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Women will topple Islamic Republic even if it survives war: Nobel laureate

Mar 8, 2025, 16:46 GMT+0

Iranian women will overthrow the Islamic Republic even if it survives a war, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi said in a message marking the International Women's Day.

"I am convinced that if the Islamic Republic survives any war, it will not survive facing the women," Mohammadi said in the video message published on her social media accounts on Saturday.

"The glass of life of the authoritarian regime will be broken by the hands of women of Iran."

Mohammadi is the most outspoken and prominent dissident inside the country and has spent over a decade in Iranian prisons. Currently on medical leave from Tehran's Evin Prison, she has resumed her public criticism of Iran's theocratic rulers.

In her video message, she said the Islamic Republic has used all the possibilities and capacities of a political system to suppress, subjugate and dominate women over the past 46 years.

However, she said, "women overcame the government. Women of Iran were subjected to widespread discrimination, daily humiliation in their public and private life, but they were able to master and resist."

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate accused the Islamic Republic of subjecting Iranian women to gender apartheid.

"The Islamic Republic has wielded all its power from legislation in parliament to enforcement by the executive branch, from judiciary rulings to propaganda, education and cultural engineering, to subjugate women. It has used every tool at its disposal to dominate them. Yet today we witness the strength and defiance of women in Iranian society," she added.

On Thursday, a US-based rights group has urged governments to recognize what it called gender apartheid in Iran as a crime against humanity, arguing that the Islamic Republic systematically oppresses women.

"The oppression of women in Iran is not just discrimination—it is a deliberately designed, institutionalized system of domination intended to enforce the subjugation of women to maintain the state’s grip on power," said Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) director of communications, Bahar Ghandehari.

"This state-sanctioned systemic subjugation amounts to nothing less than gender apartheid, which fully meets the threshold of a crime against humanity," she added in the press release.

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Veils and freedom: An Iranian perspective on Women's Day

Mar 8, 2025, 14:57 GMT+0
•
Lawdan Bazargan

On March 8, 1979, tens of thousands of Iranian women took to the streets, demanding the right to choose what to wear on the first International Women’s Day of the post-revolutionary Iran.

The rally that was supposed to be a celebration of women, became the start of a six-day battle against the newly imposed Islamic dress code on them. It was perhaps the earliest sign that the revolution they had fought for had been hijacked.

Only weeks before, many of these same women—students, doctors, lawyers, nurses, teachers, activists—had marched against the dictatorial rule of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, fighting for freedom, democracy, and equality, unaware that they would become the first victims of Iran’s Islamization led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

On March 7, 1979, Khomeini decreed that all women working in government offices must heed Islamic diktats and cover their hair. The following day, women arriving at work unveiled were turned away.

Many felt this was not about clothes, but control. They saw it as an attempt to erase women from public life. And they fought back.

“We did not rise to go back,” thousands chanted marching from the University of Tehran toward the Prime Minister’s office. “In the dawn of freedom, women’s rights are missing.”

The peaceful demonstration was met with brute force. Islamist revolutionaries and pro-Khomeini mobs stormed the march with sticks and knives. Dissenting women were beaten and stabbed. They were called enemies of Islam and agents of the West.

But they did not back down.

For six days, they marched through the streets of Tehran, defying the cold, the growing danger, and the bitter sneering of those who dismissed their struggle as secondary to the revolutionary cause.

The dismissive view was by no means limited to Iranian masses. It was shared by many Western intellectuals who, bewitched by the revolution in Iran, ignored or actively justified the repression of the new regime.

Thinkers afar: enablers and allies

While feminists like French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir and American writer Kate Millett stood in solidarity with women in Iran, others like de Beauvoir’s compatriot Michel Foucault helped legitimize the Islamic Republic.

De Beauvoir recognized the Iranian women’s fight as part of the global struggle for gender equality, helping establish the International Committee for Women’s Rights (CIDF) to amplify their voices. Millett traveled to Iran to document their struggle and was arrested and expelled for her efforts.

Foucault also visited Iran but had a wholly different view of the events. He romanticized the revolution, reducing it to a rejection of Western imperialism and ignoring its catastrophic consequences for women and dissidents. He brushed aside human rights concerns as Western biases, a framing that persists in various forms to this date.

Another lasting influence in Western intellectual circles is Palestinian-American philosopher and literary critic Edward Said.

Said’s most influential work, Orientalism, was published a year before the revolution in Iran. He focused on Western narratives about the East. While many of his arguments against colonialism were valid, they were weaponized by Islamists to deflect criticism.

Said, unlike Foucault, never glorified Iran’s transformation. Others used his emphasis on culture, however, to depict forced veiling and gender segregation as cultural differences rather than human rights violations, failing to—or choosing not to— challenge the repression in a meaningful way.

