----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Sunny 
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  Sent: Tuesday, November 27, 2007 8:23 PM
  Subject: [zamanku] Activists in Iran under increased pressure: group



  
http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=186993&version=1&template_id=37&parent_id=17


       
       
        Activists in Iran under increased pressure: group 
              Publish Date: Tuesday,27 November, 2007, at 02:44 AM Doha Time 
       
       
        TEHRAN: The government of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has 
stepped up a crackdown on students, unionists and teachers in the past months, 
Nobel winner Shirin Ebadi's rights group said yesterday. 
        "We are pained to say that the ninth government has further tightened 
the space for political, unionist, press and student activists despite its 
populist slogans," the group said in its latest report. 
        Ahmadinejad - whose government is the ninth elected since the Islamic 
revolution in 1979 - has made the implementation of "justice" in Iran one of 
his core policies. 
        But Ebadi's Centre for the Defenders of Human Rights said there had 
been a noticeable increase in pressure on student activists, unionists and 
teachers in the period between June and September. 
        "The student movement this summer experienced one of its hardest 
periods," it said. 
        Along with many arrests, prominent university professors have been 
sacked for "alternative thinking" and hundreds of students have been banned 
from studying for "political or ideological reasons". 
        Students have staged several protests at universities in Tehran over 
the jailing of three of their colleagues for the publication of images deemed 
offensive to Islam in four student publications. 
        It said that 80 head teachers and their deputies in the cities of 
Tehran, Hamedan, Kermanshah and Eslamshahr had been sacked as their schools had 
been linked to teacher protests. 
        Hundreds of teachers in Iran had staged protests earlier this year over 
their working conditions, under which they receive a basic wage of between $200 
and $300 a month. 
        "The crackdown on political activists intensified in summer and the 
number of detainees increased," the report added. 
        The report comes after Ahmadinejad raised the tone against his 
political opponents, threatening to expose as "traitors" critics who were 
pressuring the government in the nuclear standoff with the West. 
        The group also expressed concern over the situation of members of the 
Bahai minority, saying they were banned from working in photography, taxi 
driving, hotel management, food and publishing. 
         "Although 1,100 young followers of ideological minorities took part in 
the university entrance exam, 800 did not receive their results and only 220 
got the results," it added. 
        "Practically most of them were deprived of higher education." 
        The Centre for the Defenders of Human Rights is a small group of rights 
lawyers led by Ebadi, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003. 
        The rights group blamed the government for inflation that was hurting 
the poor most. Ahmadinejad secured votes of many of the country's poorest in 
the 2005 presidential election by vowing to share out Iran's oil wealth fairly. 
        "The heavy burden of the rising prices, especially in the housing 
market, has taken a remarkable number of people under the poverty line and 
deprived them from having the minimum (standard for a) dignified life," it 
said.  - Agencies
       
       
       
       

   


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