct bias (that reads hate/jealousy) to recognize truth, analyze facts, deduce delusion, and report the whole story, not just some perverted version: that sounds like your description of Sudan’s press

Just look at NPR: "Few Things Considered": (not leftist), "The World: (according to leftist agenda") et al...All announced in some quiet well spoken English...But right wing perspectives that should read alternative perspectives, only presented by left wing people or cut and biased. Like Sudan, who ever heard of women in an alternative outfit; for that the left (their brains) says we must "respect"...other culture.

Respect is earned, not given. I do not respect women as chattel, unable to make choices, leave their house unaccompanied by a male family member; I do not respect any religion that says my G-d or you are...less.

I do not respect the American media; except Savage, and a few others. If the American media is not rallying around: banned in Britain: Savage (free speech); the American media has Alzheimers.

i do not respect the American media; except Savage, and a few others. If the american media is not rallying around: banned in Britain: Savage (free speech); the American media has Alzheimers.

 
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. Karzai's Cronies
  2. Planet Slum
  3. The Al Qaeda Diaries
  4. The Terrorists Among Us
  5. The Real Shock of Fort Hood
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. Edward Burtynsky's Oil
  2. Think Again: God
  3. Bolivia's Lithium-Powered Future
  4. Planet Slum
  5. Plague: A New Thriller of the Coming Pandemic
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. The Al Qaeda Diaries
  2. Zardari in the Crosshairs
  3. The Real Shock of Fort Hood
  4. The Terrorists Among Us
  5. This Week at War: Heading for a Bad Breakup
TODAY | PAST WEEK

MOST
READ

MOST
COMMENTED

  1. The President, the Professor, and the Wide Receiver
  2. The Real Shock of Fort Hood
  3. Is There a Palin Doctrine?
  4. The Only Hope Left?
  5. The Terrorists Among Us
  • NET EFFECT

    Why are people creating Facebook profiles for Holocaust victims?

    BY EVGENY MOROZOV

  • PASSPORT

    North Africa's escalating soccer war

    BY JOSHUA KEATING

  • ARGUMENT

    How the Chinese media covered Obama's visit

    BY WILLIAM MOSS

  • SMALL WARS

    The U.S. and Pakistan are heading for a bad breakup

    BY ROBERT HADDICK

  • DANIEL DREZNER

    Time's not-so-shocking Obamaland expose

  • BEST DEFENSE

    What would George Marshall think of today's generals?

    BY THOMAS E. RICKS

  • SHADOW GOVT.

    What does containing North Korea actually mean?

    BY JAMIE FLY

  • THE CABLE

    How the Chinese government censored Obama's visit

    BY JOSH ROGIN



  • 1. Aligning on Afghanistan? President Obama and PM Brown Turn Focus on Exit Strategy
  • 2. R.I.P.: Russia to Continue Ban on the Death Penalty
  • 3. All for One: Jailed Fatah Leader Implores Palestinian Unity
  • 4. Global Warming Time Out: Stagnating Temperatures Baffle Climate Experts
 See All Photo Essays
  • Planet slum: From Nairobi to Caracas, Mumbai, and Jakarta

  • Falling Like It's 1989

November/December 2009
  • Feature

    Revolution in a Box

  • Feature

    Plague, by Robin Cook

  • Opening Gambit

    My Plan to Overthrow the Mullahs

  •  See Entire Issue

     Preview Digital Edition

  • Made in China—and sold there, too.
  • Why Sarah Palin is unlikely to be the future of the Republican Party.
  • What to drink on Thanksgiving: Napa cabernet.
  • Geithner Is Not Going Anywhere
  • GM Customers Give Back
  • Ron Paul Wins Lifelong Fight, Now May Be Forced To Vote Against Everything He Believes
  • What Would the Pilgrims Say About Tofu?
  • What Would the Pilgrims Say About Tofu?
  • What Kobe, LeBron and Dwyane Owe Spencer Haywood

About FP: Meet the Staff | Foreign Editions | Reprint Permissions | Advertising | Corporate Programs | Writers’ Guidelines | Press Room | Work at FP

Services: Subscription Services | Academic Program | FP Archive | Reprint Permissions | FP Reports and Merchandise | Special Reports | Buy Back Issues

Subscribe to FP | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | RSS Feeds | Contact Us

FP Logo


1899 L Street NW, Suite 550 | Washington, DC 20036 | Phone: 202-728-7300 | Fax: 202-728-7342
FOREIGN POLICY is published by the Slate Group, a division of Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC
All contents ©2009 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive, LLC. All rights reserved.