WNN Iran Report - 30 years ago, Dr. Shirin Ebadi, the first female judge in Iranian history,
was removed from her post when religious authorities in Iran declared that all women serving in the country as judges
were “unfit” to perform their duties. She was then immediately demoted to a position as administrative
clerk in the courtroom where she once presided. Dr. Ebadi was hit then by the inequities of women’s rights and
inequality in Iran, but she did not let that stop her.
During a time marked by political and religious upheaval, Shirin Ebadi found her path and continued her journey by
becoming a human rights advocate and attorney serving the public as she helped those who looked to her to provide
counsel on the interpretation of rights under Iranian law.
In 2003, Dr. Ebadi received the Nobel Peace Prize, “for her efforts for democracy and human rights” as she
“focused on the struggle for the rights of women and children.” Almost six years later, in Feb 2009, the struggle
to defend human rights in Iran continues.
“The issues facing us today are increasingly complex. A certain number of states have ignored the rules of
international law to impose relations dominated by force. Domestically, repression is increasingly often gaining the
upper hand over the respect of rights and freedoms,” said Ebadi to human rights defenders, FIDH – International
Federation of Human Rights.
Over the past years, Ebadi has been the target of threats, arrests and assassination attempts, but she is not
slowing down. She keeps moving forward. Today she continues, in spite of recent reversals, to represent victims of
human rights injustice and discrimination in Iran.
“I realize that putting so much store in political dialogue seems overly optimistic, given the gulf that exists
between the West’s expectations of Iran and the Iranian system’s inclination to compromise. I focus on the
political process not because I imagine we will refashion a new relationship around the negotiating table anytime
soon but because I see no other options ahead. Iran, for its part, must peacefully transition to a democratic
government that represents the will of the majority of Iranians,” said Ebadi in her 2006 book, “Iran Awakening.”
Now at the age of 61, her life is in more danger than ever. A sentence for “death” has recently been written by
vandals on the walls outside her home and office in Tehran and pinned on her door. But the fearless Iranian human
rights lawyer has a deep conviction that, “When you believe in the correctness of your work, there is no reason to
be afraid of anything.”
Recently, only a few weeks following an invitation to give a series of public lectures for the University of
Malaya, the Malaysian Ministry of Foreign Affairs suddenly cancelled Ebadi’s speaking tour. “Dr. Shirin Ebadi is a
strong critic (of the Iran government),” said the Ministry. “Her public speaking engagements in Malaysia would
cause a disruption of the good relations between the governments of Malaysia and Iran, especially in the field of
education,” continued the Ministry’s office communication.
“On the brink of the 10th anniversary of the UN Declaration of Human Rights Defenders and the 60th anniversary
year of the International Declaration of Human Rights, it is ironic that a 2003 Nobel Peace Prize laureate
has been censured in Malaysia.
As Ebadi’s censured visit came to a close, on Sunday Dec 21, 2008, plain-clothes and uniformed police and
security officials raided the offices of the DHRC - Defenders of Human Rights Center. DHRC staff speculates that
the closure was in part pushed through on the heels of a Oct 2008 negative report on Iran’s human
rights by UN General Assembly.
Now the subsequent complete closure of the DHRC building in Tehran has come as a very hard blow to human rights
defenders worldwide. DHRC cases defending women rights activists, prisoners of conscience, journalists and students
in Iran have been compromised, along with DHRC documentation of families of prisoners with reports of human
rights abuse. In addition to this, the DHRC committee of investigation on fair elections has now been forced to
completely halt its work for the upcoming April elections in Iran.
“The closure of DHRC is not just an attack on Shirin Ebadi and her Iranian colleagues, but on the entire
international human rights community of which she is an influential and important member,” said Kenneth Roth,
executive director of Human Rights Watch.
As global human rights are also put to the test in the US with new administration policies in the closing of
Guantanamo Bay Detention Camp along with government interests in the withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, the record of
human rights abuse by the US is also in the global public eye. Speaking up for the greater good is ringing strongly
throughout global communities.
