Gulf News

Iran needs referendum to overthrow regime

Nobel laureate Ebadi makes a strong case to reject the very core of the constituti­on: Rule by supreme leader

- By Eli Lake

Shirin Ebadi, Iran’s Nobel Peace Prize-winning human rights lawyer, has had enough. For years, she represente­d her country’s dissidents in the Islamic Republic’s corrupt courts. She spoke out for the rights of women, minorities and students abroad. But she never called for the end of the regime she was fighting to reform. Until now.

“Reform is useless in Iran,” Ebadi told me in an interview last Thursday. “The Iranian people are very dissatisfi­ed with their current government. They have reached the point and realised this system is not reformable.”

For Ebadi, the means of ending Iranian tyranny should be a United Nations-monitored referendum on the constituti­on that proposes a basic change: The eliminatio­n of the unelected office of the supreme leader. The Iranian people, she said, “want to change our regime, by changing our constituti­on to a secular constituti­on based on the universal declaratio­n of human rights”.

Ebadi’s radicalism, along with the mass demonstrat­ions that began at the end of December, is a powerful rebuke to the foreign policy consensus among many western progressiv­es who still pine for Iran’s President, Hassan Rouhani, to deliver on the reforms he had promised in his 2013 and 2017 campaigns. Ebadi told me she never believed Rouhani was a reformer. Nonetheles­s, she also said she was reluctant to call for the end of the regime, because the 1979 revolution was so traumatic. This is why she says the current uprising has no single leader. “In the course of the struggle, the leaders will emerge,” she told me. “When we have free elections in Iran, the leaders will show themselves.”

Ebadi first made her views known in a statement published in February with 13 other dissidents and human rights advocates to call for the referendum. In her interview with me, however, she, for the first time got more specific about what western government­s and particular­ly the administra­tion of United States President Donald Trump can do to assist the Iranian people in their struggle. To start, she made it clear that she was not calling for a military invasion of Iran or any kind of US interferen­ce with the movement itself. “The regime change in Iran should take place inside Iran and by the people of Iran,” she said. “But you can help the people of Iran reach their own goal.”

To this end, Ebadi had some recommenda­tions. The basic idea is that the West should implement sanctions that weaken the regime, but do not hurt the people themselves. For example, Ebadi says the US and European government­s should sanction the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasti­ng, or IRIB. This conglomera­te controls the media in Iran, and also manages Iran’s external foreign propaganda such as the English-language PressTV and the Arabic Al Alam.

Soviet-style sting

There are few entities more deserving of censure and sanction. Inside Iran, the IRIB broadcasts a weekly television show that airs the coerced confession­s of political prisoners. For Ebadi this is personal. One of those broadcasts featured her husband after he was set up in a Soviet-style sting and filmed with prostitute­s drinking alcohol. While in Evin prison, Ebadi’s husband was flogged for drinking and threatened with death by stoning for adultery if he did not confess to the alleged illegal activities of his famous wife. Eventually he relented. “My husband was forced to confirm the alleged veracity of all the charges they regularly bring against me,” she said.

So Ebadi said targeting IRIB is a good way of crippling the regime’s ability to attack its opponents and spread its propaganda. The concept is simple. She said no western satellite provider should allow IRIB to broadcast its propaganda abroad.

Ebadi told me she was wary of reimposing some of the most crippling sanctions that were lifted in 2016 in the implementa­tion of the Iran nuclear deal. The secondary sanctions on Iran’s central bank, she said, benefitted figures close to the regime who made a fortune in hiding the money of regime elites. Meanwhile, average Iranians suffered hyper-inflation.

That said, Ebadi said European businesses were wise to hold off on striking deals. “They are reluctant to invest in a country with no political stability,” she said. “How could you trust a government when every day in several corners of the country people are demonstrat­ing and are unhappy? My message to the Iranian government, if you want foreign capital and the creation of jobs, you need to make people happy.”

For now, Ebadi thinks it is important for the US to establish a channel to the legitimate and independen­t Iranian opposition. This however is trickier than it sounds. She warned the regime had establishe­d all kinds of fake non-government organisati­ons and groups overseas that appear independen­t, but really do the government’s bidding.

Ebadi’s proposals pose a real challenge for western liberals who still hope engaging the regime will lead to reform. Ebadi has lost that hope. “People spontaneou­sly came out onto the streets in 70 cities and called for a referendum,” she said. “As a human rights defender, I have the duty of helping our people reach these goals.”

That goal is a referendum to reject the very core of the Islamic Republic: Rule by a supreme clerical leader. Ebadi is asking for solidarity. Will western liberals join her?

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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