Mindanao Times

Iranian campaigner calls for vote boycott

-

ANTI-headscarf campaigner Shaparak Shajarizad­eh once believed in the potential for change in Iran but is now so despondent she is calling for a boycott of Friday’s parliament­ary elections in the Islamic Republic.

Shajarizad­eh became a dissident in 2018 when she was arrested for repeatedly removing her headscarf in public and waving it on the end of a stick, as part of a women’s rights protest that caused a social media storm.

“The Iranian people lost their hopes... I was among those who had some hopes. But now it is like choosing between bad and worse,” the 44-year-old women’s rights campaigner told AFP in Geneva, where she was attending an annual conference for human rights activists.

Shajarizad­eh said the supposed political choice in Iran between reformist and conservati­ve politician­s was like picking between “two faces of the same coin.”

Thousands of reformist and moderate candidates are in any case being barred from contesting the elections – something that critics say could turn the

vote into a choice between conservati­ves and ultraconse­rvatives.

Iranians “lost their hopes,” particular­ly after a bloody crackdown last year on fuel-price protests, she said.

Shajarizad­eh calls President Hassan Rohani, who was first elected in 2013 and again in 2017 and was once seen as a possible force for change, a “so-called reformer.” - Escape on foot The protest movement against Iran’s Islamic dress code began when in December 2017 when a woman, Vida Mohavedi, stood on a pillar box on Enghelab Avenue in Tehran without the mandatory long coat and raised her veil on a stick.

Enghelab means revolution in Farsi and the square and avenue are among the busiest areas in the capital.

Movahedi’s move sparked similar protests by other women like Shajarizad­eh and they soon won recognitio­n as “Dokhtarane enghelab,” or the Girls of Revolution Street.

“Young women are back in the streets,” she said – a reference to other demonstrat­ions in recent years which have seen women taking a leading role.

During her visit to Geneva, Shajarizad­eh received a prize for her defense of women’s rights in Iran but she talks about herself as an ordinary person whose life changed completely when she decided to join the protest.

She was arrested three times and beaten for her defiance.

She decided to run away, crossing the mountains into Turkey on foot with her head covered to avoid detection.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines