Masowe aresztowania nauczycieli w Iranie

Świat | Prawa kobiet/Feminizm | Prawa pracownika | Protesty | Represje

Ponad tysiąc nauczycieli zostało aresztowanych w Iranie podczas strajku i demonstracji w tym tygodniu. Ponad 100 tys. nauczycieli strajkowało. W tym samym czasie wybuchły protesty o prawa kobiet.

8 marca zaplanowany był protest za prawami kobiet pomimo inwigilacji rządu i represji. Niestety policja nie pozwoliła na rozpoczęcie demonstracji każda osoba, która próbowała demonstrować została pobita i zatrzymana. Co najmniej 25 osób zostało zatrzymanych przed uniwersytetem.

Demonstranci próbowali przejść do innego miejsca, ale zostali zaatakowani przez policję. Także ponad 200 osób pojawiło się przed parlamentem w pikiecie solidarności z zatrzymanymi 4 marca.

4 marca 700 osób demonstrowało w Teheranie przeciwko nowym przepisom dotyczącym ubrań kobiet na uniwersytecie. Kilka demonstracji miało miejsce w innych miastach od 4-8 marca.

Równolege 5 marca ponad 100 tys. nauczycieli zaczęło strajkować. 8 marca także oni zorganizowali masowe protesty, m.in. za wyższymi pensjami i o wypłatę zaległych pensji. Pracownicy innych branż przyłączyli się protestu. Ponad tysiąc nauczycieli zostało aresztowanych.

Więcej wkrótce!

Gdyby władzę w USA mieli

Gdyby władzę w USA mieli Demokraci, już szykowaliby się do wojny w imię "praw kobiet". Republikanie wolą uzasadniać działania kompleksu militarno-przemysłowego wojną z terroryzmem, a Demokraci wojną o prawa człowieka. Wystarczy spojrzeć na historię interwencji zbrojnych USA, w której od ponad 100 lat nie ma nawet dekady bez kilku interwencji, by zorientować się, że wszelkie uzasadnienia dodawane są dopiero wtedy, gdy plan ataku jest już gotowy.

Yaku...!

Dokładnie zadziwiające tylko jest, do jakiego stopnia zmanipulowane jest społeczeństwo amerykańskie i jak dalece skorumpowane są media w USA. Najlepiej widać to na przykładzie wojny w Iraku gdzie już dawno udowodniono, że wszystkie powody jej rozpoczęcia były wyssanymi z d… bzdurami.

bardzo podoba mi się

bardzo podoba mi się zakończenie powyższego kometa, tak, własnie w ten sposób powstają plany wojenne!

Women in Iran: Repression and resistance

http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?itemid=12278

Women in Iran: Repression and resistance
by Nasrin Alavi

March 06, 2007
openDemocracy.net
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The claim of rights by women in modern Iran builds on the pioneering work of earlier generations, reports Nasrin Alavi.

Iranians are the first to know how easy it is for a whole nation to be reduced to the rants of a senseless politician, or for images of a handful of shroud-wearing crazies burning the American flag in Tehran to reach the western media's front-pages. But how easy is it for thousands of Iranian teachers protesting outside the Iranian majlis (parliament) - as they did on Saturday 3 March 2007 - to merit any attention?

Not very, is the answer - and especially when the drums of war are being sounded. At such times, it is more convenient to dehumanize the prospective enemy than to see this enemy as it is - composed not of 70 million Mahmoud Ahmadinejad clones but of diligent nurses, factory workers, dear uncles and aunts, poets, writers, filmmakers, students cramming for their exams, lovelorn teenagers, and, yes, protesting teachers.

It is not only teachers who are protesting. On Sunday 4 March, around thirty-three Iranian women - as far removed from Ahmadinejad as you can get - were arrested in Tehran. These women had gathered outside Tehran's revolutionary court in solidarity with five of their friends, charged with organizing a rally in June 2006 against discriminatory laws against women.

Only two days earlier, they had published an open letter asserting their rights to the freedom of peaceful assembly that are afforded them by the Islamic Republic's constitutional laws:

"International Women's Day is soon upon us as our nation endures a grave period. The internal policies of domination, duress and an ineffectual foreign policy - with an insistence on pursuing a nuclear energy program - when we have lost the confidence and trust of the world; as the confrontational issues and the continuous warmongering policies of the United States and its allies around the world with the pretext of exporting democracy and human right through sanctions and military attack has presented us with a mounting predicament. On one side - with the absence of a democratic structure - we witness decisions being made on our behalf without our presence or the presence of our legitimate leaders. While at the other end we feel the circle of the siege around us increasingly tighten as we are threatened with sanctions and the nightmare of war[…]

[…][W]e announce our protest against all paternalistic policies, whether they be in the name of dishonest interpretations of Islam or with the pretext of human rights and democracy and we believe what the world community should insist upon debates on democracy and human rights and not nuclear energy, and all within peaceful diplomatic dialogue, not war and destruction[…]

[…]Despite all the pressures and obstacles the Iranian women's movement in now within its most enduring and active periods in recent history."

On their own terms

Iranian women have come a long way in their struggle for rights. Morgan Shuster lived in Iran at the turn of the century and wrote about his experiences. "The Persian women since 1907 had become almost at a bound the most progressive, not to say radical, in the world; that this statement upsets the ideas of centuries makes no difference. It is a fact […] In Tehran alone, twelve women's associations were involved in different social and political activities. [Iranian women] overnight become teachers, newspaper writers, founders of women's clubs and speakers on political subjects."

