Flap Your Lips Friday…YOU Have The Freedom Here
Posted by Michelle Moquin on January 8th, 2010
Well maybe not right now, at this very present moment, but hopefully soon.
Think about it…if you can’t flap your lips here, on my blog, at least be grateful that you’re able to flap your lips at all…and not be jailed for the words that you speak and the hand that writes. Women across the world do not have the comfort of freedom of speech as we do here in the US, but that doesn’t stop them from voicing their views even when they are aware that speaking their minds could mean jail, or worse, execution.
Widespread Arrests of Women’s Rights Activists, Female Journalists and Relatives
Numerous women’s rights campaigners, female journalists and relatives are being arrested and persecuted as authorities in the Islamic Republic of Iran attempt to repress masses of Iranians from advocating for their civil rights in recent weeks, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran said today.
“It is evident that the authorities are singling out women’s rights activists and arbitrarily arresting them, as well as female journalists, in the context of recent public demonstrations,” stated Aaron Rhodes, a spokesperson for the Campaign.
Dr. Nooshin Ebadi, the sister of Nobel Peace Laureate Shirin Ebadi, was arbitrarily arrested on 28 December. Nooshin Ebadi has no record of political or human rights activism and her arrest is a blatant attempt to intimidate and silence Shirin Ebadi.
“The arrest of Shirin Ebadi’s sister is an act of hostage-taking by the state and should be strongly condemned by the international community,” Rhodes said.
Some activists have been threatened with execution, while others have disappeared, with no official record of their arrest or whereabouts provided.
Atieh Yousefi, one of the most active members of the One Million Signatures Campaignin the city of Rasht, was arrested on the Shiite Holy day of Ashura (27 December). According to information provided to the Campaign, Yousefi was arrested while trying to assist a young man who had been severely injured by plain clothed agents who had beaten him. Still in detention, a judge has denied her family permission to visit her.
On 2 January 2010, Parisa Kakaie, a member of the Committee of Human Rights Reporters, who had been summoned to the Intelligence Ministry and threatened in telephone calls, was arrested when she appeared at the Intelligence Office. On 3 January, Kakaie called her home and said that she was in ward 209 of Evin prison. Previously, Kakaie was summoned to Branch 3 of the Revolutionary Court, along with other women’s rights activists, and was questioned at the Investigation Office of the Intelligence Ministry.
Bahareh Hedayat, a women’s rights advocate and a leading student activist, was arrested on 30 December 2009, by intelligence agents who presented a written order to detain her. Her home was searched and many of her personal belongings, including her computer and books, were confiscated.
Zohre Tonkaboni, 62, a former teacher and member of Mothers for Peace, was arrested on 28 December. Mahin Fahimi, another member of Mothers for Peace, was arrested on 8 December 2009, along with her son, Omid Montazeri. Fahimi’s husband was executed in 1988 while he was a political prisoner.
On 20 December 2009, Shiva Nazarahari, a leading member of theCommittee of Human Rights Reporters, was arrested on a bus en route to Qom for Grand Ayatollah Montazeri’s funeral, when the bus was stopped by Security Forces in Enqelab Square in Tehran. Nazarahari went on a dry hunger strike after she was arrested, and was transferred to the health clinic of Evin prison’s ward 209 on 1 January, where she was warned that she would be executed if she continued her hunger strike. Previously, on 14 June 2009, Nazarahari had been arrested at her office but was released after 100 days on bail of $200,000, and is waiting for her trial. Before these detentions, she had been arrested in August 2004, in a gathering of political prisoners’ families in front of the UN building, and was sentenced to a one-year suspended prison term.
Somayeh Rashidi, a women’s rights activist and member of the One Million Signatures Campaign, was arrested on 20 December 2009 while she appeared before the Revolutionary Court following her summons. She was questioned in court without her lawyer being allowed to accompany her; later, she was transferred to Evin prison. Her home was subsequently searched by agents who took her personal belongings and those of her roommate. Rashidi was previously denied the possibility to pursue her graduate work in women’s studies because of her activities.
