Iran regime war on women
Iran regime war on women
Assault and arrest of a woman in Tehran
March 8 marked International Women’s Day, a day to reflect on the
situation of women throughout the world. With all the talk about Iran’s
nuclear program, little attention is being paid to the internal
situation, particularly Iran’s ongoing war on women. The regime in
Tehran has continued its policy of disenfranchisement and apartheid with
respect to women. This week the regime proposed a new draft law
supposedly aimed at boosting the country’s population, which Amnesty
International has claimed would, 'reduce Iranian women to baby-making
machines.'
The law would block employment at certain jobs for Iranian
women who choose not to have children, making it clearly discriminatory
and unfair. Amnesty’s deputy director for the Middle East and North
Africa, Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui noted, 'The proposed laws will entrench
discriminatory practices and set the rights of women and girls in Iran
back by decades.”
The legislation is supposedly motivated by the
“Supreme Leader’s” totalitarian command that Iranians act to increase
the country’s birth rate. The willingness to implement such
discriminatory legislation shows fundamental lack of equality and
justice within the Iranian regime, and is reminiscent of a fascist
dictatorship. It also affirms the regime’s view that women are meant to
be relegated to objects within society, to be controlled, regulated and
confined. Obviously, by subjugating women, the Mullahs seek to enchain
the society as a whole.
Under the tenure of the regime’s smiling president Hassan Rouhani
more at least 1,300 people, including dissidents and ethnic and
religious minorities, such as Sunnis, Kurds, Arabs and Baluchis, have
been executed, dispelling the notion in some quarters that Rouhani may
represent the winds of reformist change. His inhumane behavior
demonstrates yet again that the extremist Iranian regime is inherently
incapable of reform.
Among the executed were almost 30 women, some of
whom were hanged in public. This show of savagery dwarfs even the
horrific barbarity of Islamic extremists of ISIS (Islamic State) in Iraq
and Syria. Last October, the regime executed a young woman, Reyhaneh
Jabbari, who was accused of defending herself against being raped by an
intelligence agent. These barbaric executions are coupled with inhumane
and degrading punishments, such as eye gouging, limb amputation and
flogging in public.
This past year has seen repression and
discrimination against women increase in many forms. The regime
continues to maintain policies which encourage or acquiesce towards
gender based violence. As many as 25 women were the victims of heinous
attacks involving acid thrown onto their faces by men on motorcycles.
The attacks were motivated by a culture of misogyny and repression
towards women, and a direct result of the ruling regime and its policy
of gender apartheid. The attacks occurred after a law was passed by the
regimes parliament to protect citizens who feel 'compelled to correct'
those who do not adhere to their view of Islamic morality. In reality it
legitimated gender based violence against women who were wearing makeup
or were accused of being “improperly” veiled.
The regime also offers
little protection for stay-at-home women. According to the report by
the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights on Iran, Ahmad Shaheed, some
66 percent of Iranian women have experienced domestic violence, yet the
governmental policies do little to address this issue or provide support
for women. The report also states, “Some draft laws…markedly compound
discrimination against women by further eroding their protection from
forced marriage and rights to education, work and equal wages.” The
report goes on to identify ongoing systematic shortcomings with respect
to the rights, freedoms and opportunities of women in Iran.
It should
also come as no surprise that the Iranian regime executed two women on
International Women’s Day, and continues to terrorize women in every
aspect of society, while paying lip service to human rights and equality
when dealing with the West. Sadly the fate of Iranian women has been
left out of the narrative surrounding negotiations with the fascist
theocracy in Tehran. Those of us abroad must do all we can to ensure
that the regime is not able to silence and suppress the women of Iran,
who, in the words of the Iranian opposition leader, Maryam Rajavi , are best positioned to defeat Islamic extremism and fundamentalism.
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