
Calls for safe reopening of Iranian human rights
centers, commitment to human rights work
WASHINGTON - December 23 - After learning of the
shutdown of two renowned Iranian human rights organizations Sunday,
CODEPINK Women for Peace have created
a letter of petition to Iranian President Ahmadinejad calling for him to allow
women's rights and human rights activists to continue their work in Iran safely
and freely. It also calls for the re-opening of the two organizations, the
Center for Participation in Clearing Mine Areas and Defenders of Human Rights
Center. (View the online petition
here).
CODEPINK will deliver the petition to the U.S.
Iranian ambassador in D.C. this week. (Watch CODEPINK co-founder Medea Benjamin
describe the group's response to the shutdown Monday
here on GRITtv with Laura
Flanders.)
The centers, founded by Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, were shut down
with no explanation or written justification illegally just hours before a 60th
anniversary of Human Rights Day celebration there. In August 2006, according to
a CNN interview Monday, Ebadi said the Iranian government informed her that the
agency is "illegal" and vowed to arrest those who continued to work there.
"Shirin Ebadi and her fellow activists inspire us all with their courage and
strength in the face of a kind of suppression that many of us will never know,
and we stand in solidarity with them and support their work for human rights and
a more democratic Iran," said Jodie Evans, co-founder of CODEPINK. "This illegal
raid on Shirin's offices is only the most recent attempt by the Iranian
government to suppress or erase the face of human-rights activism in Iran."
Ebadi was briefly taken into police custody
following raids of the centers, which are highly respected in Iran and worldwide
for their role in improving human rights conditions. The Center for
Participation in Clearing Mine Areas helps victims of landmines in Iran, and
Defenders of Human Rights Center, reports human rights violations in Iran,
defends political prisoners, and supports families of those prisoners. If Iran
truly champions human rights, the centers must be allowed to remain safely open.
A
petition, CODEPINK believes, is the best way to support Ebadi without
provoking a reaction from the government that would endanger her or place her
under more intense scrutiny.
"We must be conscious of and realistic about how our actions in support of her
affect her safety, her ability to do her work, and her life," Evans said. "But
we cannot do so in any way that provokes a reaction from the government which
would endanger them more or place them under increased scrutiny."
For more information on the petition, please call Jodie Evans at 310-621-5635
or Medea Benjamin at 415-235-6517.
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CODEPINK is a
women-initiated grassroots peace and social justice movement working to end the
war in Iraq, stop new wars, and redirect our resources into healthcare,
education and other life-affirming activities. CODEPINK rejects the Bush
administration's fear-based politics that justify violence, and instead calls
for policies based on compassion, kindness and a commitment to international
law. With an emphasis on joy and humor, CODEPINK women and men seek to activate,
amplify and inspire a community of peacemakers through creative campaigns and a
commitment to non-violence.
... Payvand News - 12/24/08 ... --