Thursday, July 16, 2026
  • English
  • Français
  • فارسی
  • عربى
PODCASTS
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee
No Result
View All Result
Home Monthlies
NCRI women Monthly April 2017

NCRI Women’s Committee Monthly Report – April 2017

May 5, 2017
in Monthlies

NCRI Women’s Committee Monthly Report – April 2017

Download English Version

Introduction

April saw the start of campaigns for presidential and parliamentary election sham in Iran. This is a realm where women are totally deprived or restricted to a great extent to participate and express their opinions, according to the law. Article 115 of the Constitution of the Iranian regime states that the country’s president must be elected from among the religious and political statesmen (rejal). The word rejal literally means men of high achievement.

The Interior Minister Abdulreza Rahmani Fazli confirmed this during a visit to the Election Headquarters on April 11 to oversee registration of volunteers for the election. He said, “The interpretation of the law so far indicates that the term ‘political statesmen’ does not include women.”

In the meantime, pressure on prisoners was further increased in April. On April 12, security forces in the Evin Prison raided the women’s ward, searched their belongings and violently frisked all the inmates.

More pressure was also brought upon imprisoned civil and political activists. They were deprived of fair trials, medical leaves and necessary medical treatment.

Prison Conditions

Tehran’s Quds Judiciary Complex sentenced the Daemi sisters (Atena, Ensieh and Hanieh) to prison sentences of three months and one day, on April 3, 2017. Tehran’s No. 2 Penal Court had convicted all three sisters based on the “indisputable and incontestable” charge of “insulting agents while on duty”. Athena Daemi started her hunger strike on April 8, 2017, in protest to the sentences issued for the imprisonment of her sisters. She is suffering from kidney infection due to hunger strike.

Amnesty International issued an Urgent Action statement on April 20, 2017, for Atena Daemi.

Judiciary officials refused to grant furlough to human rights activist Nargess Mohammadi who is presently detained in Evin Prison. This is while they have already received a 600-million-touman bail bond for her release.

Ms. Mohammadi has started serving a 10-year sentence as the second stage of her case which began on March 15, 2017.

Civil rights activist Massoumeh Zia who is presently imprisoned in Evin Prison, has been deprived of having telephone contacts with her family. Ms. Zia has been transferred to solitary confinement in Ward 241 of Evin since March 25, 2017, and does not have the permission to have any contacts with her family. She is also deprived of having a lawyer.

Political prisoner Zahra Zehtabchi has been deprived of having leaves from prison. Ms. Zehtabchi has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for supporting the opposition People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK). Zahra Zehtabchi is a social researcher and mother of two daughters.

Prison officials have once again refused to grant medical leave to political prisoner Zeinab Jalalian jailed in Khoy Prison, West Azerbaijan Province. Ms. Jalalian suffers from pterygium and risks losing her eye-sight.

Political prisoner Noushindokht Mir-Abdolbaghi, 64, is presently detained in Evin Prison’s Women’s Ward, serving her 34-year sentence. She is accused of acting against national security, collusion against the state, insulting the sanctities, and disseminating false information.

Ms. Mir-Abdolbaghi has received a judiciary ruling according to which she is unable to endure prison conditions due to old age and suffering from schizophrenia. However, she has not been released.

Tahereh Riyahi, a journalist who worked for the state-run Borna news agency, has been held in Evin Prison in an undecided state since December.

Tahereh Riyahi was arrested on December 27, 2016, by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence and taken to solitary confinement at Evin’s Ward 209. She is accused of disseminating propaganda against the state.

 

Ethnic and Religious Minorities

The arrests of ethnic and religious minorities continued in April.

In the wake of the Persian New Year celebrations in Nowruz, security forces arrested a young woman in Sanandaj for wearing “unconventional clothes”, namely a dress bearing the flag of Kurdistan.

Chenar Hosseini was subsequently released by signing a written pledge, but she was summoned and threatened again, a number of times.

Sanandaj is the capital of the western Iranian Kurdistan Province.

