Iran dispatch: Nobel Peace Prize award to an imprisoned Iranian women’s rights activist will rally support for her fight – JURIST

Sharareh Abdolhoseinzadeh is a law student and a PhD in Political Sociology. She files this from Tehran. 

On Friday, the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to an imprisoned Iranian woman, Narges Mohammadi, a political and civil activist who has been in prison for many years. In selecting her, the Nobel Committee emphasized her connection with the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement and her standing as an inspiration for Iranian women. Of course, she has been in Evin prison before the “Women, Life, Freedom” protests even started, and it looks like she will remain there for some time, as her prison term was recently increased with a new case against her. But this has not stopped her efforts for human rights and democracy from inside the prison.

As the vice-president of the Human Rights Defenders Association in Iran, Mohammadi is the second Iranian to win the Nobel Peace Prize, exactly 20 years after Shirin Ebadi, the head of that association, received the award. Ebadi, living in London since 2009, said that Narges Mohammadi has spent “years of her life fighting for freedom, equality and protecting human rights.”

For many years, as a civil activist, Mohammadi talked about the human rights situation in Iran, the number of executions and the state of prisons, especially solitary confinement. In recent years, Mohammadi was not able to live with his family, who were forced to leave Iran. Taqi Rahmani, her husband, left Iran in January 2012, having been arrested more than eight times.

This is the Nobel Committee’s full statement, as released on Friday:

The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2023 to Narges Mohammadi for her fight against the oppression of women in Iran and her fight to promote human rights and freedom for all. Her brave struggle has come with tremendous personal costs. Altogether, the regime has arrested her 13 times, convicted her five times, and sentenced her to a total of 31 years in prison and 154 lashes. Ms Mohammadi is still in prison as I speak.

In September 2022 a young Kurdish woman, Mahsa Jina Amini, was killed while in the custody of the Iranian morality police. Her killing triggered the largest political demonstrations against Iran’s theocratic regime since it came to power in 1979. Under the slogan “Woman – Life – Freedom”, hundreds of thousands of Iranians took part in peaceful protests against the authorities’ brutality and oppression of women. The regime cracked down hard on the protests: more than 500 demonstrators were killed. Thousands were injured, including many who were blinded by rubber bullets fired by the police. At least 20 000 people were arrested and held in regime custody.

The motto adopted by the demonstrators – “Woman – Life – Freedom” – suitably expresses the dedication and work of Narges Mohammadi.

Woman. She fights for women against systematic discrimination and oppression.

Life. She supports women’s struggle for the right to live full and dignified lives. This struggle across Iran has been met with persecution, imprisonment, torture and even death.

Freedom. She fights for freedom of expression and the right of independence, and against rules requiring women to remain out of sight and to cover their bodies. The freedom demands expressed by demonstrators apply not only to women, but to the entire population.

In the 1990s, as a young physics student, Narges Mohammadi was already distinguishing herself as an advocate for equality and women’s rights. After concluding her studies, she worked as an engineer as well as a columnist in various reform-minded newspapers. In 2003 she became involved with the Defenders of Human Rights Center in Tehran, an organisation founded by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi. In 2011 Ms Mohammadi was arrested for the first time and sentenced to many years of imprisonment for her efforts to assist incarcerated activists and their families.

Two years later, after her release on bail, Ms Mohammadi immersed herself in a campaign against use of the death penalty. Iran has long been among the countries that execute the highest proportion of their inhabitants annually. Just since January 2022, more than 860 prisoners have been punished by death in Iran.

Her activism against the death penalty led to the re-arrest of Ms Mohammadi in 2015, and to a sentence of additional years behind walls. Upon her return to prison, she began opposing the regime’s systematic use of torture and sexualised violence against political prisoners, especially women, that is practised in Iranian prisons.

Last year’s wave of protests became known to the political prisoners held inside the notorious Evin prison in Tehran. Once again, Ms Mohammadi assumed leadership. From prison she expressed support for the demonstrators and organised solidarity actions among her fellow inmates. The prison authorities responded by imposing even stricter conditions. Ms Mohammadi was prohibited from receiving calls and visitors. She nevertheless managed to smuggle out an article which the New York Times published on the one-year anniversary of Mahsa Jina Amini’s killing. The message was: “The more of us they lock up, the stronger we become.” From captivity, Ms Mohammadi has helped to ensure that the protests have not ebbed out.

Narges Mohammadi is a woman, a human rights advocate, and a freedom fighter. In awarding her this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, the Norwegian Nobel Committee wishes to honour her courageous fight for human rights, freedom, and democracy in Iran. This year’s Peace Prize also recognises the hundreds of thousands of people who, in the preceding year, have demonstrated against the theocratic regime’s policies of discrimination and oppression targeting women. Only by embracing equal rights for all can the world achieve the fraternity between nations that Alfred Nobel sought to promote. The award to Narges Mohammadi follows a long tradition in which the Norwegian Nobel Committee has awarded the Peace Prize to those working to advance social justice, human rights, and democracy. These are important preconditions for lasting peace.

In a letter from Evin prison, 22 of Narges Mohammadi’s fellow political prisoners hailed the Peace Prize award “honoring her years of activity for the realization of freedom and equality and raising the voice of Iranian society’s demands and rights” and called it a step towards greater enlightenment. Their letter states, “We are proud of our sister and comrade-in-arms Narges, who gave color to the Nobel Peace Prize in the first year of the Jina movement (Mehsa Amini). The red color of the shed blood, which is the heat of the mothers of the petitioners, has been engraved on the emblem of the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize.”

The Islamic Republic has meanwhile condemned the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to a fighter against it. A number of officials in the Islamic Republic, without mentioning Narges Mohammadi, expressed their anger over awarding the Nobel Peace Prize to this well-known human rights activist. And in one of the first official reactions of the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Nobel Peace Prize award, Iran’s Foreign Minister tweeted that assassinated Iranian military officer Qassem Soleimani is “the most worthy symbol of world peace”.

The award of the Nobel Peace Prize to Narges Mohammadi will deepen international legitimacy and global awareness of the struggle of the opponents of the “Islamic Republic” to end political tyranny and establish a secular and democratic political system in Iran. Narges Mohammadi has signed several statements during her three decades of political struggle. From now on, every time she puts her signature on a statement, that text will become one signed by a “Nobel Peace Prize laureate” and this will cause that text to get broader wider international attention. Many elites, politicians and observers will follow her comments more seriously than before.

Opinions expressed in JURIST Dispatches are solely those of our correspondents in the field and do not necessarily reflect the views of JURIST’s editors, staff, donors or the University of Pittsburgh.


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