1.1171662-2178688534
This recent image from video provided by CAPA and Canal+ television on Monday April, 8, 2013 shows Tunisian Femen activist Amina. Bewilderment, scorn, resentment _ women’s rights activists across the Middle East are reacting with everything but joy to topless demonstrations in Europe by the Ukrainian feminist group FEMEN against oppression of women in Muslim countries. They fear the bare breasts may hurt their cause more than help it, after FEMEN activists protested in front of mosques and Tunisian embassies last week in solidarity with a Amina who caused a scandal in her own country when she posted topless photos of herself protesting religious oppression.(AP Photo/Benoit Chaumont and Akim Rezgui/ CAPA/Canal+) Image Credit: AP

Tunis: The woman who scandalised Tunisia by posting topless photos of herself as a form of feminist protest is now trying to leave the country, her former lawyer said Tuesday after a video surfaced in which the woman recounted being drugged and given virginity tests by relatives.

Amina Tyler, 19, shocked this Muslim nation when she posted Facebook photos with the words “my body belongs to me” scrawled across her naked chest. She was later spirited away by her family after religious hardliners issued death threats against her.

Bouchra Belhaj Hamida, Tyler’s former lawyer who has in the past acted as her spokeswoman, said Amina had escaped from her family in a village outside the capital and was now staying with friends as she gathered the necessary documents to get to France.

In a video interview posted Monday on the Facebook site of the Ukrainian women’s group FEMEN, the young woman described her ordeal and vowed one last demonstration before leaving.

“I don’t want to leave Tunisia before I do a topless protest. I will do a topless protest and then I will leave Tunisia,” Amina said in a filmed Skype conversation with a member of FEMEN, a group that often uses nude protests to display support for women’s rights.

Fingering a pendant representing Tunisia’s Berber ethnic minority, Amina described how she was snatched by her cousin from a cafe, beaten and had her mobile phone SIM card destroyed. She was then taken to her aunt’s and then her grandmother’s house, where relatives admonished her and made her read from the Quran.

“Two old women of my family checked to see if I was virgin or not. That was horrible and against my freedom,” she said in the video. “They took me to the kitchen and said take off my clothes and we will see if you are virgin.”

She added that she was given large doses of medicine that made her sleep a great deal.

Hamida, a prominent feminist lawyer, would not reveal Tyler’s location except to say she was not far from the capital. Amina is gathering the material she needs to reach France, including an ID card, a passport and a visa, Hamida said. Unlike in some Muslim nations, in Tunisia women do not need the permission of a father or husband to leave the country.