Yahoo – AFP,
8 Nov 2015
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Marzieh
Afkham has been appointed as Iran's first woman ambassador since the
1979
Islamic revolution, heading its embassy in Malaysia (AFP Photo/Behrouz Mehri)
|
Tehran
(AFP) - Iran has appointed its first woman ambassador since the 1979 Islamic
revolution, naming foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham to head its
embassy in Malaysia, the foreign minister announced on Sunday.
"Choosing
Afkham as ambassador took a few minutes but choosing her successor took four
months," Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said at a ceremony in
Tehran for the 50-year-old career diplomat who will be replaced at the ministry
by a man, Jaber Ansari.
Iranian
media first said back in April that Afkham was lined up for promotion to the
rank of ambassador, but the reports were unconfirmed.
Zarif paid
tribute to Afkham, who was also the first woman in the Islamic republic to
serve as foreign ministry spokeswoman, saying she had carried out her duties
for two years with "dignity, bravery and particular insight".
In turn,
the new ambassador to Kuala Lumpur, quoted by state news agency IRNA, praised
Zarif for "the courage to take such a decision" and for his
"trust in women".
After his
2013 election, Iran's moderate President Hassan Rouhani called on ministers to
appoint women to high posts and said his government would stand up against
discrimination, naming three women to the country's 11 vice presidential
positions.
Although
deemed more liberal than those of many Arab countries, Iran's laws since the
revolution have been criticised as unfair to women in cases of marriage,
divorce and inheritance.
While women
may hold key posts, including in parliament and the cabinet, they can not serve
as judges and have not been allowed to run for president.
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