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Nobel Winner
Says Feminist Movements, Not Military Force, Holds Key to Democracy
in Iran
By Erin Gartner
September, 17 2006 - (The Associated Press ) Shirin
Ebadi, the Iranian human rights activist who won the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2003, said supporting feminist movements in the Islamic
world would better promote democracy than military force.
"Instead of bringing democracy with cluster
bombs, we should support women fighting for democracy," Shirin
Ebadi said through an interpreter Thursday during a speech at Meredith
College, a women's university in Raleigh.
A lawyer, former judge and writer in Iran, Ebadi
spoke in Farsi to about 1,000 people about fighting for human rights
in Iran and elsewhere in the world. She said the feminist movement
has been successful in changing some custody laws in Iran, but that
women need more victories.
Iranian women hold high-ranking social and political
positions yet the court testimony of one man is equal to testimony
given by two women, she said. "Although they (feminists) were
always told these laws were the laws of Islam and could not change,
they have been able to change laws," she said.
Ebadi heads the Center for Protecting Human Rights,
a group formed by six prominent lawyers that was banned by Iran's
hard-line government last month. The government said the group did
not have a proper permit.
Ebadi became one of Iran's first female judges after
graduating with a law degree from the University of Tehran in 1969.
Ten years later, during the Islamic Revolution, she said she was
demoted to an administrative secretary when the country's conservative
leaders insisted that Islam forbade judgment by women.
In 2003, she became the first Iranian and first
Muslim woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. The Norwegian Nobel
Committee said she was chosen "for her efforts for democracy
and human rights ... especially on the struggle for the rights of
women and children." Her autobiography, "Iran Awakening:
A Memoir of Revolution and Hope," was published this year in
the US.
From: http://www.truthout.org/issues_06/091806WA.shtml
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