Open Letter to Monthly Review
Editors
Dear friends,
In a recent posting on your web site, Rostam
Pourzal uses an anonymous email by a ‘witness’ in Tehran to deny the extent of
the repression of women demonstrators by vigilante Islamic police on 12
June 2006 (http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/pourzal180606.html
)
Pourzal tries to portray president Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad as a ‘popular’, ‘radical’ figure, and tries to underestimate,
justify and excuse the brutal, repressive nature of the Islamic regime in Iran;
in doing so he makes various assumptions and claims that we will deal with in a
another posting. However as far as the events of 12 June in Tehran are
concerned, contrary to the claims of the anonymous ‘observer’, the extent and
intensity of the brutal attack on the peaceful women’s demonstration was
far worse than that portrayed by the BBC and the international media.
It is sufficient to refer to comments and reports
by organisers and participants, most of whom have no fear of giving their real
names, despite the fact that they were arrested and imprisoned by the
regime’s security forces. In an effort to stop the protest, several prominent
women's rights activists were issued summonses in the middle of the night on
Saturday and on the days leading up to the protest. Since then, others have
been summoned for interrogation by phone or in writing. The women summoned
include Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani, Parvin Ardalan, Sussan Tahmasebi, Farnz Seify
and Fariba Davoodi Mohajer. Only Fariba Davoodi Mohajer received her summons in
person. Others were not at home or at their offices when agents arrived to
issue summons. Fariba Davoodi Mohajer was issued a summons in person at 11:00pm
on Saturday, and subsequently spent 10 hours in interrogation on 12th June. On
Monday morning, the day of the protest, another women’s rights activist who had
endorsed it, Shahla Entesari, was arrested in her place of employment.
Prior to the protest, a massive campaign of
harassment against those who had endorsed the protest was carried out by
security forces. Scores of women were summoned to court and interrogated,
including women's rights activists, student activists and webloggers, who had
spread word about the protest.
In refuting the superficial content of the
anonymous email quoted by Pourzal, we refer you to the photographs of
vigilante/policewomen attacking the demonstrators on 12 June, and to the
testimony of Parvin Ardalan and Noushin Khorassani, labour activists from Vahed
bus company who participated in the event. They wrote:
The principle demands were as follows:
• Abolition of polygamy
• The right of divorce by women
• Joint custody of children for mothers and
fathers
• Equal rights in family law
• Increasing the minimum legal age for girls
to 18 (currently it is 15)
• Equal rights for women as witnesses in
courts of law
According to official reports including that of the
Ministry of Justice 70 people (42 women and 28 men) were arrested by 13th
June 2006, while several women’s rights activists have been summoned to appear
in front of the Revolutionary Court and others have been sent to Evin Prison in
Tehran. In an interview with the daily ‘Shargh’ , the minister for
Intelligence, Mohsen Ajheii claims that the women’s demonstrations for equal
rights endangers‘national security’. Police attacks before and during the
protest were widely reported in dozens of blogs, they more or less agree on
both the level of attacks and methods used by women police officers armed with
batons:
Zahra, a law student, describes the day in
her blog:
"When we got there it was really scary.
Several police buses and cars covering the whole area. Cell phones were
obviously monitored because we were receiving suspicious text messages from an
unknown number...We got to the meeting point in the Hafte-Tir Square and saw
the police forces already being "busy" in three other spots. We sat
down and started chanting slogans..After about 5 minutes of confused stares
from the pedestrians at us we received the first surprise: the women police
force which are scarier than men for two reasons...First they are
"mahram" to women so they can kick and punch women without violating
any religious code and second they are strangely way more aggressive than men!
First they tried to force us by hand to get up and leave...When we resisted
they started using their nightsticks, after not very long the kicks and punches
and the nightstick beatings got very harsh...Right in front of my eyes one of
them beat Mana right in her head so badly that I don't think I will ever forget
the sound of it...All of sudden everywhere is red...The second surprise: they
are using a paint spray on us. We didn't realize first but they were marking us
so that they know later in the crowd who was sitting and resisting...Smart!
They finally forced us to get up and pushed us to
the center of the square while we were still chanting the anthem for Iran's
women movement. At least people are seeing us and you can see the objection and
sympathy in their eyes...The other side of the square is so crowded I can't
really see anything but I hear that they are arresting people...We are
scattered...This is partly bad because we are so scattered that we can not even
say why we are here so that they won't call all this "a police encounter
with women with bad Islamic Hijab".
"We said that that sitting in the park is not
a crime. They said, “Get up before we proceed to using other methods!”
…"They kicked us out of the park. They beat us and kicked us out. We
walked. Calm and peaceful. We walked around the park. They kicked us out. They
beat us up. Someone yelled and said, “I am your mother. Shame on you!” The
answer was the following: “ I do not have a bitch as my mother!” And then she
pushed the older lady very harshly. We left. They took us. Around the square we
were holding papers on which it was written, “Change the anti-woman laws!”, “We
demand the rights of a complete human being!” and then we started to whisper
collectively, “ We are women. We are humans. And yet we have no rights…” This
time they started to beat us from all sides. Not only men were beating us.
There were also women with chador (the garment) who were screaming: “Do not
argue with the police!” and as soon as someone would start to argue, they would
start to curse and kick them all over.