Maryam Zia, a women’s rights activist who is the director of an organization devoted to children’s welfare, and is the wife of Mansour Hayat Ghaybi, a member of the Executive Board of the Bus Workers’ Union, Vahed Syndicate, was arrested on 31 December at her home. She wasn’t at home when the plainclothes came to arrest her, but her son was forced to call her and ask her to come home. She was taken to an unknown location. Previously, she had been arrested during the women’s rights gathering in Haft Tir square in 2006.
Mansoureh Shojaie, a member of One Million Signatures Campaign and the Women’s Cultural Center, has been arrested, but no information about her location or legal status has been released.
In addition to these cases, the following female journalists have also been imprisoned:
Badrossadat Mofidi, General Secretary of the Journalists Association, was arrested on 28 December 2009 at her home.
Nasrin Vaziri, a journalist and reporter for ILNA and other publications, was taken into custody by unknown persons on 28 December at 22:00. According to her family, there is no information about her whereabouts and her name is not on any detainee list. Her family, in an interview with the Committee of Human Rights Reporters, said that the Tehran prosecutor’s office had informed them that the office didn’t issue any order for her arrest, so she has effectively been “disappeared.”
Mahsa Hekmat, a reporter for the daily Etemad Meli, was arrested on 1 January 2010. She was visiting Ali Hekmat, a well- known journalist at his house in Saveh. The agents had apparently ordered the arrest of Ali Hekmat, but after they coordinated with their superiors, they arrested Mahsa as well.
Other women have also been jailed, some apparently based on their relationships to political and civil society activists. Two daughters of Mohammad Tavasoli, a member of the Freedom Movement (Nehzat e Azadi), Layla and Sara Tavasoli, were arrested in the last four days. Tavasoli’s daughters are not activists and they were reportedly arrested to force Tavasoli to announce the closure of the Freedom Movement.
Some of the other female political activists arrested include Azar Mansouri, the deputy of the Iran Participation Front, and student activists Niloufar Hashemi Azar, and Atefeh Nabavi and Shabnam Maddadzad.
The Campaign calls on the Islamic Republic authorities to immediately release all women’s rights activists and others who have been arbitrarily arrested.
Source: United4Iran
StreetJournalists 1.6.10
Why is it that those who bathe in the land of milk and honey have become complacent in their bed of roses, whispering their wants when the mood strikes, free from fear…while those with their hands tied, living in constraint, shout for sovereignty day after day after day, confined in fear?
I am so grateful that my words are not restrained and my hands speak freely. There is no stumble in my speech, nor shake in my gesture. I am free from fear, free to express. And I will continue to do so for those that can not.
Peace out….
Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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January 8th, 2010 at 1:06 pm
All of this saddens me, and angers me. What else can we do to help besides be concerned, write letters, send a check? I would imagine that simply the mass global public giving more of a shit would do a lot, but…Other ideas?
January 8th, 2010 at 1:47 pm
I’m with you re: that important question, Doug. What can make true change happen…?
Great talking to you yesterday, Mischa, too brief though, shall we shoot for a longer Q&A on Mon/Tues?
Speaking of flapping your lips, have I got a vmail for you to hear, that pompous ass of a woman I told you about on the phone…well, I’d only listened to 15 seconds of her vmail when I’d called her back bc she had the details all wrong, then I spoke to you and then I listened to the rest of her lengthy vmail, oh baby, this vmail is a great example of how NEVER to talk to anyone – I couldn’t stop laughing, she went totally tangential about how big and bad and powerful she and her friends’ hubbies are (oh put up your own freakin’ dukes babes, why should I give a flying one what your man does…?! So NOT relevant to the convo), that and she totally wants my head on a platter and my lips on her ass over some perceived injustice to her buddy…if someone like her (and her apparently very powerful peeps) would take an interest in people other than themselves for a change, maybe their dinero and clout could create change in this world, how about mouthing off for the rights of other women who can’t voice off like you, wench? Oh, but nah, she’ll just try to intimidate whoever she can…
It was so tempting to call her and (totally tongue in cheek) say, ‘I’m so happy for you and your pal that you both married well, now F off’ but I took the high road and wrote an incredibly professional letter, the subtext if she’s bright enough to catch it is, I’ll only continue to deal with you if you behave, please and thank you – or you know, you can always F off, your call! tee hee…
Caio for now, Luv, Zen Lill