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Flowers for life in Iran!!!

EveryOne Group | 02.11.2007 23:14

Petition to stop the execution of the young Iranian gay Makwan Moloudzadeh (  http://www.petitiononline.com/everymak/ ) - campaign against death penalty in Iran
Let’s send a white flower and a red flower to President Mahmud Ahmadinejad to say yes to life and no to the blood shed by the death sentence

“FLOWERS FOR LIFE IN IRAN” CAMPAIGN

Petition to stop the execution of the young Iranian gay Makwan Moloudzadeh (  http://www.petitiononline.com/everymak/ ) - campaign against death penalty in Iran

Let’s send a white flower and a red flower to President Mahmud Ahmadinejad to say yes to life and no to the blood shed by the death sentence:

President Mahmud Ahmadinejad - Pasteur Ave - 13168-43311 Tehran - Iran

Stop the execution of Makwan Moloudzadeh

To save the life of Pegah Emambakhsh (the Iranian lesbian the British Government wanted to deport to her death by stoning in Iran) Gruppo EveryOne – together with the Friends of Pegah Campaign – created a new kind of humanitarian campaign and invited all those who believe in a respect for human rights to send flowers to the prison where Pegah was being detained. Thousands of bunches of flowers were delivered to the prison, putting a strain on the prison system and convincing the authorities to re-examine her case. Pegah is now waiting for her application for political asylum to be accepted.

In Iran, however, the courts continue to sentence dissidents, intellectuals, free thinkers and homosexuals to death. There is a need to approach Ahmadinejad and the judges and tell them, in a peaceful but firm way, that life is sacred is every part of the world and according to all religions - that always invite the faithful to be compassionate.

It is for this reason that we are asking you to send a white flower (symbol of life) and a red flower (symbol of blood) to the Iranian President, Mahmud Ahmadinejad, asking him not to spill the blood of Makwan Mouloudzadeh, the next designated innocent victim, and to abandon the path of terror and violence.

Fresh flowers: one white, one red to say yes to a respect for human rights, no to the death sentence. Choose a company that guarantees deliveries to Teheran (Iran), Interflora, for example.

Send the two flowers to: President Mahmud Ahmadinejad - Pasteur Ave - 13168-43311 Tehran - Iran. We suggest you also sign the petition:

 http://www.petitiononline.com/everymak/

and send an email to the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran:

 dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir

We hope that a peaceful shower of flowers will reach Iran, taking with it the most important message of our time.


Makwan Moloudzadeh, a 21 year old Iranian now faces the threat of execution. His crime is his sexuality, which is illegal under the Law of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Many have been executed for sexual crimes such as extramarital and homosexual sex acts. Due to the legal processes and procedures of the Judicial system of the Islamic Republic of Iran and its complete lack of transparency, it is extremely difficult to access the documents, witnesses, testimonies, and other facts pertinent to the files of those accused, as a result of which it is almost impossible to verify the confessions, complaints, evidence, and verdicts.
In recent years numerous individuals have been executed because of their sexual and private relations in Mashhad, Gorgan, Arak, Kermanshah, and Tehran, many of whom were under the legal age. Despite the current circumstances under which the Iranian Queer Organization, due to inaccessibility of evidence and testimonies regarding these cases, cannot prove homosexuality of those executed beyond a doubt, we believe that the true crime in these executions was sexual relationship (which is not confirmed by the Iranian government). The Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran punishes those with different sexual orientation and sexual relations by death.
According to the Penal Code of the Islamic Republic, four witnesses are required in order to prove the perpetration of lavat (sodomy) which is punishable by death. Western states reject asylum claims of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender Iranians due to their assumption that it is almost impossible to have four witnesses. The truth is that when private spaces of LGBT Iranians are raided by the police, there are four clerics and video cameras already present. Moreover, a judge can use his own knowledge to rule on a case regarding lavat; the alleged perpetrators may confess to lavat under torture; and medical examinations can prove whether an individual has had anal penetration. No civil rights legislation exists in Iran to prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation. Depictions of homosexuality are prohibited in society or in the press, unless it is negative. No organization or political party is permitted to exist that endorses LGBT human rights.
The concept of sexual orientation is not recognized in Iran, nor does the judiciary acknowledge the existence of LGBT people and instead believes that all people are normally heterosexual.Thus, homosexuality is a violation of the supreme will of their God.

As a result, no laws exist that protect LGBT Iranians from discrimination, harassment, or bias-motivated violence, and as a theocratic political system, no such laws are permitted to exist. Most Iranian LGBT people remain in the closet about their sexual orientation for fear of being the victims of discrimination, hate crimes, government sanctions, corporal punishment, and/or capital punishment.

The only legal recognition for couples is a legal marriage between one male and one female, both. The Islam-based legal system prohibits opposite sex couples from associating in public, and dating is taboo. Male homosexual couples might be able to pretend that their relationship is platonic, but any type of sexual activity outside of a heterosexual marriage is illegal.

Censorship of literature and history has been documented under the rule of both the Pahlavi Dynasty monarchy and the Islamic Republic in Iran. In 2002, a book entitled Witness Play by Cyrus Shamisa was banned from shelves (despite being initially approved) because it said that certain notable Persian writers were homosexuals or bisexuals (From Wikipedia).

In Makwan Moloudzadeh case, the judge has ruled based on his own knowledge that Makwan Moloudzadeh had committed lavat in accordance with article 120 of the Iranian Penal Code. This is despite the fact that even internal rulings of Iranian authorities, including the fatwa of Ayatollah Sane’i and other clerics who are source of emulation state that a judge’s knowledge cannot be used as a basis to prove crimes punishable by hadd usually capital punishment. Through carrying out such executions, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran not only violates the most basic international human rights standards, it also undermines the rulings and fatwas of Islamic clerics and sources of emulation who are recognized by the Islamic Republic of Iran.