The westernized lifestyles that were available to some Iranian women were lost with the Islamic Revolution of 1979. But even the most radical clerics realized that Iran's culture would not stand the strictures imposed in such countries as Saudi Arabia. As Nikki R Keddie has observed: "More than many women in the Islamic world, Iranian women occupy public spaces. Even as wives and mothers, they work, vote, drive, shop and hold professional positions as doctors, lawyers, corporate executives and deputies in Parliament."

Before the Islamic revolution of 1979, the majority of women chose to cover their heads in public in some way and the requirement that women wear Islamic covering may have helped some of them to gain an education and emancipation, especially in traditional families, as they did not need to go through a drastic cultural makeover to enter the work force. In 1975, women's illiteracy in rural areas was 90 percent and more than 45 percent in towns. Now, the nationwide literacy rate for girls aged between 15 and 24 has risen to 97 percent; while female students in state universities outnumber male ones.

Women have transformed Iran since the revolution. A third of all doctors, 60 percent of civil servants and 80 percent of all teachers in Iran are women. Some people believe the regime is immune to change, but many others, especially women, are experts at finding ways round the constraints of the patriarchal system. These women activists are less interested in whether or not to wear the veil and more concerned with gaining access to education, wider employment opportunities, equality at work and better health care for their families.

Iranian women's advances have not come about overnight; they represent a long history of hard-fought grassroots struggle. Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani, one of the women under arrest tonight, writes in the March 2007 issue of the New Internationalist about a day spent going door to door in Tehran in a campaign to get a million signatures in support of women's rights, and about her apprehension of ringing the first doorbell in her old neighborhood:

"What crime am I about to commit that I feel so scared. Why should I be scared when I'm not doing anything wrong? When my government defends its 'inalienable rights' [to nuclear power], why shouldn't I defend my own inalienable rights?

[…]A woman wearing a chador comes to the door. The small flowers on her chador are pretty. She looks apprehensive. Her face is puffy and it seems that just like me, she's not had enough sleep last night. I calm down a bit after seeing her face. I am happy to be able to see her face. I think that had it not been for the womanly bravery of Tahereh a century and a half ago that enabled her to discard her nighab, I would have had to talk to my fellow citizen without being able to see her face. Even talking to someone 'face to face' would have been meaningless then..."

(The reference is to women's-rights activist Tahereh [Qurrat-al-Ain, 1814-1854], whose removal of her veil provoked a huge uproar).

Shadi Sadr, publisher, lawyer and journalist, and another one of the women under arrest, wrote in 2004:

"Today Iranian women […] have imposed themselves on a male-dominated society which still believes women should stay at home. Perhaps nobody sees us, but we exist and we make our mark on the world around us. I assure you that if you look around carefully, everywhere you will see our footsteps."

Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani wrote before her arrest:

"Perhaps we will be imprisoned and become weary with the continuous summons to court. Perhaps we will not be able to continue along our path and educate our female counterparts about the existence of such discriminatory laws. But, what will you do with the countless women who come into contact with the court system - in fact, these very courts are the best educational facilities for women, through which they quickly learn that in fact they have no rights. Yes, perhaps with your security planning and your modern technology, you may be able to isolate and paralyze the current generation of Iranian women's rights activists, and stop the progression of our campaign, but what will you do with the love that we plant in the hearts of our children? Perhaps with your advanced technology, you will be able to attack the hearts of our personal computers, but what will you do with our dreams?"

punkt widzenie aktywistki w Iranie

http://persianperspective.wordpress.com/2007/03/08/on-iranian-womens-movement-2/

On Iranian Women’s Movement

Thursday, March 8th, 2007 in Politics

In the last few days, Tehran has been watching numerous protests by women and teachers, pointedly aimed at Ahmadinejad’s inefficient internal policies and confrontational and moronic foreign policy, reminding the Mullahs that women’s rights and support of the working class are more important issues than the nuclear program and Middle East conflicts.

33 female activists have been arrested in recent days and teachers’ protests in front of the Iranian parliament is ongoing. In a recent open letter female activists state,

International Women’s Day is soon upon us as our nation endures a grave period. The internal policies of domination, duress and an ineffectual foreign policy - with an insistence on pursuing a nuclear energy programme - when we have lost the confidence and trust of the world; as the confrontational issues and the continuous warmongering policies of the United State and its allies around the world with the pretext of exporting democracy and human right through sanctions and military attack has presented us with a mounting predicament. On one side - with the absence of a democratic structure - we witness decisions being made on our behalf without our presence or the presence of our legitimate leaders. While at the other end we feel the circle of the siege around us increasingly tighten as we are threatened with sanctions and the nightmare of war….

… we announce our protest against all paternalistic policies, whether they be in the name of dishonest interpretations of Islam or with the pretext of human rights and democracy and we believe what the world community should insist upon debates on democracy and human rights and not nuclear energy, and all within peaceful diplomatic dialogue, not war and destruction….

… Despite all the pressures and obstacles the Iranian women’s movement in now within its most enduring and active periods in recent history.

(emphasis added)

This article provides some further insight into the matters.

I would like to remind you that Iran’s Women’s movement is an aggressive front and has been so for quite some time, just another feature of the Iranian society setting it aside from most of its neighbors, e.g. Saudi Arabia, where women’s status is largely unknown and women’s movements are unheard of.

manipulacja

>>Dokładnie zadziwiające tylko jest, do jakiego stopnia zmanipulowane jest społeczeństwo amerykańskie

Dlaczego? A czy jest bardziej zmanipulowane niż inne?

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