Four women were arrested by security forces in the southern port city of Bandar Abbas and in the island of Qeshm on April 18, 2017.

The arrested women have been identified as Mahnaz Jonnesar, Maral Rasti, Mehraleh Afshar and Nassim Ghanavatian. They are said to be adherents to the Baha’ii faith. Security forces confiscated the women’s personal belongings and equipment during inspection of their residences.

Social Conditions

Iranian women are targets of discrimination and elimination of the possibility of free activities in education, sports, music and art. Samples of last month, make it clear:

Sports and art

The disciplinary committee of Iran’s Bowling and Billiard Federation deprived several female pool players from participating in all domestic and international tournaments for participating in China’s Free Games. The reason for such punishment was mentioned as “failing to observe Islamic principles”. (The state-run ISNA news agency – March 31, 2017)

Only two days left to the start of the International Pars Marathons, Iranian officials announced that the race’s routes have been changed because they could not control the veiling of non-Iranian female participants. Women have been banned from running in the main route. An official of the Athletics Federation, openly defended banning of women and said, “We are staging the tournament in an Islamic country and we must be able to control everything. We cannot hold the women’s marathon race without observing the Islamic codes.”

Mir-Emadi, the Friday prayer leader of Khorramabad, called for cancellation of women’s musical concerts in the city. “If such concerts become a tradition in this city, then the special character and values of the people go under question,” he said. (The state-run Mehr news agency, April 21, 2017)

Workers

A young nurse, Mahdieh Rezaii, 28, went into cardiac arrest during her work shift and died on April 2, 2017 at Tehran’s Firoozgar Hospital. (ILNA state-run news agency – April 13, 2017)

Director general of the Coroner’s Office in Tehran Province, announced April 17, 2017, that six female workers had died in 2016 due to lack of safety measures at the work place.

Farzaneh Namkhamessi, a working woman in Kamyaran, lost the fingers of her left hand while at work in a Nylon Making Workshop. Kamyaran is located in the western Iranian province of Kurdistan.

Suicide

At least five cases of suicide among women and young girls occurred this month.

  • A 25-year-old woman identified as Sh. A. committed suicide and died in one of the neighborhoods of Marivan, Iranian Kurdistan, on Friday, March 31, 2017.
  • A 27-year-old woman committed suicide and lost her life in the city of Ahar (East Azerbaijan Province, northwestern Iran).
  • Shima Adak, a 24-year-old woman from Marivan, committed suicide on April 9, 2017, and died. The reason for her suicide was being pressured into a forcible marriage.
  • A young girl by the name of Elaheh, 16, set herself on fire in Tehran’s Jungle Park and died.
  • A young woman from Orumiyeh, set herself on fire and died on April 18, 2017. Vida Abdollahzadeh, 20, committed suicide because her family opposed her freedom in choosing her husband.

Women’s protests

Iranian women held and participated in various protest demonstrations to demand their rights or protest the regime’s policies in different areas.

 

Sit-ins and protest

Sunni women, whose sons have either been executed or imprisoned, described the upcoming presidential elections in Iran unfair and called for its boycott.

In a statement issued on April 22, 2017, the mothers declared, “We must unite against this discrimination, inequality, and execution of our youths. We must cry out in unison that participating in an election whose candidates have their hands stained with our children’s blood is tantamount to endorsement of the same merciless crimes.”

Some 500 family members and relatives of death-row prisoners held a gathering outside the mullahs’ parliament on April 9, 2017, to express their protest to the sentences issued for their loved ones.

The State Security Force intervened and dispersed the crowd. They insulted the participants and confronted women taking part in the protest.

Teachers’ protests

Dozens of retired female teachers staged a protest in front of the Budget and Planning Organization in Tehran on Tuesday morning, April 18, 2017. One of the protesters said, “We demand to receive our termination-of-service reward, proper balancing of pensions, and improvement of medical services provided by insurance.” (The state-run ILNA news agency – April 18, 2017)

Women teachers applying for housing in Zanjan held a protest rally in front of the Governor’s Office on Thursday April 20, 2017. They protested the government’s failure to attend to their housing problems despite passage of 11 years.