"We walked around the square. They took our
papers away and torn them into pieces. They pulled the crowd of young and old
women who were yelling out slogans and took them to their assigned busses. The
crowd resisted their forces. But there were many policemen and policewomen
around. It was odd. All of a sudden it seemed as if everyone around us was a
member of the moral police. We heard them over and over saying, “No worries. We
are not strangers!” I do not really know how many of us were there. All I know
is that it was not a small crowd and that we will increase in
number."
To summarise: the courage and determination of
Iranian women participating in this protest for equal rights went far beyond
what was suggested by the superficial references in Pourzal’s article.
We find it amazing that, instead of relying on very
accurate reporting of these events by bloggers, named and known individuals,
tens of very clear photographs of the use of batons by policemen and women,
Pourzal chooses to devote so much attention to an email by someone who doesn’t even
dare admit his identity.
Let us assume for a moment that the report in the
email received by Pourzal is correct, and that the demonstrators were not hit
by batons but by flowers. Shouldn’t one consider any effort by the state to
stop a peaceful demonstration by women in a park an act of aggression? Isn’t
this unnecessary violence?
Or let us pretend that nothing happened in Tehran
on 12 June. What does Pourzal have to say about the attacks on protesters in
Ahvaz(April 2006) , in Piranshahr, and in Tabriz (June 2006) , or the many
attacks by security forces on workers in Tehran, university students in Tehran,
Shiraz and Hamedan over the last few weeks?
Weren’t those attacks orchestrated by the
same government and the same president Ahmadinejad? Has Pourzal received any
anonymous reports about those incidents? Given the length of the article he
contributed about the 12 June events, shouldn’t he have used the opportunity to
dismiss all those incidents too!?
Clearly Pourzal is concerned that the US might use
claims about the regime’s anti-democratic and suppressive policies as an excuse
to attack Iran. We share this anxiety, however one cannot overcome this anxiety
by denying the realities of the regime’s brutal repression of its own citizens.
Can one stop imperialist aggression in Iran by denying or underestimating the
extent of dictatorship and repression in Iran?
It is regrettable that your web site has
recently become so apologetic about Iran’s Islamic regime. Many of us consider
this to be in total contrast to the radical traditions of Harry Magdoff , Paul
Sweezy , Ellen Woods… who considered anti-imperialist struggle as inseparable
from anti-capitalist struggles and the battle for democracy. Your site’s support
for – indeed, at times, adoration of – one of the most brutal, militarist
factions of the Islamic Republic regime in Iran, and your inaccurate reporting
of the economic stance of the Iranian president, whose main allies include
German neo-Nazis (an inevitable consequence of his Holocaust denial statements)
is an insult to the Iranian working class and its supporters worldwide.
We, Iranian feminist socialist activists are
alarmed that your political stance is damaging the reputation of your journal amongst
left wing activists inside and outside Iran. Lifelong translators of left wing
books and articles inside Iran have either been killed by this regime and its
death squads, e.g. Mohammad Mokhtari and Mohammad Pouyande, or they are in
prison for defending families of these dead left-wing writers, e.g. Nasser
Zarafshan – who happens to be a regular translator of your journal’s articles
to farsi. And yet you show no hesitation in defending their executioners and
jailers such as Ahmadinejad.
We enclose for your attention links to a number of
eyewitness statements about the
events of 12 June 2006, as well as some of the
recent statements by Iranian workers regarding this regime’s continuation of
the neo liberal economic policies of the last decade . We can assure you that
left-wing activists inside Iran will not rest until they have exposed the sham
reactionary anti-western slogans of this president, dished out by your web site
as anti-imperialism.
After all, many of us remember the consequences of
earlier shallow anti- American sloganising, culminating in disasters such as
‘Irangate’ – when the ‘anti Imperialist’ ayatollah Khomeiny ended up supporting
Nicaraguan Contras through payment for Israeli arms, via none other than Oliver
North!!
6th July 2006
Ardeshir Mehrdad -Co-editor Iran Bulletin Middle East Forum
Shahrzad Mojab - Professor and director of the
Women and Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto, Canada
Haideh Moghissi - Professor of Sociology – York
University, Canada
Cyrus Bina - Professor of Economics and Management –
University of Minnesota, USA
Yassamine Mather- Center for the Study of Socialist Theory
and Movements- Glasgow University, UK
Torab Saleth – Editorial board journal Critique
Saeed Rahnama - Professor of Political Sciences – York
University, Canada
Younes Parsa-Benab - Professor of Political Science at
Strayer University- Washington
Mehdi Kia- Co-editor Iran Bulletin Middle East Forum
Mansour Khaksar - Poet, Literary critic
Sulmaz Moradi - Socialist , feminist activist
Borzu Fuladvand - Socialist
activist
Fereshteh Shoja - Socialist,
feminist activist
Faramarz Dadvar - Center in
Defense of Freedom & Democracy in Iran-Chicago
Dr Morteza Mohit - Political Commenattor, writer
Sadegh Tehrani - Socialist activist
Hassan Hessam - Poet
Azar Sheibani - Department of Applied Social
Sciences, London Metropolitan University
http://www.kosoof.com/archive/281.php
http://www.flickr.com/photos/parsi/archives/date-posted/2006/06/12/