An incident in which a woman was barred from entering a prominent social club in the Sheikh Zayed district of Sixth of October City because she was wearing a niqab (face veil) has sparked widespread debate, raising sharp questions over the legality of internal regulations at private social and sport
Egypt's elite social clubs are weaponizing dress codes to engineer a sanitized vision of modernity that excludes working-class Muslim women, revealing how class anxiety masquerades as secular progressivism across North Africa. This isn't about religious freedom—it's about Cairo's bourgeoisie policing who gets to occupy spaces of leisure and power, the same colonial playbook now dressed in country club bylaws. When private institutions become arbiters of acceptable Africanness, we're watching the continent's own elite do imperialism's work from within.
SUMMARY BY STRATA · ORIGINAL REPORTING BY EGYPT INDEPENDENT
READ THE FULL STORY AT EGYPT INDEPENDENT →