MP speaks out against suppression of opponents by Iran's mullahs
Iran's mullahs keep ranting on, repeating empty slogans that never materialize into realities. The regime of the Islamic Republic works tooth and nail to spread terrorism, not only outside Iran, but also inside it. This shows the enormity of suffering the Iranian people sustain because of the conduct of the bunch of criminals ruling their country.
Under attack
Iranian parliament member, Parvaneh
Salahshouri, known to be a reformist lawmaker, said recently that economic
corruption in her country has political roots.
Depriving Iranian women of their rights,
she said, is another facet of this political corruption.
She raised questions about the reasons
for failure in solving important social problems, such as poverty and
unemployment.
"Inequality among Iranians, when it
comes to political, cultural, and economic rights, is political corruption
too," Salahshouri said.
She warned in an interview with the
website of the Iranian parliament on October 7 that taking corruption lightly
would threaten the presence of the Iranian regime as a whole, at a time there
is growing anger among different classes of the Iranian society.
The regime's slogans about fighting
corruption will convince nobody as long as the members of the public are not
able to express themselves freely, Salahshouri said.
Threats, arrest
Salahshouri objected to the intimidation
and arrest of Iranian protesters, banning the criticism of government officials
and institutions in the media and restrictions on the right to peaceful
assembly, in the light of article no. 27 of the Iranian constitution.
She mentioned a large number of Iranian
opposition figures placed under house arrest for years now, even without
trials.
She alluded to the failure of the
Iranian judiciary in supporting civilian freedoms, the achievement of justice
and preventing crime, according to article no. 156 of the Iranian constitution,
which has been in force since 1979.
Wasted rights
She said the Iranian judiciary sentences
teenagers to death, even as her country had signed the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights as well as the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
She added that the courts also issue
heavy verdicts against civilian activists.
Iran brims with corruption. Some of the
country's anti-corruption institutions are corrupt themselves.
There is also corruption inside
institutions that are not subject to parliamentary or governmental oversight
because they are directly linked to Iran's Supreme Guide Ali Khamenei.
Nevertheless, Salahshouri staged an
unprecedented attack on the Iranian Revolutionary Corpse in the past years. She
also attacked Iranian police, against the background of the political and
economic crises that rocked Iran in the past years.
In September 2018, she called for
holding a public referendum on the legality of the status of the agency
responsible for selecting Iran's supreme guides as well as the validity of
supervision over the conduct of the supreme guide.
Suppression
Iranian affairs specialist at Egyptian
think tank Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, Ahmed Qabal, said
Salahshouri had precisely described the nature of the Iranian regime by talking
about political corruption in her country.
This regime, he said, depends on
anti-corruption slogans to deceive the public.
He expressed fears in an interview with
The Reference from the possible suppression of the Iranian lawmaker.
"She always lashes out at the
deprivation of Iranian women of their rights and rampant social problems in
Iran," Qabal said. "She also criticized her country's military
interference in other countries, attributing her country's economic problems to
this interference."