By Farangis
Najibullah, RFE/RL
 |
| Parvin Ardalan
(file photo) |
| (kosoof.com) |
Noted Iranian rights
activist Parvin Ardalan has been interrogated at the security branch of a Tehran
court after being charged with spreading propaganda against the government.
"I was asked about my activities on the 'Change
for Equality' and 'Zanestan'
websites," Ardalan told Radio Farda after her court visit on April 5. "They
asked about the content of some of my articles and, as a member of the editorial
teams of both websites, I defended that content. I was charged with propaganda
against the state, but I reject the charge."
Iranian authorities have summoned Ardalan to
court at least three times on a variety of charges since February, when
she won Sweden's Olof Palme Prize for her commitment to
defending women's rights.
On March 4, the authorities prevented Ardalan
from traveling to Sweden to receive the $75,000 prize, confiscating her passport
a few moments before her plane was to take off. Ardalan said she still does not
have her passport, and the travel ban is still intact.
Ardalan is a founding member of the One Million
Signatures campaign, a movement set up in August 2006 to promote equal rights
for Iranian women. The 37-year-old feminist has worked for a number of women's
publications, including "Zanestan," "Zanan," and "The Feminist Tribune of Iran,"
focusing on the lives of Iranian women. All of the publications have been
closed by the government. Ardalan is currently an editor of "Change of
Equality," an online publication promoting women's rights.
40 Members Arrested
Although "Change of Equality" and the One Million
Signatures campaign have somehow survived Iranian officials' attacks, Ardalan
and her fellow members of the signature campaign have paid a heavy price for
being involved in feminist activities.
While the campaign members insist their movement
is a nonpolitical, purely social association that has nothing against the state
and religion, some 40 of its members have been arrested by Iranian police and
intelligence services. Most of them have been charged with acting against the
state.
Two of the campaign supporters in Kurdistan
Province, Ronak Safarzadeh and Hana Abdi, were arrested by security services
last autumn and remain imprisoned. Both are in their early 20s. After spending
several months in prison without formal charges and without access to lawyers
and relatives, the women have recently been accused of cooperating with
terrorists and illegal armed groups. Both deny the charges, which have been
condemned by rights groups as baseless.
Last year, Ardalan was handed a 3 1/2-year
suspended prison sentence for taking part in a demonstration in Tehran.
Tehran Wants 'Total Silence'
Reza Moeni is in charge of the Iran, Afghanistan,
and Tajikistan desk at the Paris-based rights group Reporters Without Borders.
Moeni says the Iranian government has increased its pressure on the signature
campaign and other feminists by "arresting the movement's members, filtering
their websites, and closing down the women's magazines."
"The Iranian government wants total silence,"
Moeni says. "Even when they free a journalist or a feminist from prison, they
set them free under heavy bails, and obviously such journalists or activists
would hesitate to continue their activities."
However, Tehran's efforts to silence the rights'
activists sometimes bring the opposite effect, and end up attracting
international attention and support to the activists' cause.
"There is pressure from the government's side,
but there is resistance from the opposite side," Moeni says. "A few days ago
more than 1,000 human rights activists, feminists, and civil-rights groups
issued a statement to support Safarzadeh and Abdi, who have been imprisoned in
Kurdistan. The statement worked against the Islamic republic's efforts to say
that the two women were involved in terrorist activities and cooperating with
armed groups."
Ardalan says the government pressure has to some
extent made the feminists' activities less effective. "The campaign doesn't have
a newspaper, and it is very difficult to access and read our websites inside
Iran," Ardalan says.
After spending a few weeks in prison or perhaps
having a criminal case hanging over one's head, many members of the signature
campaign have become more cautious in their activities. However, Ardalan says
she and most of the Iranian rights activists are determined to continue to fight
for equal rights, and they "have always known that there is a price to pay for
such goals."
Copyright (c) 2008 RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org
... Payvand News - 04/09/08 ... --