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Women bear brunt of Iranian
crackdown on civil liberties
By Scheherezade Faramarzi
April 28, 2007 - (Associated Press) Iranian police
shoved and kicked them, loaded them into a curtained minibus and
drove them away. Hours later, at the gates of Evin prison, they
were blindfolded and forced to wear all-enveloping chadors, and
then were interrogated through the night.
All 31 were women — activists accused of
receiving foreign funds to stir up dissent in Iran. But their real
crime, says Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh, was gathering peacefully
outside Tehran's Revolutionary Court in support of five fellow activists
on trial for demanding changes in laws that discriminate against
women.
During her 15 days in prison, "I tried to
convince them that asking for our rights had nothing to do with
the enemy," Abbasgholizadeh told The Associated Press by telephone
from Tehran. "But they insisted that foreign governments were
exploiting our cause."
The March 4 arrests highlight how women's rights,
which were making some advances under the reformist presidency of
Mohammad Khatami, are being rolled back by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
who succeeded him in August 2005.
Activists say that while world attention has focused
on the West's standoff with Iran over its nuclear program, the abuses
of women's rights have intensified, using fear of a U.S. attack
as a pretext.
Over the past 10 months, security forces have
"become more and more aggressive even as women's actions have
become more peaceful and tame," said Jila Baniyaghoub, an activist
who has also spent time in jail.
"By tightening the noose on us, they are trying
to warn us that they will not tolerate even the mildest criticism,"
she said.
Iranian authorities are reluctant to answer specific
questions about the treatment of women. Several officials and lawmakers
approached by the AP to talk about the issue refused to be interviewed.
But Intelligence Minister Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei
recently pointed a finger at women activists when he claimed that
"the enemy's new strategy is to finance and organize various
groups under the cover of women's or student movements."
The aim, he told a state news agency, is to depict
the government as incompetent and to turn people against it.
Abbasgholizadeh is a 48-year-old mother of two
daughters, a matronly divorcee with a fringe of chestnut hair peeking
from under her shawl, and her story highlights her change of fortune
since the days when Khatami was president and reformists were gaining
influence in Iran.
Then she had Khatami's ear through the Center for
Women's Participation, a government office set up to promote women's
rights, and wrote a report for the president on the state of women
in Iran.
One of Ahmadinejad's first actions was to replace
the office with one called "the Center for Women and Family
Affairs" — a renaming that seems to reflect his conviction
that a woman's place is primarily in the home.
Under Ahmadinejad, Web access has been curbed,
almost all liberal newspapers have been shut, and activists say
they are under closer surveillance and often summoned for questioning.
The women say they have borne the brunt of the
onslaught.
Abbasgholizadeh and other reformists have waged
a lengthy battle against laws that permit death by stoning for women
accused of adultery, the practice of polygamy, employment laws that
favor men, and family laws that deny divorcees full custody of their
children and entitle them to only half the inheritance a man can
receive.
But far from backing down, Ahmadinejad's government
has now turned its crackdown to colleges.
It is drafting a law to limit women students to
half the places in college, instead of the 65% they now occupy.
It is also restricting women's entry to medical schools, arguing
that they put a strain on limited — and sexually segregated
— dormitory and transportation facilities.
Women working for the government must leave work
by 6 p.m. to get home and tend to their families.
And once again, with the arrival of summer, authorities
are cracking down on women for not covering up enough. Police say
more than 200 women have been arrested this year and released only
after promising to dress more conservatively.
On April 2, five activists were arrested in a Tehran
park for collecting signatures calling for changes to laws that
discriminate against women. Two of them, Fariba Davoudi Mohajer
and Sussan Tahmasebi, are under sentences of six months and a year
respectively, and are free pending court appeals.
On June 12 last year, police broke up a gathering
of more than 5,000 women demanding reforms in a Tehran square. Seventy
people were arrested and five organizers were charged.
It was during their court hearing that Abbasgholizadeh
and the other 30 women were detained. All were soon released except
Abbasgholizadeh and her lawyer, Shadi Sadr.
She said discrimination extended even into her
prison cell in Section 209 of Evin prison: Male prisoners got to
smoke and drink tea as much as they liked, while women were limited
to two cigarettes and two cups of tea a day. Men could exercise
in sunshine; women got their 15 minutes outdoors at sunset.
She was never physically abused, she said, but
had to endure what she called "white tortures" —
no bed or mattress in her 6-foot-by-9-foot cell, just blankets;
a fluorescent light that was never turned off; a tiny barred window
near the ceiling that admitted a thin ray of light. And always,
a deathly silence.
She had to visit the bathroom blindfolded. Denied
TV or radio, she was given only a Quran to read, and she couldn't
call home until a day or two before her release on March 19.
Still, she said it was better than the previous
time she was in Evin, for about a month in 2005 for attending a
foreign-organized conference. Then her cell was too small to stand
up in, she recalled.
This time, she said, she endured five interrogations,
always by the same Intelligence Ministry man who has handled her
case for years.
An educated man, he sat before her in a small soundproofed
room and always asked the same questions: How many trips had she
made, and why? Who paid for them? How much money had she received
from overseas? What did she spend it on? Who attended her women's
rights workshops?
Abbasgholizadeh said she had nothing to hide: She
confirmed making trips abroad and said her organization received
money from a Dutch foundation, described how it was spent, and said
her workshops were held in small towns and villages with six to
12 participants at a time.
She said experience had taught her to give brief
answers; "No need to tell your whole life story."
After days of solitude and silence, Abbasgholizadeh
heard a friendly voice: Her lawyer, calling out from Cell No. 24.
"Mahboubeh, are you here? Are you OK?"
Sadr asked.
"Yes, I am well," Abbasgholizadeh replied
through the metal windowless door of her Cell No. 12.
It was the first time they had spoken since their
arrest.
Immediately, a female warden stormed into her cell, telling her
she was disturbing other inmates.
Abbasgholizadeh said she exploded at the guard.
"I can't talk, I can't walk, I can't look," she shouted.
"Why don't you tell me not to breathe too?"
From:http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2007-04-28-iran_N.htm
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