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Iran: Signature Drive Targets
Gender Discrimination
By: Golnaz Esfandiari
August 28, 2006 – (RFE/RL) Activists in Iran
have started a petition drive calling for changes to laws that discriminate
against women. Organizers hope to attract the signature of 1 million
Iranians -- a challenge that they say public officials could not
ignore. Authorities blocked the gathering at which the launch was
supposed to take place on August 27 on a technicality. But women's
rights defenders are collecting signatures and vowing to broaden
their campaign nevertheless.
This campaign is just the latest move by women's
rights activists who argue that Iran can be Islamic and nondiscriminatory
at the same time. Police violently dispersed a public protest two
months ago aimed at raising awareness of gender discrimination.
One of the demonstrators involved in that event -- former reformist
lawmaker and student rights activist, Ali-Akbar Moussavi Khoeni
-- remains in custody.
This new initiative is aimed at pressuring lawmakers.
Organizers want to demonstrate that many Iranian citizens -- women
and men –- are unhappy with laws that treat women as second-class
citizens. Islamic laws as applied in Iran deny women equal rights
in divorce, child custody, inheritance, and other areas. A woman's
testimony in court is worth half that of a man, and a woman needs
the permission of her father or husband to travel.
Activist Golnaz Maleki told Radio Farda that the
demand that discriminatory laws be amended has broader support than
just women's rights defenders. "One million signatures can
at least demonstrate that our demands are not only the demands of
4,000 or 5,000 people who go to various gatherings, are beaten up,
and then go home," Maleki said. "There is wide support
for these demands." Campaigners also argue that Iranian legislation
lags behind cultural norms and women's status in society.
In Iran, more than 60 percent of university entrants
are women. Iranian women actively participate in many spheres, including
in the education and NGO sectors. Activists believe the legal discrimination
against women negatively affects the lives of men. They say it has
led to what they describe as an unbalanced and unhealthy relationship
between men and women.
Maleki said she and other organizers hope to raise
public awareness about women's rights and create dialogue and cooperation
among different groups. "Our main goal is to create a dialogue
among citizens and educate them about their rights," Maleki
said. "And we also want women to become sensitive to their
status under the law and in society. We also want to create a collective
morale among women and encourage collaboration."
Another campaign member, Farnaz Seyfi, told Radio
Farda that the campaign will employ a number of methods to achieve
its goals. "The main method is based on the face-to-face method
-- signatures will be gathered through door-to-door contact and
conversations with women," Seyfi said. "Another method
is identifying places where women gather -- for example, in hair
salons, sport clubs, parks, on public transportation. Campaign members
will go to these places and talk to women. Another method is organizing
seminars and meetings that promote dialogue; in these places, signatures
will be collected from participants."
Activists insist that collecting signatures against
discriminatory laws is only "the first phase" of the campaign.
They say the next phase includes proposing new laws. Maleki said
the current campaign is modeled on a similar effort that was launched
in Morocco in 1992 and led to changes in the law. But she said she
suspects that campaigners in Iran have a more difficult task ahead
of them than their colleagues in Morocco.
"[Collecting] 1 million signatures is in fact
one of the goals -- we've set June 19, 2007, as the deadline,"
Maleki said. "But I'm personally not very hopeful that, by
that day, 1 million signatures will have been collected. From what
I know from Morocco, [Moroccan activists] collected 1 million signatures
in three years. [But] they had different conditions -- their king
[supported them], and they had a volunteer force of 9,000."
Authorities prevented the event on August 27 at which the campaign
was supposed to kick off -- a seminar on "the Impact of laws
on women's rights."
But organizers began collecting signatures from
those who turned up nevertheless. They also distributed pamphlets
on laws that activists claim deny women basic rights. Campaigners
have also launched a website to further their cause, called we-change.org.
Several prominent intellectuals, lawyers, and literary figures have
publicly backed the compaign, including Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Shirin Ebadi, poet Simin Behbahani, and film director Jafar Panahi.
From: http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/08/0c90c058-d109-4aa6-984c-1a6229288a1a.html
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