Emancipating Women’s Rights in Iran: Nobel Peace Prize Awarded to Imprisoned Activist Narges Mohammadi

2023-10-06 09:18:00

The Nobel Peace Prize was crowned on Friday by Iranian human rights activist Narges Mohammadi, currently imprisoned in the Islamic Republic where bareheaded women blow a wind of emancipation despite repression.

The 51-year-old activist and journalist is being rewarded “for her fight once morest the oppression of women in Iran and her struggle to promote human rights and freedom for all,” said the president of the Norwegian Nobel committee, Berit Reiss-Andersen , in Oslo.

Vice-president of the Center for Human Rights Defenders founded by Shirin Ebadi, also a Nobel Prize winner in 2003, Narges Mohammadi has been repeatedly convicted and imprisoned for 25 years for her commitment once morest compulsory veiling for women, and the death sentence.

She was rewarded as Iran was hit last year by a vast protest movement triggered by the death of a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, Mahsa Amini, following her arrest in Tehran for non-compliance with the strict dress code. Islamic.

She and three fellow inmates burned their veils in the courtyard of Tehran’s Evin Prison to mark the anniversary of Mahsa Amini’s death on September 16.

Iran ranks 143rd – out of 146 countries – in the World Economic Forum (WEF) ranking on gender equality.

The “Women, Life, Freedom” uprising – a slogan with which Ms. Reiss-Andersen began her announcement on Friday – was violently repressed there: 551 demonstrators, including 68 children and 49 women, were killed by security forces, according to the NGO Iran Human Rights (IHR), and thousands of others arrested.

“No prospect of freedom”

If the protest is now more diffuse, it continues in different forms, posing to the Iranian authorities one of the greatest challenges since the 1979 revolution.

Scenes still unimaginable a year ago, women today go out revealed in public places despite the risks.

In September, the predominantly conservative Iranian Parliament toughened sanctions targeting women who refuse the veil.

“This year’s Peace Prize also recognizes the hundreds of thousands of people who, over the past year, have demonstrated once morest theocratic regimes’ policies of discrimination and oppression once morest women,” he said. Ms. Reiss-Andersen.

Arrested once more in 2021, Narges Mohammadi has not seen her children – who live in France with her husband – for eight years.

Ms. Reiss-Andersen said on Friday that she “hoped” for her release by the Iranian authorities.

20 years ago, the Nobel had already been awarded to an Iranian, the lawyer Shirin Ebadi, rewarded “for her efforts in favor of democracy and human rights”, and more particularly those of women and children. in his country.

In 2003, Ms. Ebadi defied Iranian conservatives by receiving her Nobel Prize in Oslo without wearing a hijab.

If she remains behind bars, Narges Mohammadi will not be able to go to the Norwegian capital to receive her Nobel – a diploma and a gold medal accompanied by 11 million crowns (nearly 980,000 euros) – on December 10.

The Peace Prize has repeatedly rewarded imprisoned activists, including the Belarusian Ales Beliatski last year, represented by his wife at the Nobel ceremony, and the Chinese Liu Xiaobo whose chair remained symbolically empty in 2010.

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