Source:
Amnesty International
The Iranian
authorities should cease their harassment of women human rights defenders and
take urgent steps to dismantle the discriminatory legislation they are seeking
to change, Amnesty International said in a report published today.
"Instead of using its
powers to repress and intimidate those who protest and demand their rights,
Iran's government should address longstanding legal and other discrimination
against women, who make up half of the country's population," said Malcolm
Smart, director of the Middle East and North Africa Programme at Amnesty
International. "They must release imprisoned women's rights defenders and stop
detaining and harassing those peacefully exercising their rights to freedom of
expression, association and assembly."
Amnesty
International's new report comes as Ronak Safarzadeh and Hana Abdi - two Kurdish
Iranian activists - continue to be detained without charge or trial, or even
access to a lawyer. They were arrested in October and November 2007 for
peacefully exercising their rights.
The organisation also
published details of 12 women's rights activists, 11 women and one man, who are
currently being detained or are otherwise facing persecution because of their
peaceful efforts to lobby for legislative change.
According to the
report,
Iran: Women's Rights Defenders Defy Repression, human rights defenders
leading the campaign to end legalized discrimination against women are
frequently arbitrarily arrested and detained, denied access to lawyers, family
members and due process, and sometimes ill-treated with impunity by security
officials. Some have been prosecuted on vaguely-worded charges, accused of
threatening national or public security, apparently as a form of intimidation
and to deter them from continuing their campaign to protect and promote women's
rights in Iran. Others have simply been detained without any formal charges for
long periods during which they were held in solitary confinement and denied all
access to the outside world, often under a legal provision that allows judges to
order indefinitely renewable periods of detention.
The authorities'
harassment and intimidation of women's rights activists have become even more
evident and acute since the launch by activists of the Campaign for Equality on
27 August 2006. This aims to collect 1 million signatures of Iranians to a
petition demanding an end to legal discrimination against women.
Dozens of activists
and supporters have been arrested in connection with their activities for the
Campaign for Equality, some while collecting signatures for the petition. As of
January 2008, the Campaign's website had been blocked by the authorities at
least seven times. Official permission to hold public meetings has frequently
been denied, and campaign activists usually hold their workshops in the homes of
sympathizers, some of whom have then received threatening phone calls apparently
from security officials or been summoned by them for interrogation. At least one
such workshop was forcibly broken up by police who arrested those present,
beating some.
Amnesty International
is calling for a change in discriminatory legislation which, among other things,
excludes women from the most senior positions of state and appointment as
judges, denies them equal rights with men in marriage, divorce, child custody
and inheritance, and determines that any evidence they give before a court
carries only half the weight of that given by a man.
The report calls on
the government, Iran's parliament (the Majles), and the judicial
authorities who exercise significant influence over the position of women, to
abide by Iran's international obligations to uphold women's rights and end legal
and other discrimination.
"Iranian women's
demands to be allowed an equal place, and for an end to the discriminatory
legislation which blights their lives, should be welcomed and encouraged by the
authorities," said Malcolm Smart. "The government should see the work of women's
rights activists and human rights defenders as an asset, and recognize the
important contribution that such activists and defenders are making to address
discrimination and intolerance and to promote universal human rights for all
Iranians."
... Payvand News - 02/28/08 ...
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