Amnesty Calls For Release Of Iranian Women

(RFE/RL) March 6, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Amnesty International has called for the immediate release of more than 30 women activists who were arrested on March 4 while staging a peaceful protest in Tehran.

The women had gathered outside a court to protest the trial of four women's rights advocates charged in connection with a peaceful protest last June against discriminatory laws.


Amnesty's researcher on Iran, Drewery Dyke, told RFE/RL the latest arrests may be an attempt to prevent activists from marking International Women's Day on March 8.


"Rather than arresting peaceful demonstrators, the Iranian authorities should really be taking women's demands seriously, there's a serious and genuine demand for equality, equality before the law," Dyke said.


The Center of Human Rights Defenders, the Tehran-based rights group founded by Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebad, has also called on the Iranian authorities to release the women.

Women In Iran

Women In Iran

Women in Tehran (epa file photo)

CALLING FOR MORE RIGHTS: Although women played key roles in Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, the place of women in post-revolutionary society has been a vexing question. Iranian women have struggled to bring attention to their calls for greater rights in their country's rigid theocratic system, calls that have often clashed with the values proclaimed by conservatives in society. (more)


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