Iran: Ahmadinejad's women ministers not representative

Source: 
Women's eNews
Since Iran's Ahmadinejad named the Islamic Republic's first women to cabinet-level posts, rights activists have denounced it as a cynical move. Leila Mouri explains why the nominees now facing Parliament don't represent her.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad--the man many Iranians believe stole the presidency in Iran's contested June 12 elections--two weeks ago nominated three women to head ministries and this week Iran's parliament begins the vetting process. These are the highest positions for which women have been nominated since the emergence of the Islamic Republic 30 years ago.
Since the nominations were announced high-ranking clerics and Ahmadinejad supporters have decried the appointments as anti-Islamic.

Iranian rights activists, meanwhile, have very different reasons for denouncing the president's historic nominations of female ministers.

We see a new strategy to undermine women's hard-fought human rights.

Our dismay is generated by two of the nominees: Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi as minister of health and Fatemeh Ajorlou as minister of social security and welfare.

The third woman, Fatemeh Keshavarz, nominated as minister of education, is harder to predict since she is a relative newcomer. So far all we really know about her is that she served as deputy to the previous education minister in a department devoted to mentally challenged students.

A Different Story

But the other two--Ajorlou and Dastjerdi--are a different story.

Ajorlou belongs to the conservative fraction in Iranian parliament and is staunch supporters of Ahmadinejad.

Dastjerdi is a former member of Parliament who belongs to Principalist Women, one of the conservative political parties that backed Ahmadinejad in the June elections.

Both Dastjerdi and Ajorlou supported Ahmadinejad's 2008 bill--turned back by Parliament--to limit married women's out-of-house work to six hours a day. The point of that bill: to enable them to spend more time for their "priority duties" such as serving their husbands and raising their children at home.

Ajorlou and Dastejerdi have both explicitly defended the idea of gender segregation in hospitals, universities, public transportations, parks and other public places.

Dastjerdi, a gynecologist, believes that women should be treated only in single-sex hospitals and only by female doctors; a suggestion that faced objections from, among other quarters, the medical community. Physicians and other clinicians argued that there were not enough female doctors to justify such an approach, particularly not in smaller town and cities that suffer shortages of all types of specialists, male or female.

However, Ahmadinejad's minister of health, Kamran Bagheri Lankarani embraced the idea and opened a female-only hospital in 2007 in south of Tehran. It joins at least one other such hospital, located in the holy city of Mashhad, in northeastern Iran.

Typical Approach

This kind of initiative is typical of the gender segregation that Ahmadinejad's administration has promoted since he took office in 2005.

The Aftab news agency has reported similar gender segregations in several other ministries.

The Ministry of Guidance and Islamic Culture, for instance, bans women after 6 p.m.

The Education Ministry in September 2005 announced that male teachers would no longer be permitted to teach in female-only schools. (Iran's schools are almost all single sex; the exceptions are in small villages lacking the money to provide gender-segregated facilities.)

Ajorlou, a parliamentarian from Karaj, a city west of the capital, Tehran, was a leading advocate of gender quotas to stem the rise of female students in Iran universities, where 64 percent of students are female.

"It is not fair that women are appearing with all of their maximum abilities in various scientific fields but the men have been remaining behind," the Ilna news agency quoted her at one point. She then went on to say that women should not enter the majors--she did not specify which ones--where they couldn't meet the physical requirements that came with the related careers.

'Proper' Attire V. Prostitute

Ajorlou also said in an interview with Masih Alinejad, a reformist Iranian journalist, that the destiny of women who do not wear "proper" hijab--or modest attire stipulated by strict interpretations of Islam--will be prostitution.

The remark shows how little concern she has for some of her Iranian "sisters" who think we have the right to choose our own attire.

Ahmadinejad's female nominees have shown several times that they are no better than male hardliners when it comes to women's status issues.

Ajorlou and Dastjerdi supported Ahmadinejad's proposed modification of the family law bill, which would have removed the current legal requirement that a man receive his first wife's permission for a second marriage. Women's rights activist worked hard last year against the modification. In a small but significant triumph for Iranian women, Parliament did not ratify the change.

Ahmadinjead has named these women knowing they will not stand up to him in any way.

By making this hollow--but superficially historic--gesture he thinks he'll also help to repair a reputation badly damaged by the fraud election.

But it's not going to fool too many and it's certainly not going to erase the brutality his security forces committed against political activists, women's rights defenders and people in the street.

Leila Mouri Sardar Abady is an Iranian journalist and women's rights activist. She has recently become a doctoral student of Middle Eastern and Asian Languages and Cultures at Columbia University in New York.

01 September 2009

Source: Women's eNews