Samira Ibrahim took Egypt’s military-led government to court in August, alleging she was among those subjected to the test after her arrest during the March 9, 2011, protest. She said she faced death threats after bringing the case.
On Sunday, the 25-year-old marketing manager said the ruling devastated her.
“This is rape, and I fainted when I heard the verdict in court,” she said. “God knows the truth, and it will always be a black spot in Egypt’s history.”
The court acquitted the doctor because of contradictory testimony from witnesses, the government-run website EgyNews reported.
The issue came to light last year after several women alleged they were subjected to such examinations following a March 2011 protest in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
Presidential candidate Abdullah Shalaan said the ruling showed the military government’s flaws.
“They will never indict one of their own. In all the cases of killing protesters, no real investigations were done, just fact-finding committees that submit their findings,” he said. “No real justice has been served, and this is another example. I congratulate this brave woman for standing against them regardless of the final verdict.”
In December, an Egyptian administrative court issued an order banning virginity tests for female detainees.
The human rights group Amnesty International reported that Egyptian troops beat, shocked and strip-searched women arrested during the protests in Cairo and forced them to submit to virginity tests.
Egyptian authorities initially denied requiring virginity tests, but in May, a senior general who asked not to be identified acknowledged the practice.
The general said the tests were performed as a safeguard against the women accusing authorities of sexual assault, and he defended the tests.
“The girls who were detained were not like your daughter or mine,” the general said at the time. “These were girls who had camped out in tents with male protesters in Tahrir Square, and we found in the tents Molotov cocktails and (drugs).”
But Ibrahim said her treatment clearly showed the tests were meant to “degrade the protesters.”
“The military tortured me, labeled me a prostitute and humiliated me by forcing on me a virginity test conducted by a male doctor where my body was fully exposed while military soldiers watched,” she said.
Another protester arrested in the March 9 protest, Salwa Hosseini, offered a similar account, according to an Amnesty International report on the allegations.