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Iranian women's rights activist sentenced
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI
June 2, 2008 - (AP) A young Iranian activist
and his lawyer said Monday that he had become the first man sentenced
for participating in a campaign to change laws that discriminate
against women.
Amir Yaghoub Ali, 21, said he was convicted of acting against
national security and sentenced to a year in prison for his role
in the "Change for Equality" campaign, launched by Iranian
women activists in September 2006.
The campaign sought to collect a million signatures in support
of changing laws that deny women in Iran equal rights in matters
such as divorce and court testimonies.
Ali said he was detained last July while collecting signatures
for the campaign in a park in northern Tehran and spent 29 days
in the notorious Evin prison before being freed on $20,000 bail.
Ali's lawyer, Nasrin Sotudeh, said the country's Revolutionary
Court found her client guilty and sentenced him on March 2 but
didn't inform them of the verdict until May 25, because of customary
legal formalities in Iran. She said under Iranian law, she has
20 days from May 25 to appeal and would "obviously do so."
Ali will remain free throughout the appeals process.
"My client is innocent," she said.
Sotudeh said at least six women have been sentenced over the campaign,
with punishments including jail terms and lashes. None of the
sentences have been carried out, though it is unclear why, she
said.
Court officials and prosecutors could not be reached for comment
Monday.
Ali told The Associated Press the court sentenced him for "acting
against national security by propagating against the system."
But he said he believes in his actions.
"Changing discriminatory laws will benefit Iranians and will
create a fairer social environment," Ali said. "Our
call for change is considered by the ruling Islamic establishment
as crossing the red lines. Authorities don't want to allow any
changes in laws in support of women rights. That's why they seek
to suppress such demands."
Iran has refused to ratify the United Nations convention on women's
rights and the country's senior clerics in Qom, Iran's main center
of Islamic learning, have rejected the convention as un-Islamic.
Under the strict form of Islamic law practiced in Iran, a woman
needs her husband's permission to work or travel abroad. A man's
court testimony is considered twice as important as a woman's.
Men can keep four spouses at once — a right not granted
to women.
And while Iranian men can divorce almost at will, a woman seeking
a divorce must go through a long legal battle and often relinquish
rights in return for divorce.
But despite being restricted from the nation's highest political
posts, Iran's 35 million women enjoy greater freedoms and political
rights than women in most neighboring Arab states, including the
right to vote and hold public office.
Those freedoms got a boost with the 1997 election of former reformist
president Mohammad Khatami, who appointed a female vice president.
Since then, other women have held positions within the government
but have not been Cabinet members. And while women in Iran can
run for parliament positions, they're prohibited from running
for president.
Parvin Ardalan, one of the signature campaign leaders, said that
along with Ali, about 50 women activists have been detained or
summoned to court over the campaign.
"This is a policy of intimidation by the authorities,"
she said. "But we won't give up."
From:http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iAFtNcKmm9jA3rZpNqLVbDBvEJQQD9123QJG1
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