Nobel laureate Ebadi says Iran's 'revolutionary process' is irreversible
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[February 03, 2023]
By Parisa Hafezi
DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi said
the death in custody of a young Iranian Kurdish woman last year has
sparked an irreversible "revolutionary process" that would eventually
lead to the collapse of the Islamic Republic.
Iran's clerical rulers have faced widespread unrest since Mahsa Amini
died in the custody of the morality police on Sept. 16 after she was
arrested for wearing "inappropriate attire".
Iran has blamed Amini's death on preexisting medical problems and has
accused the United States and other foes fomenting the unrest to
destabilise the clerical establishment.
As they have done in the past in the face of protests in the past four
decades, Iran's hardline rulers have cracked down hard. Authorities have
handed down dozens of death sentences to people involved in protests and
have carried out at least four hangings, in what rights activists say is
aimed at intimidating people and keep them off the streets.
A staunch critic of the clerical establishment that has ruled in Iran
since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, Ebadi has been one of the most
outspoken supporters of the anti-government demonstrations.
Like many critics of Iran's clerical rulers, Ebadi believes the current
wave of protests has been the boldest challenge to the establishment's
legitimacy yet.
"This revolutionary process is like a train that will not stop until it
reaches its final destination," said Ebadi,
who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 for her work defending human
rights and who has been in exile in London since 2009.
The 1979 revolution toppled Iran's Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, a secular
monarch allied with the West, and led to the formation of an Islamic
Republic.
With the latest protests ushering Iran into an era of deepening crisis
between the rulers and society at large, Amini's death has unbottled
years of anger among many Iranians over issues ranging from economic
misery and discrimination against ethnic minorities to tightening social
and political restrictions.
For months, Iranians from all walks of life have called for the fall of
the clerical establishment, chanting slogans against Supreme Leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
However, protests have slowed considerably since the hangings began.
They have been at their most intense in the Sunni-populated areas of
Iran and are currently mostly limited to those regions.
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Iranian Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
Shirin Ebadi poses for a photograph at the Thomson Reuters office in
London, Britain February 2, 2023. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett
Videos shared on social media, unverifiable by Reuters, showed
people chanting "Death to Khamenei" from rooftops in some cities,
but nothing on the scale of past months.
The rights group HRANA said that as of Wednesday, 527 protesters had
been killed during unrest, including 71 minors. It said 70 members
of the security forces had also been killed. As many as 19,262
protesters are believed to have been arrested, it said.
GROWING ANGER
Ebadi, speaking in a phone interview from London, said the state's
use of deadly violence will deepen anger felt by ordinary Iranians
about the clerical establishment because the their grievances remain
unaddressed.
"The protests have taken a different shape, but they have not
ended," Ebadi told Reuters in a phone interview from London.
With deepening economic misery, chiefly because of U.S. sanctions
over Tehran's disputed nuclear work, many Iranians are feeling the
pain of galloping inflation and rising joblessness.
Inflation has soared to over 50%, the highest level in decades.
Youth unemployment remains high with over 50% of Iranians being
pushed below the poverty line, according to reports by Iran's
Statistics Centre.
The crackdown has stoked diplomatic tensions at a time when talks to
revive Tehran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers are at a
standstill. The United States and its Western allies have slapped
sanctions on Iranian authorities and entities for their involvement
in the crackdown and other human rights abuses.
To force Iran's clerical establishment from power, Ebadi said the
West should take "practical steps" such as downgrading its political
ties with Iran by recalling its ambassadors from Tehran, and should
avoid reaching any agreement with the Islamic Republic, including
the nuclear deal.
(Writing by Parisa Hafezi; Editing by Michael Georgy and Frances
Kerry)
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