http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=36851


RIGHTS-IRAN:
Int'l Women's Day Rally Forcibly Dispersed
Kimia Sanati

TEHRAN, Mar 8 (IPS) - A valiant attempt by several hundred women to commemorate 
International Women's Day by demonstrating in front of the Iranian parliament 
ended in violence when police and plainclothesmen used force to disperse them. 

One of the coordinators of the rally asked the demonstrators to leave to 
prevent more violence, according to news portals. 

Citing eyewitness, Meydaan (Women's Field), a woman's rights portal said the 
organisers of the rally were beaten by police. The Advarnews portal estimated 
that there were about 300 demonstrators. 

The rally took place although police had arrested 30 women on Sunday outside a 
Tehran Revolutionary Court where the cases of five women, who had taken part in 
a Jun 12, 2006 demonstration, demanding legal equality with men, were being 
heard. 

Police broke up that demonstration and arrested 70 women, all of whom have 
since been released. Charges against the five on trial include conspiring 
against national security, making propaganda against the state, disruption of 
public order through participation in an illegal gathering and acting against 
national security. 

''We believe that what the international community must insist on is human 
rights and democracy (in Iran) rather than (Iran's) nuclear issue. And that has 
to be done through diplomatic dialogue and peaceful means, not through war and 
destruction," the activists had said in their invitation to join peaceful 
demonstrations in front of the court. 

Following Sunday's arrests, 620 leading members from a range of Iran's 
political parties and trade unions had written an open letter to Iran's chief 
judge expressing ''disappointment'' at the arrests. 

Earlier, the Washington-based Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International 
called for the immediate release of the arrested activists. Amnesty said in a 
statement that it believed the arrests may have been intended to deter 
activists from organising events to mark International Women's Day. 

"Based on Article 27 of the Iranian Constitution, demonstrations and gatherings 
are free if arms are not carried by demonstrators. The two women that I 
represented at the trial on Mar. 4 for participating in the Jun. 12, 2006 
demonstrations had been exercising exactly the same constitutional right,'' 
Nasrin Sotoudeh, lawyer for Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani and Parvin Ardalan, 
detained in front of the court, told IPS. 

The demonstrators were attacked by police officers and security agents. 
Plainclothesmen on the ground tried to disperse the crowd violently even before 
the demonstration actually commenced. Seventy activists were arrested but 
released within a few days. Several organisers of the event were officially 
charged and a former male parliament member, Ali Akbar Mousavi Khoini, was kept 
in detention for five months. 

''Jun. 12 was a turning point. Soon after the incident, women's rights 
activists said they realised that there was need for a new tactic and the 
'Campaign to Collect One Million Signatures to Change Discriminatory Laws' was 
born,'' a women's rights activist and journalist told IPS on the condition of 
remaining anonymous. 

''The campaign (launched in November) has caused much concern to the 
establishment because with face-to-face and door-to-door outreach, it will move 
the cause among ordinary people in the society. It is not going to be limited 
to a closed circle of activists and intellectuals. And it has already spread, 
through workshops to train volunteers, to quite a few provinces," she said. 

"Demanding change for equality between men and women is so threatening to the 
patriarchal establishment, they will do everything to stop the idea from 
spreading and 'infecting' society. The campaign website was filtered three 
times in five months, twice in the past two or three weeks only," she added. 

The 'Keyhan' newspaper, a mouthpiece of Iran's hardliners has accused feminists 
and women's rights activists of being sponsored by what the paper called 
''executives of American plans for soft overthrow of the Islamic Republic''. 
The United States and the Netherlands are funding the signature campaign, the 
paper claimed. 

Men's exclusive right to divorce their wives and exclusive guardianship of 
children, a law that permits a man to take as many as four permanent and 
several temporary wives and giving a woman's testimony half the value of that 
of a man, are among laws that the campaigners have been demanding changed. 

On Thursday, Shirin Ebadi, Iran's celebrated winner of the 2003 Nobel Peace 
Prize joined Irene Khan, who heads Amnesty International and is also a Nobel 
Peace Prize winner (1977) to call on the government to revoke laws that 
discriminate against women. 

In an open letter, the two Nobel laureates said women in Iran faced ''serious 
and widespread discrimination'' because of laws that exclude them from 
''critical areas of political participation''. They noted that women were 
entitled to equal status with men under the Iranian legal system and that the 
time was ''long overdue to make this a reality''. 

The letter referred to the mass signature campaign and stressed that the time 
had come for the Iranian government to ''pay heed to these voices and put an 
end to legal discrimination against women in Iran''. (END/2007) 

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