CRY FREEDOM.net
Welcome to cryfreedom.net,
formerly known as Womens
Liberation Front.
A website
that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolution as well
as especially for the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the
struggles of our sisters in other parts of the Middle East. This online magazine
that started December 2019 will
be published every week. Thank you for your time and interest. |
|
JINA MAHSA AMINI
The face of Iran's protests. Her life, her dreams
and her death.
In memory of Jina 'Mahsa' Amini, the cornerstone of the 'Zan.
Zendagi. Azadi revolution.
16 February 2023 | By Gino d'Artali
And also
Read all about the assasination of the 22 year young Jhina Mahsa
Amini or Zhina Mahsa Amini (Kurdistan-Iran) and the start of the Zan,
Zendagi, Azadi (Women, life, freedom) revolution in Iran
2022
and the latest news about the 'Women Live Freedom' Revolution per month in 2023: October
15 - 1
--
September 30 - 16
--
October 15 - 1
-- September 30 - 16
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September 17 - 1
--
August 31
- 18 --
August 15
- 1--
July 31 - 16
--July
15 -1--June
30 - 15--June 15-1--May 31 -16--
May 15-1--April--March--Feb--Jan
|
|
And
For all topics below
that may hopefully interest you click on the
image:
'BIOLOGICAL |
'IRANIAN JOURNALISTS |
'BLINDING |
CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE
Here we are to enter THE IRANIAN
WOMEN'S REVOLUTIONISTS against
'Facing Faces and
Facts 1-2' (2022) to commemorate the above named and more and food for
thought and inspiration to fight on.
Dear reader, from here on the 'Woman,
Life, Freedom' pages menu will look a bit different and this
to avoid too many pop-ups ,meaning the underlined period
in yellow tells you in what period you are and click on another
underlinded period to go there. However, when needed a certain
topic will be in yellow meaning it's a link to go that topic and
will open in a new window. If you dissagree about any change feel more than free to let me know what you
think at
info@cryfreedom.net
|
|
September 29 - 26, 2023
and more menu links to news untill September 1,
2023 |
2-weekly opinion by Gino d'Artali: |
When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi
figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da
qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so
called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali.
Center for Human Rights in Iran - September 28, 2023
<<Academic Year in Iran Begins with Imprisonment of Teachers, Arbitrary
Arrests
A year-long state crackdown on civil society and dissent in Iran has
been corroding the country's education system, resulting in the arrests
or detentions of at least 97 teachers over the past 12 months, as
revealed by research conducted by the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI).
Additionally, there have been at least 24 convictions of teachers on
groundless national security charges, at least 20,000 school principals
have been reportedly fired for allegedly allowing or supporting
protests, and hundreds of teacher union members have been fired or
arrested. <The Iranian government's deliberate obstruction of access to
education is aimed at ensuring that no child is exposed to a teacher
who's critical of the state or supportive of the rights to freedom of
speech and expression,> said Hadi Ghaemi, the executive director of CHRI.
<The Iranian government is striking at the heart of the country, the
education system, to suppress dissent and this warrants strong
international condemnation and action to prevent further harm to future
generations in the country,> Ghaemi said. CHRI urges international
education organizations, including UNESCO and UNICEF, to demand an
immediate cessation of the crackdown in schools and against teachers by
the Iranian government, which not only violates students' rights to free
speech and expression, but also impedes access to education. CHRI also
echoes the demand of thousands of teachers and teachers' unions in Iran
for the Islamic Republic to be removed from the governing board of the
International Labor Organization (ILO) for flagrantly violating the most
Fundamental Principles of the ILO, including freedom of association,
through the arbitrary arrests and firings of teachers.