Women teachers and pre-school teachers from northern Iranian provinces converged in Tehran and staged a protest in front of the mullahs’ parliament on Sunday April 23, 2017. They demand to be officially employed by the Ministry of Education.

Loss or property and wealth

On the fourth day of registration for the Iranian elections, a woman went to the Interior Ministry and voiced her protest against plunder of her wealth by government-backed institutions in front of the cameras.

She said, “I invested in a licensed institution, the Caspian Credit Institute. I have not come here to (register to) become a president. But what shall we do? It has been five months that they have not given us our interests nor have they returned our money.”

A number of women staged a gathering outside the Central Bank of Iran on Wednesday, April 19, 2017.  They thus protested to the Caspian Financial Institution which had failed to refund their deposits. Dozens of people participated in this gathering and chanted, “Release people’s investments.”

Dozens of women held a protest rally on Monday morning, April 24, 2017, in front of the presidential office in Tehran. The women were protesting the plundering of their lands in Tehran. They accused state officials of planning to take over their lands because they do not issue them permits to build there.

ShareTweetPinShareSendShare

Related Posts

Week 129: No to Execution Tuesdays Expands to 58 Prisons Across Iran

July 14, 2026
Week 129: No to Execution Tuesdays Expands to 58 Prisons Across Iran

In the 129th week of the No to Execution Tuesdays campaign, political prisoners in 58 prisons across Iran staged a hunger strike on Tuesday, July 14, 2026, once...

Read moreDetails

Iranian Women Trapped by War, Poverty, and Domestic Abuse

July 14, 2026
Iranian Women Trapped by War, Poverty, and Domestic Abuse

The war and intensifying economic crises in recent months have exerted the greatest and most direct pressure on Iranian women, placing them on the frontline of vulnerability as...

Read moreDetails

Iran: Raid on the Women’s Ward of Evin Aims to Exile Political Prisoners

July 13, 2026
Raid on the Women’s Ward of Evin Aims to Exile Political Prisoners Letter from Iranian political prisoners in Evin

The Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) reported today that on July 12, prison authorities in Iran launched a repressive raid on the women's...

Read moreDetails

Iran: Transfer of 60 Inmates Sparks Protest in the Women’s Ward of Evin

July 13, 2026
Iran: Transfer of 60 Inmates Sparks Protest in the Women’s Ward of Evin

The transfer of 60 inmates to the overcrowded women’s ward of Evin Prison sparked protests and clashes with prison guards on Sunday, July 12, 2026. Sixty female prisoners...

Read moreDetails

Iran: 52-Year-Old Mother of Two Executed at Adelabad Prison in Shiraz

July 12, 2026
Iran: 52-Year-Old Mother of Two Executed at Adelabad Prison in Shiraz

Setayesh Mohammadpour, a 52-year-old woman from Jahrom County, was executed at dawn on Sunday, July 12, 2026, at Adelabad Prison in Shiraz. Mohammadpour, the mother of two children...

Read moreDetails
Next Post

Iran: Girl child suffers brain death due to stepfather's beating

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Documents

Call for Immediate Action to Halt the Death Sentence of Arghavan Fallahi

Sign our Statement to Halt the Death Sentence of 25-Year-Old Political Prisoner Arghavan Fallahi

July 10, 2026

Statement Calling for Immediate Action to Halt the Death Sentence of 25-Year-Old Political Prisoner Arghavan Fallahi We express our profound...

The Ineffectiveness of Population Policies in Iran: Economy, Aging, and the Overlooked Rights of Women

The Ineffectiveness of Population Policies in Iran: Economy, Aging, and the Overlooked Rights of Women

July 10, 2026

Abstract: A compilation of official data, media reports, and disclosures published in April, May, and June 2026 demonstrates that Iran...

Crushed by Design: Structural Crises and Inequitable Policies Push Female-Headed Households to the Edge

Crushed by Design: Structural Crises and Inequitable Policies Push Female-Headed Households to the Edge

May 18, 2026

Introduction Life for the Iranian people under the religious dictatorship is fraught with hardship and peril from every perspective. Whether...

