Yahoo – AFP,
Ali Noorani, August 9, 2017
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| Iran's new vice president for women's affairs Masoumeh Ebtekar delivers a speech at the World Climate Change Conference outside Paris on November 30, 2015 (AFP Photo/ALAIN JOCARD) |
Tehran
(AFP) - Iranian President Hassan Rouhani appointed two female vice presidents
on Wednesday but continued to take flak from reformists for nominating no women
ministers.
The
appointments came a day after the moderate president announced his all-male
list of ministers to parliament, seen as a betrayal by reformists who backed
his re-election campaign in May.
"It is
incredible and shocking that the president has ignored the demands of women in
nominating his government," Parvaneh Salahshouri, head of a parliamentary
women's group, told lawmakers.
A letter
calling for female ministers to be appointed was signed by 157 of the 290 MPs.
There was
small comfort in the appointment of two women as vice presidents, who do not
require parliamentary approval.
Massoumeh
Ebtekar, known internationally for her role as spokesperson during the 1980 US
embassy hostage crisis, was named as vice president in charge of women's
affairs, having previously run the environment brief in Rouhani's office.
Laya
Joneydi was appointed as the vice president for legal affairs, while another
woman, Shahindokht Mowlaverdi, was named as a special adviser for citizens'
rights.
Rouhani, a
moderate cleric who had three female vice presidents during his previous term,
has several more deputy positions to fill and it was unclear if any would go to
women.
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An Iranian
woman queues to vote in the presidential election on
May 19, 2017 (AFP
Photo/ATTA KENARE)
|
Unsurprised
In an
interview with AFP, the head of the newly formed Reformist Women's Party, Zahra
Shojaei, said she was unsurprised by the lack of female ministers given the
continued opposition of many lawmakers and powerful religious figures behind
the scenes.
A large
independent faction of MPs "are still not in favour of female
ministers," said Shojaei.
But she
said female vice presidents actually have more power than ministers and have
already broken the taboo on putting women in positions of authority.
"We
have gone past the symbolic stage. Female ministers are important but it's not
our only demand. Even if Rouhani had appointed several women ministers, it
would not have solved women's issues," she said.
She
highlighted a number of legal issues -- including the need to gain permission
from a male relative to leave the country, lower levels of legal compensation
and "blood money" for women, and discriminatory inheritance laws --
as areas that needed action.
"Rouhani
has worked on policies of empowerment for women over the past four years, and
we want that to continue, as well as amending laws in parliament," she
said.
The
continued fraught issue of gender in Iranian politics was highlighted over the
weekend, when EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini led an all-female team
for talks with an all-male Iranian contingent led by Foreign Minister Mohammad
Javad Zarif.
The image
from that meeting was "heavy with significance," Mohammad Reza Aref,
head of the reformist faction in parliament, wrote on social media.
Rouhani
sailed to victory in May over hardliner Ebrahim Raisi with the backing of
reformists after vowing to improve civil liberties and rebuild ties with the
West.
Some
reformists have argued this week that Rouhani is failing to repay their
confidence in him.
"We
expected at least one woman among Rouhani's nominations," said Aref.


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