Iranian official calls Barbie 'destructive'

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- A top Iranian judiciary official
has warned against the "destructive" cultural and
social consequences of importing Barbie dolls and
other Western toys.


Iranian shopkeeper Hamid Reza Delband displays
American Barbie dolls at his shop in Tehran on Monday.

 In the latest salvo in a more than decade-old
government campaign against Barbie, Prosecutor General
Ghorban Ali Dori Najafabadi said in an official letter
Monday to Vice President Parviz Davoudi that the doll
and other Western toys are a "danger" and need to be
stopped.

"The irregular importation of such toys, which
unfortunately arrive through unofficial sources and
smuggling, is destructive culturally and a social
danger," said the letter, a copy of which was made
available to The Associated Press.

Iranian markets have been inundated with smuggled
Western toys in recent years partly due to a dramatic
rise in purchasing power as a result of increased oil
revenues.

While importing the toys is not necessarily illegal,
it is discouraged by a government that seeks to
protect Iranians from what it calls the negative
effects of Western culture.

Najafabadi said the increasing visibility of Western
dolls has alarmed authorities and they are considering
intervening.

"The displays of personalities such as Barbie, Batman,
Spiderman and Harry Potter ... as well as the
irregular importation of unsanctioned computer games
and movies are all warning bells to the officials in
the cultural arena," his letter said.

Najafabadi said Iran is the world's third biggest
importer of toys and warned that smuggled imports pose
a threat to the "identity" of the new generation.

"Undoubtedly, the personality and identity of the new
generation and our children, as a result of
unrestricted importation of toys, has been put at risk
and caused irreparable damages," he said.

Mattel Inc., the maker of Barbie, had no immediate
comment Monday on the Iranian action.

Barbie is sold wearing swimsuits and miniskirts in a
society where women must wear head scarves in public
and men and women are not allowed to swim together.

In 1996, the head of a government-backed children's
agency called Barbie a "Trojan horse" sneaking in
Western influences such as makeup and revealing
clothes.

Authorities in Iran launched a campaign of
confiscating Barbies from toy shops in 2002,
denouncing the un-Islamic sensibilities of the iconic
American doll. But the campaign was eventually
dropped.

Also in 2002, Iran introduced its own competing dolls
-- the twins Dara and Sara -- who were designed to
promote traditional values with their modest clothing
and pro-family stories. But the dolls proved unable to
stem the Barbie tide.

Source
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/04/29/iran.barbie.ap/index.html





      
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