Iran jails women's rights activist for protests

Sentenced to three years in jail and 20 lashes

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An Iranian woman activist has started a three-year jail term for taking part in a protest in 2006 to demand more right for women in the Islamic republic, a fellow campaigner said Monday.

Alieh Eghdamdoust was among 70 people arrested during the rally in Tehran, but this was the first prison sentence to be implemented, leading activist Sussan Tahmasebi said.

Eghdamdoust was first sentenced to three years and four months' in prison and 20 lashes. This was later reduced to three years' jail by an appeals court.

"She started serving her sentence yesterday," said Tahmasebi, who herself is appealing against a partly suspended two-year jail sentence for the same protest, on June 12, 2006.

Of those arrested during the rally, 14 people were charged with criminal offences, including spreading propaganda against the ruling system.

She started serving her sentence yesterday

Activist Sussan Tahmasebi

Police had said the rally was illegal as the protesters did not have a permit. Tahmasebi said peaceful rallies were allowed under Iran's constitution.

Activists say women in Iran are subject to institutionalized discrimination that makes them second-class citizens in divorce, inheritance, child custody and other aspects of life, although they are legally entitled to hold most jobs and can vote.

The Iranian government dismisses such accusations

The website of a campaign for women's rights in Iran said Eghdamdoust was taken under guard on Sunday from her home in the northern city of Fouman to the Office of Implementation of Sentences to serve her jail term.

A few months after the 2006 protest, campaigners began trying to collect 1 million signatures on a petition demanding greater women's rights.

Tahmasebi said about 47 activists had been detained in connection with the campaign, including three last Friday. Most were freed after a few days or weeks.

Last Friday, Iran’s security forces detained three women’s rights activists as they gathered signatures in support of the campaign for gender equality in northern Tehran.

Western diplomats and rights groups say the arrests of women's rights campaigners form part of a broader crackdown on dissent, possibly in response to external pressure on Tehran over its nuclear program.