http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/world/21-iran-+slaps-travel-ban-on-poetess-on-womens-day-sk-48


Iran slaps travel ban on poetess on women's day 

Monday, 08 Mar, 2010 

 
In a part of the Muslim world where women are often perceived of as the 
repressed gender, images of Iranian women during and after the recent elections 
have catapulted Iran's female demonstrators into the forefront of the country's 
opposition movement. - AP PHOTO 
TEHRAN: Iran's most celebrated living poetess Simin Behbahani faced a travel 
ban after being prevented from leaving for France for International Women's Day 
ceremonies, an opposition website said.

Behbahani, 82, is also a feminist advocating better rights for Iranian women 
who face several inequalities under the Sharia-based law in place in the 
Islamic republic since its 1979 revolution.

Officials confiscated Behbahani's passport at Tehran's Imam Khomeini airport 
Monday morning as she was set to leave and told her to follow up the matter 
through the revolutionary court, Keleme.com said.

"Paris municipality had invited me for March 8 and I had prepared a text about 
feminism and a poem about women which I was going to read at the ceremony and 
return on Wednesday," Behbahani was quoted as saying.

"After I crossed customs and my passport was stamped, two officials called me, 
took my passport away, kept me till 5 am and asked questions," she said.

The octogenarian poet is close to Iran's Nobel peace prize winner and human 
rights campaigner Shirin Ebadi - both condemning the Islamic republic's 
treatment of women as discriminatory.

Behbahani was reportedly beaten up by security forces in a 2006 rally in a 
central Tehran park on Women's Day.

Iranian women's rights activists have for years called for changes to the 
Shiite country's laws which are deemed as unfair to women in marriage, divorce 
and inheritance.

Under Iranian laws, a woman's life and her testimony are valued at half those 
of a man. Married women can be prevented from working by their husbands and 
need his consent to obtain a passport.

Since the Islamic revolution three decades ago, women have been barred from 
working as judges and the age of legal responsibility has been lowered to nine 
for women compared to 15 for men.

Iranian authorities have cracked down on women's rights activists since 
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005. Scores have been arrested 
and jailed for organising rallies, petitioning or writing feminist articles.

Several have also been banned from leaving the country.

Iranian women account for over 60 percent of university entrants and came out 
strong in street protests against hardliner Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election 
last year. - AFP



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