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Iran: End pressure on women’s
rights defenders
August 27, 2008 (AI) - On the second anniversary of the launch of
the Campaign for Equality on 27 August, Amnesty International is
renewing its demand that the Iranian authorities cease harassing
and imprisoning women’s rights defenders and to restrict their
campaigning activities for the repeal of laws and policies which
discriminate against women in Iran.
The Campaign for Equality is a network of individuals working to
end legal discrimination against women. The campaign informs women
of their rights, and is aiming to collect one million signatures
from the Iranian public to a petition against discriminatory laws.
Two years into the campaign, women’s rights defenders are
facing increasing repression as they try to take their demands for
equal treatment to the broader population while the authorities
continue to impose restrictions on their use of public space to
carry out their peaceful and legal activities.
There are also worrying developments that seem to be further entrenching
discrimination against women in Iran. In particular, a new Family
Protection Bill passed in July by the Law and Legal Affairs Committee
of Iran’s parliament not only fails to address discrimination
against women in relation to marriage, divorce and child custody
but, if passed into law, would also lift the condition requiring
a man to get the permission of his first wife before taking a second
wife. The bill still needs further parliamentary approval and to
be agreed by the Council of Guardians, but it represents a very
worrying trend.
Amnesty International is urging the Iranian government and parliament
not to entrench discrimination but to move ahead with a package
of reforms in order to end those laws and practices which continue
to discriminate against women, who make up half of the population
of Iran, and to deny them access to their human rights. Amnesty
International is also urging the Iranian government to ratify, without
reservation, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women, and to bring Iran’s laws and practices into
conformity with this Convention.
Since the launch of the Campaign, Amnesty International has collected
information on the harassment of the Campaign for Equality activists.
They face threatening phone calls by persons identifying themselves
as Ministry of Intelligence officers warning them not to hold planned
meetings; they are prevented from organizing peaceful meetings or
demonstrations and to date, the website of Campaign for Equality
has been blocked on at least 11 occasions and filtering has extended
to local sites of the campaign in several Iranian provinces.
Some campaigners have been sentenced or are facing charges for their
peaceful campaigning for women’s rights and Amnesty International
calls for such charges to be dropped and for their immediate and
unconditional release of those serving prison sentences.
Amir Yaghoub-Ali was sentenced in May 2008 to one year’s imprisonment
for collecting signatures in Daneshjou Park, Tehran in July 2007.
He is currently free pending the outcome of an appeal against his
conviction and sentence.
In June 2008 Hana Abdi, a member of Iran’s Kurdish minority,
and member of the Campaign in Kordestan province and of the Azad
Mehr NGO was sentenced to the maximum five years’ imprisonment,
to be spent in internal exile after conviction of "gathering
and colluding to commit a crime against national security."
Hana Abdi was summoned to the Prosecutors Office in August 2008
and was cautioned about passing news outside prison, if she does
so she would be further charged with “propaganda against the
state”.
Zeynab Bayzeydi, another Kurdish women's rights activist was sentenced
in August 2008 to four years' imprisonment, and internal exile on
account of her activities in support of women's rights, which she
has denied, except the one arising from her work on the Campaign
for Equality.
Women’s rights defenders in Iran describe a climate of increasing
repression and restrictions on public space for them to carry out
their peaceful, legal activities.
In an interview (link to the interview) with Amnesty international,
Sussan Tahmasebi a founding member of the Campaign for Equality
explained:
“We are forced to hold our meetings, trainings and seminars
in our homes, but the security forces have worked hard to prevent
us from even holding meetings in our own homes, meetings have been
broken up and members have been arrested.”
“Nearly 50 were arrested and charged with vague security charges,
such as endangering national security, or spreading of propaganda
against the state.”
In the year of the 10th Anniversary of the UN Declaration on Human
Rights Defenders, which affirms the protection of human rights defenders
from violence or threats as a result of their work, Amnesty International
is urging the Iranian authorities both to protect human rights defenders
and value the work they do. The organization is also calling for
the immediate release of all prisoners of conscience, including
activists in the Campaign for Equality who are currently detained.
From:http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/iran-end-pressure-women-s-rights-defenders-20080827
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