A Legacy of Resistance

Back in Iran, the forced veiling of women was completed and codified in 1983. Those daring to flout the law would be punished by official enforcers or emboldened thugs. The Six-Day Protest of 1979 was defeated.

But it heralded a long fight for equality that’s continued to this date.

In 2022, the world watched as Iranians across Iran took to the streets after a 22-year-old Kurdish woman named Mahsa Amini died in custody, having been detained for not covering her hair fully.

Amini’s tragic death—a state murder by all accounts—ignited the largest uprising against the Islamic Republic. Young men tore down posters of supreme leader Ali Khamenei as young women set their scarves on fire.

Their slogan? “Woman, Life, Freedom.”

The struggle against hijab and gender apartheid is not just an Iranian issue—it is a global human rights fight. Iranian and Afghan women continue to resist, even as the Islamic Republic and the Taliban impose laws aimed at erasing them from public life.

What happened on March 8, 1979, is not just history, it is a warning. Revisiting that eventful day and what has happened in Iran since, may help Western intellectuals and politicians see mandatory hijab for what it is: systemic, religious oppression, not a symbol of cultural relativism.

When enforced by law, hijab is not a cultural practice. It is a means of control. Iranian and Afghan women are calling for solidarity, demanding that the world listen to them rather than the Foucaults of the world.

International Women’s Day is a day to honor those who fought and are fighting for equality. It also has to be a day to reject the view that dismisses their struggle, and enables their oppressors.

Opinion expressed by the author are not necessarily the views of Iran International.

Iranian-American journalist on hunger strike in Evin prison

Mar 8, 2025, 11:51 GMT+0

Iranian-American journalist Reza Valizadeh, a former reporter for US-funded Radio Farda, has launched a hunger strike in Evin Prison, protesting what he calls an unjust and rushed legal process that resulted in his 10-year prison sentence.

Valizadeh, who was arrested in September last year after returning to Iran to visit family, was convicted of collaborating with a hostile government—a charge his legal team and international observers have strongly denounced.

In January, an Iranian appeals court upheld his sentence despite his lawyer arguing that the punishment is disproportionate to the alleged crime.

In a message from Evin Prison obtained by Iran International, Valizadeh said his hunger strike is in response to the Iranian judiciary's refusal to review key aspects of his case. He said that until the full scope of issues raised during interrogations and court proceedings are reconsidered, he will continue his protest.

“The public must know that the judicial process for political prisoners in Iran is hasty, lacks thorough examination, and leads to lengthy and unfair sentences,” he wrote.

Valizadeh was initially held in Ward 2A of Evin Prison, a section controlled by the IRGC Intelligence Organization, before being transferred to Ward 209, overseen by the Ministry of Intelligence.

His trial, held under Judge Iman Afshari, was widely criticized for its brevity and lack of due process. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison, two years of internal exile from Tehran and neighboring provinces, and a travel ban.

Currently, he is being held in Ward 8, an area described as an “exile ward” known for its unsanitary and overcrowded conditions. According to sources, lice infestations, lack of medical care, and restricted access to family visits have worsened his situation. Additionally, he has been barred from granting legal representation to his family for handling personal affairs.

Valizadeh’s case has drawn international condemnation, with organizations such as Reporters Without Borders and the Committee to Protect Journalists demanding his immediate release. The US State Department has called his arrest a violation of international law, but Valizadeh has criticized Washington for failing to take effective action beyond issuing statements.

Iran has been accused of hostage diplomacy, detaining foreign and dual nationals under vague security charges to use as leverage in diplomatic negotiations and receiving financial rewards. The European Parliament recently condemned this practice, calling for the release of EU detainees. Rights groups warn that such detentions often lead to prisoner exchanges for Iranians held abroad.

Sweden summons Iran's ambassador to seek release of dual national

Mar 7, 2025, 19:08 GMT+0

Sweden’s foreign ministry summoned Iran’s ambassador on Friday, demanding the immediate release of Ahmadreza Djalali, a Swedish-Iranian academic on death row in Tehran, citing serious concerns about his worsening health.

“We have received highly concerning reports about Ahmadreza Djalali’s deteriorating health," the ministry said in a statement, adding that Iran’s ambassador had been urgently summoned.

During the meeting Sweden urged Iran to free Djalali on humanitarian grounds, according to the statement. “The summons demanded that Ahmadreza Djalali be immediately released on humanitarian grounds so that he can be reunited with his family.”

Sweden also called for urgent medical treatment for Djalali as his health condition deteriorates. “At the same time, he must immediately receive the medical care he so clearly needs.”