“Thirty years on, some of the worst abuses of the Shah’s time – torture, executions and the suppression of
legitimate dissent – are still being replicated in Iran,” said Malcolm Smart, Director of Amnesty International’s
Middle East and North Africa Program, “despite the efforts of the country’s growing and valiant community of human
rights defenders.”
“It is high time that Iranian authorities lived up to their obligations under international human rights law,”
added Smart.
On the 30th anniversary of the Iranian revolution, a new and innovative opportunity to address the status of
democracy in Iran may be secretly on the mind of many Iranian citizens. Many who participated in Iran’s
revolution 30 yrs ago had high hopes for freedom and independence, dignity and rights. But the hopes and
aspirations of Iranian women were shadowed by despair in the early months of the new Islamic Republic.
As new government policies in the post revolution “Spring of Freedom” responded to widespread opposition to the
idea of mandatory Islamic dress for women, including requirements to wear the Hijab, relaxation of the codes were not
encouraged as Iran’s government took a step back only a few months later.
“As long as I am alive, I will do my duty and activities,” said Ebadi to the press recently.
Exposing Ebadi to higher risks and dangers, her advocacy work on issues related to human rights violations in Iran
and her defense in the human rights of Iran’s Baha’i community, has placed her in an undeserved dangerous and
very precarious position.
When she received the Nobel Peace prize in 2003, she used the 1.4 million prize money to found and finance
the opening of a center for legal rights counsel in Tehran called the DHRC - Defender of Human Rights Center.
Recently, in Feb 2008, Ebadi and her family suffered under the weight of her human rights convictions as the
government sponsored, IRNA - Islamic Republic News Agency, published a series of articles falsely claiming that she
and her daughter, a student at Canada’s McGill University, had converted from Islam to a religion currently
considered by the Iranian government to be part of a heretical and unrecognized minority - the Baha’i religion.
Leaving the Iranian Islamic State religion is a serious crime in Iran called “apostasy” and being accused of
this “crime” cannot be taken lightly. “The penalty for apostasy Kofr (infidelity, blasphemy) under the
Iranian criminal code is death,” states Section 5, Article 225-1 of the pending Iran State Penal Code.
The drive to formally include apostasy laws and to enact “justice” under the penal code has caused “deep
concern” at the United Nations. On the Oct 30, 2008 UN General Assembly session, the Assembly expressed concern
about Iran’s “increasing discrimination and other human rights violations against persons belonging to religious,
ethnic, linguistic or other minorities.” Groups recognized as suffering under the report include Arabs, Azeris,
Baluchis, Kurds, Christians, Jews, Sufis and Sunni Muslims, as well as Baha’is and their defenders.
“Particular attacks on Baha’is and their faith in State-sponsored media, increasing evidence of efforts by the
State to identify and monitor Baha’is, preventing members of the Baha’i faith from attending university and from
sustaining themselves economically,” along with Baha’i arrests, were also highlighted in the General Assembly
report.
Under government scrutiny and the implication in pending Iranian law on the charges of “apostasy,” Shirin Ebadi
and her daughter are clearly facing personal danger with a looming and dangerously real sentence of death.
She and her daughter promptly denounced the false accusation in public when Ebadi said, “Threats against my life
and security and those of my family, which began some time ago, have intensified.” An anonymous, handwritten
threat that Ebadi has received during this time says, “Shirin Ebadi, your death is near.”
Oct 2008 threats and harassment against Ms. Ebadi also escalated while she was in Germany receiving the
“Tolerance Prize” from the Protestant Academy of Tutzing. While receiving the prize, the IRNA - Islamic Republic
News Agency warned Ebadi that she was not in favour with Iran’s government officials. They went on to explain,
that Ebadi was exploiting Iran’s government authority’s “patience and tolerance.”
“This (Tolerance Prize) award was bestowed on her because of her remarks that are contrary to the interests of
the Iranian nation,” stated the IRNA.
Since the revolution, 30 yrs ago, the population of Iran has doubled. 70 percent of all Iranians are the same age,
or younger than, those who took part in the revolution. Today, these youth are eager to just “live their lives” and
be part of the global community. Out of two million students attending higher education, more than 60% today are
women. 30 years ago, of the 100,000 students attending institutions of higher education in Iran, only 17.5% were
females.