Monthlies

June 2026 Report: Working Iranian Women Erased from Labor Market
Monthlies

June 2026 Report: Working Iranian Women Erased from Labor Market

July 5, 2026
May 2026 Report: The Enduring Resistance of Iranian Women
Monthlies

May 2026 Report: The Enduring Resistance of Iranian Women

May 31, 2026
April 2026 Report: Mass Arrests of Women: Targeted Repression in Time of Crisis
Monthlies

April 2026 Report: Mass Arrests of Women in Iran

April 30, 2026
March 2026 Report: How Iranian Women Are Shaping the Resistance
Monthlies

March 2026 Report: Courage Under Fire

April 3, 2026

Articles

Iranian Women Trapped by War, Poverty, and Domestic Abuse

Iranian Women Trapped by War, Poverty, and Domestic Abuse

July 14, 2026

The war and intensifying economic crises in recent months have exerted the greatest and most direct pressure on Iranian women,...

JINNEWS: An Account of Women Prisoners’ Resistance in Iran Amid Repression and Discrimination

JINNEWS: An Account of Women Prisoners’ Resistance in Iran Amid Repression and Discrimination

July 7, 2026

Turkey’s JINNEWS, one of the region’s well-known news outlets covering women’s issues and human rights, published a report on June...

Iran Water Crisis: Water Mafia and Ecosystem Destruction

Iran’s Escalating Water Crisis: Energy Imbalance, Popular Protests, and the Role of Women

July 1, 2026

The Iran water crisis has transcended a mere climatic challenge, evolving into a structural catastrophe marked by severe ecosystem destruction...

The Fallen for Freedom

Setareh Rafiei was born on June 11, 2006
The Fallen for Freedom

Setareh Rafiei

July 9, 2026
Elham Zeinali A Compassionate Nurse and the Pillar of Her Family
The Fallen for Freedom

Elham Zeinali

July 2, 2026
The Unbroken Smile: How Sara Mokhtar, a Former Airline Executive Became the Vanguard of the Iranian Resistance
The Fallen for Freedom

The Unbroken Smile: How a Former Airline Executive Became the Vanguard of the Iranian Resistance

June 28, 2026
Shilan Salehi: Iran Regime Extorted 150 Million Tomans for Return of Her Body
The Fallen for Freedom

Shilan Salehi: Iran Regime Extorted 150 Million Tomans for Return of Her Body

June 13, 2026

ABOUT US

NCRI Women Committee

We work extensively with Iranian women outside the country and maintain a permanent contact with women inside Iran. The Women’s Committee is actively involved with many women’s rights organizations and NGO’s and the Iranian diaspora.
The committee is a major source of much of the information received from inside Iran with regards to women. Attending UN Human Rights Council meetings and other international or regional conferences on women’s issues and engaging in a relentless battle against the Iranian regime’s misogyny are part of the activities of members and associates of the committee.

CATEGORIES

  • Activities
  • Articles
  • Documents
  • Famous Women
  • Heroines in Chain
  • IWD Conferences
  • IWD Speeches
  • IWD Videos
  • Maryam Rajavi
  • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
  • Monthlies
  • Podcast
  • Reference Library
  • Solidarity
  • Statements
  • The Fallen for Freedom
  • Videos
  • Women in History
  • Women in Leadership
  • Women of Iranian Resistance
  • Women's News

BROWSE BY TAG

Child marriage coronavirus education execution forced hijab Gender Gap Generation Equality Honor killings Iran Teachers Maryam Akbari Monfared Nurses Plan on Women's Rights and Freedoms Poverty Prisoners Protests rural women Saba Kord Afshari The girl child Violence against women Women's Leadership Women Heads of Household Zeinab Jalalian

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • Publications
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • About Us
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • Ten Point Plan for Iran
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
  • Vanguards
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • Events
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • Video
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • Podcast
  • DONATE
  • Contact us
  • فارسی
  • عربی
  • Français

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.