EveryOne Group and the Iranian Queer Organization demands the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran to abolish death penalty and punish the accused and perpetrators according to minimum international human rights standards.

For the EveryOne Group: Roberto Malini, Matteo Pegoraro, Dario Picciau, Ahmad Rafat, Arsham Parsi, Salvatore Conte, Steed Gamero, Fabio Patronelli, Glenys Robinson, Aisha Ayari, Loredana Marano, Laura Todisco, Irene Campari, Alessandro Matta

For further informations:
www.everyonegroup.com
 info@everyonegroup.com

Tel: (+39) 334 8429527

EveryOne Group
- e-mail: info@everyonegroup.com
- Homepage: http://www.everyonegroup.com - www.annesdoor.com

Comments

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Ahmadinejad's Gay Denial Must Occasion Caution

03.11.2007 10:59

Following the recent trip of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to the US and his remarks at Columbia University where he denied the existence of homosexuals in Iran, the issue of Iranian gays is now in international public view.

Whether this newly gained global visibility marks a step in favor of improving the situation of gays in Iran or leads to a deepening of their plight has as much to do with internal Iranian society as with the actions of the international community. There are dangers and possibilities in this incredible turn of events that Western gay activists have to consider carefully.

No matter what anyone thinks of Iran, its regime, or its president, the fact is that Ahmadinejad's trip was a conscious change in policy by the Iranian government aimed at reaching out to the US and the American people. The Bush administration and the mainstream media have downplayed this fact and have even increased the same rhetoric that they developed before the invasion of Iraq - WMDs, state-sponsored terrorism, etc.

None of us can know what the outcome of these diplomatic maneuvers will be. But now that the issue of gays in Iran has become front and center, there is little doubt that it will work into the propaganda wars of both the Bush and the Ahmadinejad administrations.

In Iran, the president's comments denying the presence of homosexuals have been generally ignored or censored in the mainstream media; however the issue is debated and discussed publicly and on the Internet. It remains to be seen if activists and progressives in Iran will make any inroads in gaining greater public visibility and support as a result of this discussion.

This issue could easily become a major ideological and political test for a regime that rests on the basic notion that Iran is a proud independent nation resisting Western and especially US imperialism. The idea that homosexuality is a Western phenomenon is, of course, the main government line on the issue, and if the movement for gay rights is seen as a Western agenda, or a part of Western imposition on Iran, it will make it that much harder for the many brave gay activists inside Iran to continue their struggle for visibility and acceptance.

In the US, on the other hand, Ahmadinejad's comments regarding gays have been blown up and discussed ad nauseum to the point of becoming one of the primary ways that he is being increasingly discredited and vilified. And here is the danger that we in the West can easily fall into - if this issue is used to further antagonize Iran, it could mean a disaster for the situation of gays in Iran.

The sudden emergence of sympathy, even love, for gays by the likes of Fox News is not just cynical, it is dangerous. If left in the hands of those who couldn't care less about gay rights, the situation of Iranian gays will become a part of American war propaganda that aims to create justifications for military intervention and deepen the idea inside Iran that gays are a dangerous fifth column.

For the many well-meaning gay activists in the US who have been facing great challenges and setbacks here under the Bush administration, the idea that the LGBT community can have influence on public policy - especially foreign policy - seems farfetched. But what we say and how we relate to this moment can have repercussions beyond our own struggling community. I hope this essay will serve as a beginning of a constructive dialogue that helps us think and take proper action regarding the situation of gays and all sexual minorities in Iran.


* Kourosh Shemirani lives in New York City and is a member of QIAM, the Queer Iranian Alliance. Contact him at:  qiam2006@yahoo.com.

Kourosh Shemirani
- Homepage: http://www.gaycitynews.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=18884273&BRD=2729&PAG=461&dept_id=585504&rfi=6


"when islam is less threatened, it might remember. . . . " i used to say

03.11.2007 11:08

- but why wait. the tales of the founder of that good spiritual tradition record his support of what we call "homosexuals" ( - the word was different then, we misinterpret it as "eunuch" ) to the extent that when one guy admitted he had had lustful thoughts about women, he told him to quit the job! (He wasd working in the womens quarter at the time, so thats easier to comprehend - unless you keep the current misinterpretation. . . . if a eunuch, why might it matter? )
theology meet SENSE
with good attitude

the problem is abuse of power, misuse of power, blackmail, etc
love , with integrity, isnt a problem
dont execute people for love

please

i agree


yes, in WW2, the great war for democracy, the UK didnt do its scheduled election

03.11.2007 11:28

but - we dont need to use the "mitigations" to postpone wisdom. . . . I hope.
As the catholic church shows signs of movement over this issue - at least to the extent of saying all its priests - of either sexuality - should remain celibate, to alter the emphasis,
or the US army had that same "dont mention it, we wont ask / you dont exist" awkward midway position . . . . there are ways to remember what good attitudes were. . . .
Racism seems sense for people if they aint grown out of it yet,
People afraid of all tall people, of course, could "sort of" explain why, but we have ALL met tall people that DONT FALL ON YOU ON PURPOSE WHEN YOU AINT EXPECTING IT. . . .
These are probably exceptions.
Then you get over getting hung up.
( sometimes you actually discover that its the tall people that assist you most )
(depends where you are hung up)
( height has its uses, as a bit of the team.)
cheers




happy ALL hallows
(see recent nice piece in these "uk indymedia" newswires, plus comments!ace)

i agree too. straight asa very borin' straight thing, but . . . .


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