Welcome to P2PNET.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
Register | Login
RIAA News
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
TV
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Product News
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Search: 
Search
 
Web P2PNET   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
TekSavvy
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

Hosseinkhah, Javaheri: jailed in Iran

p2pnet news | Freedom:- Iranian Nobel peace laureate Shirin Ebadi says bail set for two jailed Iranian women’s rights activists, whom she says are innocent of charges laid against them by the country’s ruling authorities, is far too high.

Quoted by Agency France-Presse, Ebadi says Maryam Hosseinkhah, 27, and Jelveh Javaheri (right), 30, held in the infamous Evin prison in north Tehran, are innocent.

"A revolutionary court has issued a one-billion-rial ($107,000) bail for Hosseinkhah, who has been jailed since November 18 and a 500-million-rial ($57,000) bail for Javaheri, arrested on December 1," says the story.

We’ve been looking for an update but haven’t been able to find anything beyond a Human Rights Watch post saying trials were slated for December 18 and 19.

For now, Hosseinkhah, who writes for websites Zanestan and WeChange, has been in custody since November 18 while Javaheri was arrested on December 1, says Reporters Without Borders, going on the two women have been charged with publishing false information, disturbing public opinion and "publicity against the Islamic Republic".

All Iranian websites offering news about the country have been forced to register with the culture ministry, says RWB, adding:

"According to the council of ministers, insulting Islam or other monotheistic religions, spreading separatist ideologies, publishing false news or publishing news that invades privacy are all grounds for declaring a website illegal."

Hosseinkhah and Javaheri are among those who want to change Iran’s Sharia-based laws for women by collecting a million signatures online and in person, says AFP, adding:

"The two women were among the 33 women arrested in March outside a revolutionary court where fellow feminists were on trial for organising a protest in June 2006 in a Tehran square."

Of Evin Prison, "On June 23, 2003, Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi was arrested for taking photographs in front of the prison, an imprisonment which led to her beating and death in Iranian custody," says the Wikipedia.

"Doctors examining Kazemi found evidence of rape, torture and skull fracture. The Iranian government alleged that she died from a stroke whilst being interrogated."

"Women’s Rights Activists, Mahboubeh Hossein Zadeh and Nahid Keshavarz have been in jail since April 2, 2007, "for collecting signatures in support of the One Million Signatures Campaign, says Payvand’s Iran News. Here, it continues, is what Mahboubeh Hossein Zadeh has to say >>>

Source: Change for Equality, Iran (translated By Sussan Tahmasebi, April 14, 2007

"Our husbands are lying in enclosed graves and we are in open graves. We too ceased to live the very day that we killed our husbands." These are the words of a woman who spends her nights on the three story bed across from me. Her nights are filled with nightmares about the death of her husband—a husband she stabbed to death.

This is Evin prison—the women’s ward. Nahid and I do not fully comprehend which national security we have undermined, nonetheless with this charge we spend our days in limbo in the midst of these women. Ten of the 16 women with whom we have shared a cell for over a week, are here on charges of murdering their husbands. These women, having lost faith in a legal system that offers no hope and no protection, weave their days to the darkness of the night that lingers behind the tall walls of Evin. If our laws had the capacity to defend women charged with murder, they would not be here now, spending their time idly in waiting for the day that would swallow them—a term used by female inmates to describe execution day.

These women, they all seem kind and patient to me. They are women forced into marriages they did not choose, women who were forcibly married off at the age of 13 and 14, women whose husbands were chosen by their fathers…one of these women was forced into marriage through physical violence bestowed upon her by her father, who slapped her repeatedly until she accepted her fate. Until she accepted to marry a man who was 45 years her senior. Another woman continues to have nightmares about that doomed day four years ago, when she took matters into her own hands and murdered her husband. She worries about her daughters whom she turned over the state welfare organization for care. Others too, have similar stories.

Woman, mother, requests for divorce, discriminatory laws, murderers…all but one of them is under 40 years of age. She asks "why doesn’t anyone listen to our problems or pains?" "Where was the judge when my husband forced me onto the streets, into prostitution, in an effort to earn enough money to support his habit of addiction? What is one to do? Which laws were meant to support me? Which laws were intended to save me? Why didn’t the judge listen to my pleas? I grew weary. The law provided me with no refuge. I defended myself. Yes! I killed him!"

Another woman explains "my father said that we will lose face. I cried. I asked my father didn’t you marry me off by force at age 13? Now I want a divorce. My father refused. But when I saw my husband that night with another woman, in my own bed, I could no longer take the abuse." The victims are not just the women with whom I share a cell. The victims are all women in this land.

Today a few judges came for an official tour of the prison. Nahid was in visitation with her family when they came to our ward. The judge pokes his head into the cell and asks "are there any problems in this room?" It seems that the only problems with which female inmates could be faced are nutritional. He finds out that I am a reporter, so he goes further to ask about our other problems. I explain that I am charged with "actions against national security through spreading of propaganda against the State." He says that my presence in prison, given the fact that they have processed my paper work for release on a third party bail guarantee is illegal. Enthused, I ask his name so that I can quote a reliable source to counter our state of limbo and uncertainty, during these days when the judge assigned to our case does not feel the obligation to provide a response to our family or to our lawyer. Immediately the visiting judge retreats and explains: "there is no need to know my name. I should explain that the judge in charge of your case has the authority to keep you in prison for as long as he sees fit!"

