Maryam Namazie

   - *Gender:* Female
   - *Location:*
*London*<http://www.blogger.com/profile-find.g?t=l&loc0=GB&loc1&loc2=London>:
   *United Kingdom* <http://www.blogger.com/profile-find.g?t=l&loc0=GB>

About Me

This is my personal blog. Any comments made by me here are my own and don't
reflect the various campaigns I work on (unless of course they are
attributed to those campaigns). Some of my activities include being
spokesperson for Equal Rights Now, the One Law for All Campaign against
Sharia Law in Britain and the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain. I work
closely with Iran Solidarity, which I founded, and the International
Committee against Stoning on the Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani case and that of
others.* I am very much on the Left and am Central Committee and Political
Bureau member of the Worker-communist Party of Iran.* Some of my other
affiliations are: National Secular Society Honorary Associate and the NSS'
2005 Secularist of the Year award winner; Vice President of the Gay and
Lesbian Humanist Association; Honorary Associate of Rationalist
International; and Emeritus member of the Secular Humanist League of Brazil.
My blog has been rated one of the top 100 atheist blogs and I was selected
one of the top 45 women of the year 2007 by Elle magazine Quebec. Feel free
to comment on any entry and I'll try to respond as soon as possible.

http://maryamnamazie.blogspot.com/2011/08/if-youre-gay-in-iran-please-dont-make.html

Tuesday, August 02, 2011
 If you’re gay in Iran, please don’t make too much noise (per ‘gay rights’
activists)<http://maryamnamazie.blogspot.com/2011/08/if-youre-gay-in-iran-please-dont-make.html>
 I just received an email from Nick Cook of
DNA<http://www.dnamagazine.com.au/default.asp>,
the largest gay magazine in Australia, saying that I have been entirely
removed from a piece on the situation of gays in Iran because – get this –
‘Several of the other people [he] spoke to in the story convinced [him] to
remove [me] from it because they are concerned about the gay community being
linked to the political movement to overthrow the Government. Their fear is
that if gays become seen as agitating for revolution, the crackdown against
them will be even harsher.’

Frankly, I am not sure how much harsher it can get. I mean being gay is
already punishable by death under Sharia law. So is defending gay rights or
any rights for that matter. Just being interviewed by DNA magazine is an
offence in Iran, which might be why some of 'the others' quoted have not
even given their full names though they live abroad. After all, there are
130 offences punishable by death in Iran and many other offences for which
one can be imprisoned and so on.

Despite all this, these ‘other people’ are implying that agitation (or at
least my sort of agitation) is what causes crackdowns and not the existence
of an Islamic regime of Iran! I mean really? If they actually believe
that they can lessen the crackdown on gays by behaving a certain way, then
maybe they could stop being gay or having sex and hope it will all just go
away...

Seriously though, this shows an important difference in our politics that
reveals itself in various ways. I can’t see how gay rights activists can
defend Iranian gay rights without asking why gays need their rights defended
in the first place. You can’t merely complain about the situation of gays in
Iran and your having to flee the country when gay teenagers are being strung
up in city centres and killed in broad daylight.

Of course these activists have a right to express their views and organise
in any way they want. I don’t agree with their politics and they don’t agree
with mine. But unlike them I would never ask their views to be censored,
which interestingly DNA magazine has happily complied with (since unlike the
people of Australia we foreign type are all one homogeneous group that have
the same opinion on everything including gay rights).

Anyway I am reprinting the bits I have been quoted in below (from the
original draft):

Maryam Namazie is spokesperson of One Law For All, a lobby group that
campaigns against the Iranian regime.  She says Sharia law, the strict
Islamic code of ethics and behaviour that is in force, is the main reason
Iran is so violently homophobic. "Homophobia exists everywhere, but when the
state actually has a law that says gay people should be killed, it's a very
different and dangerous phenomenon. And it exists in places primarily where
religion and Islam are in political power."

...In 2007 Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad famously declared, during a
speech at New York's Columbia University, that "in Iran we don't have
homosexuals like in your country." Against a backdrop of boos and howls from
the audience, he went on. "In Iran we do not have this phenomenon, I don't
know who has told you that we have it." It is, of course, a ludicrous
statement. As Maryam says, "There are as many gays in Iran as anywhere else
in the world."

While several hundred gay Iranians manage to flee each year, there are
countless thousands left behind. They need help, but the best way to assist
them is not certain. Iranian Railroad For Queer Refugees director Arsham
Parsi says there is no quick political fix and that even if the Islamist
regime were toppled tomorrow it would not immediately help. "Society and
culture are more important than politics," he says. "If gay marriage were
legalised tomorrow there would be many people protesting against it. We need
to put more effort into cultural change before political change."

Maryam disagrees. She says, "In any society, even when homophobia is banned,
it still exists but a change in the law is an important first step. Changes
in law help to change culture and society. In Iran, to change Sharia law one
must get rid of the Islamic Republic of Iran. How can a regime that thinks
gays must die, women are sub-human and children are on par with animals be
reformed or remain in power?"

One of the great difficulties for the international LGBT community, which
watches developments in Iran with ever-growing horror, is knowing what can
be done to help... Furthermore, the Government can use protests by gay
groups in the West to defend its iron-fist policy on homosexuality, arguing
that as the protector of the Iranian cultural and religious traditions, it
has the mandate to eradicate these 'social ills'."

Maryam strongly disagrees with that line of thought and urges ever more
action. "I don't know when good old-fashioned international solidarity
became unhelpful," she says. "I think such a position is nonsense and only
helps to justify inaction in the face of brutality. People have a moral duty
to intervene and assist their fellow human beings. How can that be
unhelpful? We're not talking about US-led militarism and regime changes from
above, but people-to-people solidarity that has always helped change things
for the better."

According to Maryam, there is a groundswell of support for democracy in
Iran. "Even though 70 percent of the population in Iran were born under the
Islamic regime, a large majority don't want it. There is a huge anti-Islamic
backlash in Iran. The regime wants to blame the West, but it has only itself
to blame. It is antithetical with 21st Century lives."

She says there is plenty the international gay community can do to help,
including raising awareness of the issues within the wider community and
galvanising support against the execution of gays and others. "We also need
to show real solidarity with the movement there that is aiming to get rid of
the regime.”
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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