Repression and Retaliation: The Ongoing Struggle of Iran's Teachers and
Principals
On September 27, 2023, three days after the official beginning of the
academic year in Iran, parents and students of Tehran's prestigious
Farzanegan High School for Girls organized a protest rally in front of
the Department of Education. The students also boycotted classes to
express outrage over the firing of their principal, who was replaced
with one who aligns with the state and has introduced stringent security
measures designed to suppress students' freedom of speech and
expression. Some 20,000 principals have been sacked and replaced in
Iranian high schools since last year, according to Iran's minister of
education, Rezamorad Sahraei. These cases involve female principals who
rejected the compulsory hijab and religious programs, educators who
openly criticized the government, and principals who refused to
collaborate with security forces in reporting dissenting teachers or
students, according to Abolfazl Rahimi-Shad,
a teacher and political activist in Tehran who was fired in May 2023 in
connection with the protests according to an order by the Ministry of
Education. <I believe the authorities are worried and want to prepare
for [Supreme Leader Ali] Khamenei’s death in the near future,> Rahimi-Shad
told CHRI. <They want to make sure all the government workers are loyal
and ready to take orders in case there are more protests.>
Union Activists Arrested, Fired and Subjected to Other Punitive Actions
Since May 2022, teachers and their trade unions, particularly the
Coordinating Council of the Iranian Teachers Trade Association (CCITTA),
have been subjected to severe pressure by security agencies, noted
Mohammad Habibi, a teachers' rights advocate in Iran who has been
imprisoned on sham charges for his peaceful advocacy of teachers rights.
<During this period, numerous union activists and teachers experienced
arrests or faced administrative disciplinary actions such as forced
retirement, exclusion from pay raises, or job termination,> he told CHRI.
On September 23, 2023, Habibi, the spokesman for the Iranian Teachers
Trade Association (ITTA) in Tehran, announced he had been permanently
fired for engaging in peaceful advocacy for teachers' rights to fair pay
and the ability to work without being fired for their political views.
He is a teacher with 21 years of service, but his appeal to the Ministry
of Education was swiftly rejected. Habibi was released from prison in
February 2023 after 10 months in prison on bogus national security
charges. Between June 2022 and September 2022, some 100-150 trade union
teachers were detained, including those arrested during earlier
protests, said Habibi, adding <Most were prosecuted, some sentenced, and
others await verdicts. Following the Jina Movement [the Women Life
Freedom protests of 2022], 15 to 20 more teachers were arrested for
participating in related activities.> Additionally, from January to
September 2023, about 200 teachers received disciplinary orders and lost
benefits, while around 100 union activists were compelled into
retirement or suspended, and nearly 20 were terminated, said Habibi,
noting that these figures are based on media reports, and many more
cases may have gone unreported due to fear of consequences. A new law
that imposes further punishments on unveiled women in Iran also
stipulates that teachers must be <evaluated with ideological questions
every year> to ensure they support the state's repressive policies,
according to Habibi. <In fact, the behavior of teachers during the year
will also be monitored even outside the school environment, including on
social media.> <Apart from pressure on local media to encourage balanced
reporting on the issue, activists and organizations should lean on
international institutions such as UNICEF and the International Labor
Organization, which the Islamic Republic is a member of, to gather
support for teachers in Iran,> he said. <These international
institutions should hold the authorities of the Islamic Republic
accountable and echo the voices of Iranian teachers and their problems,>
added Habibi.
Educators Targeted to Stamp Out Youth Activism
Teachers have become a target of the Iranian government for multiple
reasons. Not only do they represent one of the most organized union
forces in the country, consistently advocating for improved pay and the
release of teachers who are prisoners of conscience, but they have also
faced government scrutiny due to their connection with the recent
protests in Iran. For the first time in history, elementary and high
school students actively participated in anti-state protests that swept
across the nation last autumn. These protests were ignited by the
killing of 22-year-old Mahsa Jina Amini while in state custody, merely
three days after her arrest on charges related to her attire. Of
particular note, high school girls played a prominent role in these
demonstrations, bravely posting photos of themselves without the
mandated hijab and boldly chanting <Death to the dictator> in videos
that were widely shared on social media platforms. Teachers also
protested the government's refusal to thoroughly investigate and halt a
wave of poison gas attacks at mostly girls' high schools between
February and April. In response to the student-led and teachers'
protests, the Iranian government has taken severe measures, including
detaining, arresting, and dismissing teachers who have been accused of
supporting demonstrations, allowing students to protest or holding
memorials for students who were killed by state security forces at
protests last year.
