Solidarity campaign with Iranian sentenced to appear publicly with women's clothing-video
Effects of an Iranian man sentenced to appear publicly with women's clothes, after being convicted of domestic violence, anger in Iran, arrived in Parliament, where lawmakers considered contrary to Islam and degrades women.
A tidal wave of protests broke out in Iran following verdict against Kurdish man, walking down the street wearing women's clothing, namely, which elicited domestic and women's rights organizations, a group of Deputies, who astonished them.
He was a judge in the city of Nelson's Iranian Kurdish, near the borders with Iraq, Iran has issued a ruling on this man, wearing women's clothing, and appear in public in the middle of the month. And in a campaign of solidarity with him, the men from scattered areas around the world to publish their photos and wearing women's clothing.
Frequency that the death penalty has been issued against a man for a crime related to domestic violence. However, this has caused the deliberate humiliation in provoking outrage in the country.
The day after the verdict, the society ladies of Nelson's local demonstration, attended by 1,000 people, to express their condemnation of the verdict.
The activists said that degrades women, especially Kurdish women, especially that the convicted person is forced to wear the Kurdish women get used to wear.
Then quickly stretched those events to cyberspace, having created a page on the social networking site "Facebook" entitled "to be a woman that is not offensive, and it must not be a penalty," the men of Iran and other States published pictures of them wearing women's clothing. Page is now about 9,000 fans.
Saman said, Messenger of BOR, one of the participants in the campaign supporting this person, this provision is the first of its kind in Iran. As she reports that a similar ruling was passed in the city early this month against three others.
The fallout also reached the scandal to Parliament, where he has 17 deputies signed a letter addressed to Iran's Justice Minister, told him: "this provision is contrary to Islamic values, it also demeans costume and personality of Muslim women". And across many conscientious objectors to the Internet about similar views
No comments:
Post a Comment