And I laugh. He does not even have the courage to speak his name and to defend his opinion. A few other judges visiting the prison become excited. One speaks of Mehrangiz Kar and her effort to defend women’s rights. My heart aches and I feel a sadness as vast as all the days that Mehrangiz Kar, Shirin Ebadi and other women like them have spent in Evin prison, on charges of having defended women’s human rights. One of the judges pulls me to a corner to ask how I am being treated by the other inmates. Are we bothered here, he inquires. I recall the smoke filled cells of Ward One of Evin Prison (the punishment ward, as it is infamously referred to) and the immense feeling of insecurity we felt during our time there. I remember having stood at the foot of the stairs in Ward One, when several inmates began beating a woman, pushing her down the stairs. Several female inmates beat this woman, to an inch of her life, while others held her hands so that she could not escape. I watched frightened and stunned. Injured and fearful, she gazed at the eyes of on lookers for help, but there was no liberator or even prison guard present to provide her with a reprieve.

I wanted to tell the man about a girl, who wailing, in this very ward, smashed the television set in her cell to the ground. I wanted to speak about a girl whose scar filled arms, a testament to repeated attempts at suicide, shattered the glass of a window with her head. And this time, the prison guard was present, only to faint at the sight of this violence…

But instead I only told the judge that he should visit Ward One of Evin prison. To date, no reporter has managed to visit this Ward, and no reports about the condition of prisoners in this section of Evin have been prepared. Of course, according to the women in Ward One, no judge has ever visited this section of Evin prison either. The doors to this section remain perpetually closed—and even judges do not bear witness to the atrocities that take place there.

My dear mother, my sister and her small child have come to visit me. Nahid had a chance to speak with my mother as well, and heard her lament about the worries of my aging father. My nephew Soheil is a year and a half. He places his small hands on the window of the cabinet that divides us, and laughs out loud. My sister cries. Her tears are warranted. She is spending her last days with her child. After 4 months of uncertainty, with the unrelenting assistance and support of her lawyer, she has finally managed to get her husband to agree to a divorce, on condition that she give up all her rights, even rights to her child—this very small child, whose laughter and play had interrupted the silence of my mother’s home over the past four months. My sister worries for her child, and I feel more powerless than before when faced with her tears. She is only 23 years old. "I too am one of the victims of these laws" explains my sister. "From today onward, I will start collecting signatures in support of the Campaign. I will collect so many signatures, so that these laws finally change."

The female inmate who has now started to record her own experiences in a small diary, pulls me aside and asks: "can I help you in collecting signatures for the Campaign?" She wants me to use whatever means possible to get her a signature form, so that women who are condemned to spend their days at Evin prison, too can have the opportunity to create change for others. So that with their individual signatures they can bring hope to other women. And this reminds me of the last question asked by my interrogator before I was brought here "your demands in the Campaign, including banning of polygamy, equal rights to blood money and testimony, are in contradiction to the foundations of Islamic jurisprudence and the foundations of the Islamic Regime. Given these facts, will you continue to ask for changes in the laws?" In response to this question, I wrote: "Yes! I know that our demands are not in contradiction to Islam." And today, after this experience, I am more determined than ever and I write: "I ask for changes to these discriminatory laws. I ask them in an effort to honor the dignity of all the women in my country."

Stay tuned.

SlashdotSlashdot it! Add to Technorati Favorites

Also see:
Agency France-Presse – Ebadi protests high bail for Iran women activists, December 4, 2007
Human Rights Watch – LINDSAY LOHAN was named worst actress in 2007, January 2, 2008
Reporters Without Borders – 24 Internet cafés closed and 23 arrests as government steps up online crackdown, December 17, 2007
Payvand’s Iran News – Mahboubeh Hosseinzadeh writes from Evin prison: All Women are Victims, not Just those in Prison, April 17, 2007


Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. It’s really easy!

Subscribe to p2pnet.net | | rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss | | Mobile – http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php


Net access blocked by government restrictions? Use Psiphon from the Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto. Go here for details. Download here.

HOME

One Response to “Hosseinkhah, Javaheri: jailed in Iran”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    That Is Bull****.

    Iran is a dictatorship just like the Becoming-Dictatorship America. I have a feeling One day Our Wanting-To-Control President will control our media and sites like prisonplanet, infowars, and other small news sites would get shut down, and people are already tortured in Guantanamo Bay so I bet one day Bush will order any of us who don’t wanna obey the copyright laws, or constitutionally rebels against George W. Bush will be tortured, and all in the name of Protecting children, stopping molesters, stopping terrorists, stopping drugs (War on drugs), making piracy thats moral a crime, and then Bush just sits there and adds more restrictions to this country until one day we we will become like IRAN.

    Naomi was right, America is gonna End, well the worlds gonna end, or be destroyed by nuclear wars in 2012.

    That is no joke, the way America is Bull****ing the world, trying to enforce stupid copyright laws all over the freaken world, who elected Bush to control the world, thats right he cheated in the elections, SO America is a Fascist Nation now, and being of his BSing I predict every country is gonna start hating him, America and want us all dead, oh wait IRAN Hates us, China may hate us, Russia may hate us, and several other countries hate us so we are becoming a target for the end of the world in 2012.

    If America doesn’t stop policing the world, and it’s laws, this may lead to a nuclear conflict which will lead to our destruction all because Bush wants us all to cooperate with his views but won’t cooperate with others views.

Leave a Reply

Please no Spam, flaming (attacking others), trolling, and posting off-topic. Thanks.

    Advertisements
MP3Rocket


Remove Spyware with AntiSpyware for Windows®