Saturday, December 10, 2011

My Commentary on Aljazeera's "Listening Post"


Quoted from Listening Post program blog: 
Over the past couple of months, Iran has been in the news, and the news has not been good. There was the alleged Iranian plot to assassinate a Saudi diplomat. Then came the International Atomic Agency's latest report on the country's nuclear programme. And in November, hundreds of Iranians stormed the British embassy in Tehran. Behind the headlines however, there has been another story - Iran's media conflict with the West, especially the UK.
Within Iran, BBC's Persian service is on the authorities' blacklist and the channel's signal into the country is regularly jammed. Journalists can be arrested on mere suspicion of working for the BBC. On the flip side, Iran claims that Britain inflicts unfair fines and regulations on its state-funded international news channel Press TV. The war between the countries and the broadcasters has a long history and is getting progressively more heated. In Our News Divide this week, we take a closer look at the media crossfire between London and Tehran. 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Fighting for Women’s Rights: An Interview with Mahnaz Afkhami

This interview was originally published on Arseh Sevom Civil Society Zine. 

Hooman Askary reports on his discussion with the former minister of women’s affairs in pre-revolution Iran, Mahnaz Afkhami. She links the century long struggle of Iranian women for equal protection under the law to the demonstrations that emerged in 2009 after the flawed presidential elections in Iran. Afkhami states, “The green movement in Iran is the continuation of what had been started nearly a century before and gone through ups and downs, changes and evolutionary and revolutionary transformations.”

For more than three decades, the rare images of women coming out of Iran primarily showed them in the required Islamic hijab, implying absolute compliance and complacency. Disparate accounts seldom raised doubts about the way women saw their role in society. Information and communication technologies altered that image once and for all. The world was able to see different images of Iranian women through the lens of netizens. It appeared that the imagined complacency had never even existed in the first place. In 2009, Iranian women really made the world stop and notice. They were the pioneers of the national opposition and demonstrations against the Islamic Republic which became known as the Green Movement. That movement soon became personified by a young woman who lost her life to a bullet from the Basiji militia. Unlike most of the national heroes of Iranian patriarchal society, a young woman, Neda, became the face of the nation. She was special because she was not special at all. She was the Iranian girl next door; one worlds apart from the image endorsed by the Islamic Republic.



To read the complete text, click on this link

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Pathology of the Iranian Change: How the Global Community Can Help


This article originally appeared on Iranian Progressive Youth (IPY) website

Pathology of the Iranian Change:
How the Global Community Can Help
Written by: Hooman Askary
April 10, 2011
IRANIAN PEOPLE’S post-presidential-election demonstrations of 2009 were by no means a new phenomenon in Iran. They had precedence and they proved to be ongoing. They were a link in the long chain of events that constitute the story of change in the contemporary history of Iran. The main difference between this time and past events was the role of social networking and citizen journalism which had both become available thanks to the internet. This time the world stopped to see, even partly, what happened within the borderlines of the Islamic Republic. Foreign governments and international personalities condemned the brutal attacks of the Basij militia and members of the Islamic Republic Guards Corps (IRGC) on the defenseless people who were leading some of the most peaceful movements of modern times. They sought no vengeance, they bore no grudge and their aspirations were Earthly and “achievable”; that is, had they been backed by the international community. This article addresses one simple question: what can the international community do to help the Iranian people’s cause?

Sunday, May 29, 2011

A picture is worth a thousand words



Had it not been for this awesome photo I wouldn't have started this new post at this time of night!

I found this picture by coincidence and have been fascinated by its magical grace eversince. It depicts an Iranian girl sadly dressed according to the Islamic republic's dress code wearing a scarf and mantaue standing in front of a Persepolis basrelief. The basrelief is of a Mede tribute bearer offering a gazelle fawn to the Persian Shah as tribute sometime around two and a half millenia ago! 


For me the photo conveys a message of a nation's survival amid the upheavals of its history. The girl's way of having worn the strictly enforced hijab is in itself typical of how Iranian women are resisting against the reactionary laws of the clerics who took power in Iran in 1979.

According to Mullahs in power, only a woman's face and hands can be seen in the public by non-related members of the oposite sex. Most recently a mullah in Tehran said during the Friday prayer's sermons on 27.05.2011 that women must cover their heads and necks with long veils. "Shawls are out of the question according to Islam as their hair would be visible." according to the mullah Ahmad Khatami (not Mohammad Khatami the ex-president).