Djalali, a specialist in disaster medicine, was arrested in 2016 during a visit to Iran and later sentenced to death on charges of espionage—a conviction widely criticized by international human rights organizations as unfounded. Amnesty International said his sentence was issued relying on forced confessions obtained under torture.

His health has significantly declined during his imprisonment, with reports indicating severe weight loss and inadequate medical attention.

He has has lost a considerable amount of weight and is in urgent need of medical care, according to a report by by Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter, citing Djalali's lawyer and family.

Additionally, Djalali has been experiencing dangerously low blood pressure, exacerbating concerns about his well-being, according to the report.

During Friday's meeting, Sweden said it asked Iran not to carry out Djalali's death sentence. “At the meeting, Sweden's clear protests against the death penalty and demands that it not be carried out were reiterated.”

In January, the European Parliament adopted a resolution demanding the immediate and unconditional release of all EU-Iranian dual nationals currently detained in Iranian prisons, including Djalali.

Iranian authorities crack down on Architecture Awards over hijab

Mar 7, 2025, 12:07 GMT+0

Iranian authorities have initiated legal proceedings against organizers, hosts, and attendees of the Iranian Architecture and Interior Design Award ceremony after some women appeared without mandatory hijabs.

Known as the "Fourth Night of Architects," the 12th Iranian Interior Design Award was held on January 20 at the National Library of Iran, attracting over 500 attendees.

Shortly afterward, videos emerged on social media showing women, including judges and participants, without headscarves.

The head of Iran's Public Security Police stated that under orders from Tehran's prosecutor, "swift and decisive action" was taken against those involved in "acts contrary to morality and public decency."

Police official Majid Fayz Jafari told domestic media on Friday that "the police do not compromise on citizens' security and will take firm action against those who deliberately violate the law."

Tehran's prosecutor Ali Salehi also confirmed legal action, alleging that "some women attended without observing the hijab, and moral and legal standards were not upheld."

This case is part of a broader enforcement of the Islamic Republic's hijab regulations.

Last month, Iranian singer Hiva Seifizadeh was arrested during a live performance at Tehran's "Emarat Roo Be Roo," prompting the venue to announce its closure until further notice.

Authorities have also expanded monitoring efforts, with reports of increasing warning messages and legal cases related to hijab violations.

According to the Dideban Azar website, some women received warnings through text messages, which, in certain cases, were sent to their family members.

In December, Tehran paused implementation of a controversial hijab law, which would impose harsher penalties on women and girls violating veiling requirements, following significant domestic and international backlash.

Yet, Iranian authorities continue to enforce existing hijab regulations, taking action against women who appear unveiled in public.

Earlier this week, 209 lawmakers signed a petition urging Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf to enforce the controversial "Chastity and Hijab Law."

Following that, UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk addressed the state's hijab policies.

"I call again on the authorities to repeal the (hijab) law fully and permanently, along with all other laws and practices that discriminate against women and girls," Turk said on Monday.

Rights group urges recognition of 'gender apartheid' in Iran

Mar 6, 2025, 16:39 GMT+0

A US-based rights group has urged governments to recognize what it called gender apartheid in Iran as a crime against humanity, arguing that the Islamic Republic systematically oppresses women.

"The oppression of women in Iran is not just discrimination—it is a deliberately designed, institutionalized system of domination intended to enforce the subjugation of women to maintain the state’s grip on power," said Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) director of communications, Bahar Ghandehari.

"This state-sanctioned systemic subjugation amounts to nothing less than gender apartheid, which fully meets the threshold of a crime against humanity," she added in the press release on Thursday.

Unlike racial apartheid, which is explicitly banned under international law, gender apartheid is not yet recognized as a distinct crime.

CHRI called on governments to support its inclusion in the proposed Crimes Against Humanity treaty, impose sanctions on officials enforcing discriminatory policies, and back UN investigations into rights abuses in Iran.

Earlier this year, Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi called on France's Senate to support the criminalization of gender apartheid and prioritize the fight for human and women's rights in Iran.

Tehran postponed implementing the controversial hijab law in December following a backlash from the public and the international community.

President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Wednesday he cannot implement the law due to popular opposition, after hardliners largely thwarted his agenda by pushing out top aides and rejecting his overtures to Washington.

The remarks, quoted by the head of his office in a post on X, were the strongest yet against a dormant law to tighten Islamic morality restrictions on women.

Popular opposition to hijab enforcement exploded in September 2022 when a young woman named Mahsa Jina Amini died in morality police custody, sparking nationwide protests dubbed the Woman Life Freedom movement.

The unrest was quashed with deadly force and opposition to the theocracy festered, but hardliners still drafted the new hijab law in May 2023.