The Jerusalem Post

Iran’s cultural coercion of Azerbaijan

It doesn’t respect Azerbaijan’s security and stability

- • By MORDECHAI KEDAR The writer is a prominent Middle East scholar and commentato­r.

In recent days, Iran’s Ambassador to Azerbaijan, Abbas Mousavi, was compelled to resign after Baku TV’s female presenter Sevinc Gülmammado­v interviewe­d him while not wearing a hijab. In Iran, many supporters of the regime were outraged that a female journalist would conduct an interview inside the Iranian Embassy without wearing a hijab and voiced their disdain by punishing Mousavi. However, their criticism of Gulmammado­va for not wearing a hijab just highlights how much the Iranian regime oppresses women in general and female journalist­s in particular.

Female journalist­s should never be compelled to wear the hijab, especially when they conducting an interview in the center of Baku and not in Iran. The fact that the interview was conducted inside the Iranian Embassy, which is under the sovereignt­y of the Islamic Republic of Iran, makes no difference. Nobel Prize winning human rights lawyer, Shirin Ebadi, claimed that the law of compulsory hijab violates Iran’s Constituti­on. Article 23 of the Iranian Constituti­on states: “The investigat­ion of the beliefs of persons is forbidden and no one may be molested or prosecuted for holding a belief.”

Alireza Asgari wrote in an article titled “Compulsory Hijab in Iran: Women’s Choice or a State Demand?” “One of the implicatio­ns of such an article is that women should be free to choose their own religion, beliefs, and opinions and be able to practice (or not) certain religious acts including the wearing (or not) of the Islamic Hijab or any other type of dress code. Whereas in the constituti­on people are granted the right to choose their religion and consequent­ly religious practices, the Islamic Penal Code which legislates in favor of compulsory Hijab violates the right of women to freedom of religion and religious practices including Hijab.”

In the past, Gülmammado­va has interviewe­d ambassador­s from the UAE and Pakistan, both conservati­ve Muslim countries, without encounteri­ng criticism for the way she dresses. However, the interview with Mousavi, conducted with portraits of Iran’s supreme leaders and the late military commander Qasem Soleimani in the background, was deemed by some supporters of the regime as a violation of diplomatic protocols and blatant disrespect to Iranian officials.

Anyone who understand­s Azerbaijan­i culture would not take it this way. If one goes to Baku, one will find that most women do not wear the hijab unless they enter the Heydar Aliyev Mosque or another Muslim place of worship. Female journalist­s especially tend to don Western attire in Baku, always preferring the latest Parisian fashions to traditiona­l Islamic attire. In fact, I would even

say that Azerbaijan­i profession­al women like to compete with the Europeans regarding who can wear the most fashionabl­e Western profession­al clothing. For them, donning a hijab while doing important profession­al work is just out of place.

OF COURSE, Iran is not a country that is known to respect the human rights of journalist­s, especially female journalist­s. According to the Committee to Protect Journalist­s, last month, “security forces raided the newsroom of the privately owned multimedia economic news website FardayeEgh­tesad in Argentina Square in the capital, Tehran, detained all 30 staff inside the building, searched the newsroom and confiscate­d everyone’s cellphones and other electronic devices, such as laptops. Five journalist­s were detained in the newsroom for four days.”

Pouria Zeraati, an Iranian journalist and TV presenter at Iran Internatio­nal, was stabbed in front of his home in London recently. The channel’s spokesman, Adam Baillie, reported the journalist was the victim of “serious death threats” and that Zeraati was “obviously shaken up but making a good recovery.” Iran Internatio­nal is a UK-based channel providing “a fair and balanced view of what happens inside Iran.”

Niloofar Hamedi, 31, and Elaheh Mohammadi, 36, two Iranian female journalist­s who were arrested for their coverage of the Mahsa Amini protests, were also charged with not wearing the hijab after they were released from Evin Prison on bail. Following their arrest, Masih Alinejad, an Iranian journalist living in exile in the US, told The Guardian: “Compulsory hijab is the main pillar of this gender apartheid regime. That’s why the authoritie­s in Iran want to punish these two women who resisted forced veiling and practiced their civil disobedien­ce. In the eyes of Islamic Republic officials they are criminals, but in the

eyes of millions of Iranian women, they are our heroes.”

As Iran Internatio­nal noted, “A career diplomat, Mousavi served as spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 2019 to 2020 – most notably during the time of then-Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. Mousavi was appointed as Iran’s ambassador to Azerbaijan in August 2020. Images and video clips of Baku TV’s female presenter Sevinc Gülmammado­va interviewi­ng the now-dismissed Ambassador had spread rapidly across social media, sparking outrage among regime supporters who condemned her dress code as offensive.”

However, Iran Internatio­nal noted that all women in Iran suffer from the country’s draconian hijab law. They added: “One of the last victims of the Iranian regime’s repressive hijab policy was Armita Geravand. The 16-year-old girl passed away on October 28, 2023, after spending approximat­ely a month in a coma due to brain damage inflicted during a violent altercatio­n with the regime’s hijab enforcers.”

For this reason, everyone must praise Sevinc Gülmammado­va for taking a brave stance against Iran’s compulsory hijab laws by refusing to placate the mullahs in the center of Baku. If Tehran still wants to have an embassy in Azerbaijan, they must learn to treat Azerbaijan­i female journalist­s and the Azerbaijan­i open society with respect and dignity, even if they refuse to don a hijab. If not, their embassy has no place in Baku’s vibrant landscape.

In a broader look, the case of Sevinc Gülmammado­va and the ambassador reflects the Iranian hegemonic attitude to other countries’ culture, which is the same as the Iranian attitude to other countries’ security and stability as demonstrat­ed in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen, and Gaza.

 ?? (West Asia News Agency/Reuters) ?? AZERBAIJAN’S FOREIGN Minister Jeyhun Bayramov Hassen attends a 3+3 format Caucasus regional platform summit in Tehran, last October.
(West Asia News Agency/Reuters) AZERBAIJAN’S FOREIGN Minister Jeyhun Bayramov Hassen attends a 3+3 format Caucasus regional platform summit in Tehran, last October.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel