The answer is, of course, that men do not harass women.
The article claims that -in Cairo- some young and poor men (obviously not the sharpest in the pool) harass women as a way to feel power and escape from a boring life. Even if the claim is true in a local context, is a very narrow point of view that can't be applied neither to all men in Egypt, nor of course to all men in the world.
The article claims that -in Cairo- some young and poor men (obviously not the sharpest in the pool) harass women as a way to feel power and escape from a boring life. Even if the claim is true in a local context, is a very narrow point of view that can't be applied neither to all men in Egypt, nor of course to all men in the world.