Mehdi Sheibani is one of these teachers. For filming himself lighting a
birthday cake to mark what would have been the 18th birthday of his
former student, Abolfazl Adinezadeh, who was shot and killed by state
security forces at a street protest in September 2022, Sheibani was
detained.
<As the new academic year begins, we find ourselves in a situation where
numerous wise, responsible, and compassionate teachers are enduring
unjust imprisonment, expulsion, forced retirement, exile, and other
grossly unfair penalties. These reprisals stem from their rightful
pursuit of demands, advocacy, or responsible critique encompassing
cultural, political, social, and even educational matters,> said a
statement by the Iranian Teachers' 100,000 Signatures Campaign on the
commencement of the academic year, September 24, 2023. <Furthermore,
many students and some young learners, who were educated by these
dedicated educators in schools and universities, have suffered
imprisonment or been deprived of their right to access education due to
extrajudicial actions,> it added. The egregious violations of teachers'
fundamental rights in Iran, especially in the past year, have been
strongly condemned by Education International, one of the largest and
most influential international organizations dedicated to education
representing millions of educators worldwide. In recent weeks, Iranian
authorities cracked down on teachers and their union representatives to
suppress a resurgence of last year's rallies as the first anniversary of
the extrajudicial killing of Jina Mahsa Amini will be marked on 16
September,> said the statement, which called for the immediate release
of release jailed Iranian teacher unionists. <The government recognizes
that all facets of society in Iran want change, from high school
students to the elderly,> said Ghaemi. <Instead of bowing to the will of
the people, it’s trying to turn back this tide by eliminating anyone who
may criticize state policies.> The following teachers were convicted in
the past 10 months after sham trials severely lacking in internationally
recognized standards of due process, according to research by CHRI.
Their only <crime> was engaging in some form of peaceful protest against
repressive state policies.
1- Sara Siahpour, from Tehran, sentenced to six years in prison
2- Ahmad Alizadeh, from the city of Abdanan, Ilam province, sentenced to
six years and seven months in prison
3- Shaban Mohammadi, from the city of Marivan, West Azerbaijan province,
sentenced to five years in prison
4- Mojgan Bagheri, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced to
five years in prison
5- Asghar Amirzadegan, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced
to five years in prison
6- Gholamreza Gholami, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced
to five years in prison
7- Afshin Razmjooie, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced
to five years in prison
8- Iraj Rahnema, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced to
five years in prison
9- Mohammad Ali Razmkesh, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province,
sentenced to five years in prison
10- Sarvar Mollaie, from the city of Sanandaj, Kurdistan province,
sentenced to three years and six months in prison
11- Hamid Jafari, from the city of Kashan, Isfahan province, sentenced
to three years in prison
12- Zahra Esfandiari, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province, sentenced
to two years in prison
13- Abdolrazzagh Amiri, from the city of Shiraz, Fars province,
sentenced to two years in prison
14- Soleiman Abdi, from the city of Saqqez, Kurdistan province,
sentenced to 16 months in prison and 70 lashes
15- Mehdi Dastani, from the city of Yazd, Yazd province, sentenced to
one year in prison and 74 lashes
16- Salah Azadi, from the city of Marivan, West Azerbaijan province,
sentenced to one year in prison
17- Tahereh Naghiee, from Tehran, sentenced to six months in prison
18- Hamid Jafari Nasrabadi, from Kashan, Isfahan province, sentenced to
15 months in prison
19- Rahim Sarkar, from Qazvin, Qazvin province, sentenced to one year in
prison
20- Omid Shahmohammadi, from Divandareh, Kurdistan province, sentenced
to five years in prison
21- Parviz Ahsani, from Divandareh, Kurdistan province, was given a
suspended five-year prison sentence
22- Kaveh Mohammadzadeh, from Divandareh, Kurdistan province, was given
a suspended five-year prison sentence
23- Hiwa Ghoreishi, from Divandareh, Kurdistan province, was given a
suspended five-year prison sentence
24- Fatemeh Bahmani, from Divandareh, Kurdistan province, fined 10
million tomans ($243.00)
>>
Source:
https://iranhumanrights.org/2023/09/academic-year-in-iran-begins-with-imprisonment-of-teachers-arbitrary-arrests/
Women's Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2023