Montreal Gazette

Khomeini grandchild speaks out

Pro-democracy engineer fears arrest for criticizin­g leaders

- DAMIEN MCELROY LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH

A granddaugh­ter of Iran’s first supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, has attacked the current regime’s “deviation” from the goals of his revolution, criticized leaders for failing to allow democracy to flourish, and said she fears arrest and jail.

Naeimeh Eshraghi, a Tehran-based engineer, has told The Daily Telegraph that she wants to see an opening up of Iranian society with people free to express themselves.

But she also warned the West that the crippling sanctions being imposed on Iran were having the effect of increasing the suffering of the people while having little effect on the leaders.

Eshraghi is an enthusiast­ic user of Facebook and has on occasion shared her pro-democracy views and made critical comments about the country’s leadership. She has built up a following of about 5,000 friends on her account, which she can access only by using illegal “filtering busting” technology that circumvent­s the country’s firewall.

She said she felt it was a duty to resist the increasing­ly harsh system imposed by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, her grandfathe­r’s successor as a supreme leader.

“My grandfathe­r’s system of spiritual guidance of the government rested its legitimacy on people’s consent,” she said. “Today this theory of government has split many sections of our society from the regime and has led to a deviation from the earlier right path of the revolution.”

Eshraghi, a qualified petrochemi­cal engineer who last year supported a campaign against laws requiring women to wear hijabs, objects to the government’s efforts to close off Iran’s Internet users from the world.

“It is high time that the government­s of Iran resorted to practising democracy and refrained from confrontin­g individual­s and non-government groups.

“It should stop fearing the transfer of new communicat­ions technology,” she said.

“It is only when this happens and we have free and widespread communicat­ions and the opening up of our borders to the outside world, both geographic­ally and socially, that we can secure the progress and prosperity of Iran.”

Eshraghi said that despite her place in Iran’s most prominent revolution­ary family — pictures of her as a girl on her grandfathe­r’s lap form the strapline on her Facebook page — she was vulnerable to a crackdown on free speech on the Internet.

“Not only am I concerned that the security forces may one day knock on my door, but also in fact think that it is quite possible that this may happen and then I would not be different from many other prominent free thinkers of our country who have ended up being in jail,” she said.

But she added that the regime would face a backlash within the country’s establishm­ent for such a high-profile arrest.

Iran has well advanced plans to cut the entire country off from the world wide web and place all Internet activity within a nationwide intranet.

It has also establishe­d a force of “cyber-police” that has arrested dozens of Internet users. Gen Saeed Shokrian, the force’s commander, was sacked at the start of this month after an investigat­ion into the death of the blogger Sattar Beheshti in Tehran’s Evin prison, where he was being illegally detained. But the policing of online activity has continued.

Eshraghi said that her outspoken views were accepted within the family culture.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Naeimeh Eshraghi is the granddaugh­ter of Iran’s first Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
POSTMEDIA NEWS Naeimeh Eshraghi is the granddaugh­ter of Iran’s first Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

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