Business Day

Iranian people will triumph, Nobel winner says from jail

- Nerijus Adomaitis Oslo

The Iranian people will ultimately overcome authoritar­ianism imposed by a government that has lost legitimacy and public support, Nobel peace prize winner Narges Mohammadi said from prison in a speech read by her children on Sunday.

The Norwegian Nobel committee in October awarded the prize to Mohammadi, 51, for her non-violent fight “against oppression of women in Iran” and the promotion of human rights for all, in a rebuke to Tehran’s theocratic leaders.

Her 17-year-old twins, Kiana and Ali Rahmani, collected the prize, a gold medal and diploma, at a ceremony in Oslo attended by several hundred guests.

The prize includes a cheque for 11-million Swedish krona (about $1m).

In her speech, sent from Iran’s Evin prison, Mohammadi said continued resistance and non-violence are the best strategies to bring about change. “The Iranian people, with perseveran­ce, will overcome repression and authoritar­ianism. Have no doubt, this is certain,” she said in her speech read in French.

The women’s rights advocate is serving multiple sentences on charges including spreading propaganda against the Islamic Republic after her last arrest in November 2021.

“I write this message from behind the high, cold walls of a prison,” Mohammadi said, adding that her life and the lives of many activists in Iran have been a constant struggle “to stay alive”.

Mohammadi was symbolical­ly represente­d on stage in Oslo by her portrait and an empty chair, highlighti­ng that she is among only a handful of laureates to be prevented from attending the ceremony since the award’s 1901 inception.

She was awarded the prize just over a year after 22-yearold Mahsa Amini’s death in the custody of Iranian morality police after allegedly violating rules related to the hijab, an Islamic headscarf.

Amini’s death unleashed years of pent-up anger among Iranians over issues ranging from economic misery and discrimina­tion against ethnic minorities to stricter social and political controls.

Women, including schoolgirl­s, took off and burned hijabs, revolting against laws that oblige women to cover their hair and wear loose-fitting clothes. The nationwide protests were put down with deadly force.

“We believe that the mandatory hijab imposed by the government is neither a religious obligation or a cultural tradition, but rather a means of maintainin­g control and submission throughout society,” Mohammadi said.

Iran has called the protests Western-led subversion, accusing the Nobel committee of meddling and politicisi­ng the issue of human rights.

The protest movement, which adopted the slogan “Woman, Life Freedom”, has contribute­d to the expansion of civil resistance in Iran and went on despite severe government repression, Mohammadi said in her speech.

“The reality is that the Islamic Republic regime is at its lowest level of legitimacy and popular social support,” she said. “Now is the time for internatio­nal civil society to support Iranian civil society, and I will exert all my efforts in this regard.”

The Nobel peace prize is awarded annually on December 10, the anniversar­y of the death of Swedish industrial­ist Alfred Nobel, who founded the awards in his 1895 will.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa