JAILED Iranian lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh made a call for peace from her cell in Tehran’s Evin prison for International Women’s Day today.
Ms Sotoudeh, a human rights lawyer who was sentenced to 33 years in prison and 148 lashes in 2018 for “national security offences” and “promoting immorality and indecency” after a career representing opposition activists and death row inmates, said “violations of women’s rights are systemic” in Iran.
Among her fellow prisoners — 40 women crowded into a three-room ward — are women who were arrested for handing out flowers and starting conversations about women’s rights on Tehran’s metro system last International Women’s Day.
The Committee for the Defence of the Iranian People’s Rights (Codir) cautiously welcomes the ceasefire, but remains suspicious of US and Israeli intentions
The civilian toll climbs past 1,000 as women, children and families are struck in their homes, schools and public spaces – a stark illustration of the human cost of war. AZAR SEPEHR emphasises that the future of Iran is solely determinable by the people of that country and them alone
MOHAMMAD OMIDVAR, a senior figure in the Tudeh Party of Iran, tells the Morning Star that mass protests are rooted in poverty, corruption and neoliberal rule and warns against monarchist revival and US-engineered regime change
In the second of two articles, STEVE BISHOP looks at how the 1979 revolution’s aims are obfuscated to create a picture where the monarchists are the opposition to the theocracy, not the burgeoning workers’ and women’s movement on the streets of Iran


