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Maryam Zar

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Sanctions on Iran from the Point of View of Its Women

Posted: 11/23/11 05:54 PM ET

This week Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced new, stricter sanctions on Iranian banks and those doing business with them, in order to put pressure on Tehran to engage in nuclear negotiations. Last week, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and Senator Mark Kirk introduced an amendment to impose broader, more indiscriminate sanctions against the Islamic republic. They made clear that these were directed at putting pressure on the people of Iran, presumably to topple their government. Arab Spring fever seems to have caught on in D.C.

Practically however, although sanctions imposed on a nation labeled "rogue" may make uninformed readers feel good and some senators more secure about their reelection prospects, they have little foreign policy effect and often fail to achieve the goals they claim to enable. They affect people on the ground in a tragically adverse way, and most commonly affect women and families to a crippling degree. For most women, they make life in a sparse economy even more arduous.

The U.S. senators who have introduced the amendment to impose broader sanctions against the Iranian people argue that if Iran's economy were to "collapse" under the weight of sanctions, then its people would rise up against their government. No doubt, the current regime in Iran is not well loved by its people, perhaps least of all by its burgeoning population of modern-minded women. But sanctions by the West will not motivate a historically nationalist people to topple their own government.

Iran is made up of a population that is overwhelmingly young, with a median age of 26. Its population is evenly divided between male and female, and among women of childbearing age, the average number of children is just under two. Iranian women are educated and make up at least 60 percent of its university population. They are intellectually on a par with the nation's male population, and their intellectual awareness coupled with their right to education, which was established in the 1930s, makes them a demographic that has consistently demanded legal equality and civic freedoms, both under the secular regime of the Shah, and now under the current theocratic regime. Today women in Iran make up more than 30 percent of the nation's workforce as doctors, lawyers, professors and lawmakers and fill a wide range of blue-collar jobs, which are the backbone of the economy. Sanctions threaten to chip away at this level of economic involvement directly and immediately, disempowering women and consequently marginalizing their children, who are already struggling under trying circumstances.

When I worked in Islamic Iran I had many female counterparts in the professional world around me. They were neither silent nor diminutive. They were no more answerable to a patriarchal power than I was, and they were instrumental in executing the work at hand, just as essentially as the men were. They were treated with respect and the dignity that comes with cultural equality (if not the legal equality that Iran's Sharia legal system withholds from them), and though covered from head to toe, they were just as emancipated as my Western counterparts.

Sanctions threaten to take these very women out of the work force. The working women of Iran that make up 30 percent of its workforce and seek economic self-determination, in a part of the world where that kind of involvement is crucial to development, will find their jobs dwindling unmercifully if tougher global sanctions take hold. The women will be inched out of the workforce first as the economy shrinks. No member of the Islamic republic's ruling class will lose their jobs or suffer the indignation of poverty. But the women who work as tailors, housekeepers, shop sellers, fruit vendors, office maids, cooks or assembly-line workers will find themselves nudged out of the jobs that keep a humble roof over their heads and plain food on the family table. Is this where we want the sanctions to be aimed?

Iranian women are an inherently emancipated group. Their struggle for equality has been documented for more than 100 years, and their success can be measured in their achievements, which include a globally renowned Nobel Laureate, celebrated authors, moviemakers, actresses, entrepreneurs, space travelers, journalists, presidential advisors and parliamentarians, both at home and abroad. These are not the women we should marginalize with sanctions that are ill-structured, with questionable strategic impact, and uncertain effects in the short and long terms. There has to be a better way to empower a population looking to disempower the same regime we wish to destabilize.

 

Follow Maryam Zar on Twitter: www.twitter.com/womenfound

 
 
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07:53 PM on 11/27/2011
Well, of course the sanctions hurt the people. But what would you have us do? Let the Iranian government hold the people hostage as the price for acquisition to their nuclear weapons program? Invade?

Every other option either hurts the people even more (such as invasion), or has even less effect at saving the world from going back to the brink of nuclear Armageddon.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alimostofi
Astrologer, Commentator
08:10 AM on 11/25/2011
If you asked anyone "Would you like to sanction The Hezbollah Party in Iran?" they would say "yes". If you asked "Would you like to sanction Iran" you would get "no". As simple as this seems, arguments would be toally different if the wrong phrase is used. People did not mind an attack on Raliab, but minded an attack on Afghanistan.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
11:21 PM on 11/24/2011
Sanctions have not worked against Cuba or North Korea or other countries. They have worked only against South Africa, and the former Rhodesia, because those countries were ruled by a democratic regime elected by the white elite, that listened to our condemnations. But sanctions don't work against dictators.
09:03 PM on 11/24/2011
This article perfectly iIIustrate­­­­s the moral bankruptcy of the US war propaganda US mainstream media. Illegal wars of aggression like the war against lraq should have no rewards at all costs. Besides, all oil contracts under foreign occupation are illegal.
06:44 PM on 11/24/2011
I really thank you for this article and its totally different way to see the Iran´s sanctions issue. What can we do for stop the wrong use of politics and its catastrophic consequences? This is already a war, and we can´t stop it now, can we?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DAE
12:19 PM on 11/24/2011
I hope the Iranian people, who deserve much better than the oppressive rule of the mullahs, realize that the US is not their friend. We have stabbed the Iranians in their back multiple times. A free, sovereign Iran that pursues its own path to development independently from US and Western influence is what the US fiercely hates. The US supports democracy in Iran for the sole purpose of subverting it and imposing a neo-liberal, neo-colonial rule over the Iranian nation
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
03:40 PM on 11/24/2011
Iran already has very much a democracy. It has a functioning parliament that is far more effective than our dysfunctional Congress. Also, no president has served more than the permitted two terms. The main problem is the influence of religion in Iran. If the current pressure on Iran was relieved, it would be much easier to get rid of the Mullahs.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
11:24 PM on 11/24/2011
Iran's parliament is effective because it has been elected unfairly, with many candidates disqualified. So it is dominated by hardliners, allied with the dictator Khamenei. It is illegal even for parliament members to criticize Khamenei.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Amin Khad
07:00 AM on 11/24/2011
Sanctions led to the death of 500,000 children in Iraq. Ron Paul warned about it then:

http://youtu.be/wZtPzOukjZA

And he's warning about these sanctions now.
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SheilaKhani
He who wants a rose must respect the thorn
02:01 AM on 11/24/2011
Sanctions only hurt the people. If the intent is to put pressure on Islamic regime, then US and the allies should support the people of Iran by doing the opposite of the sanctions.
The truth of the matter is that most politicians in the world are corrupt and blatantly feed us false information to achieve their own goals in the name of their national interests. In doing so, civilians in other countries pay the big price along with the American military and their families.
Pauline Jaing
Artist, worker, mother
01:24 AM on 11/24/2011
Yes but dear, the sanctons are only by a few countries, the US, Canada, Britain, and some EU countires.

Anyway, I thoght everyone was trying to get out of the IMF???? Worked for Argentina! Helped them a LOT.

Oh, yes,
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SheilaKhani
He who wants a rose must respect the thorn
02:02 AM on 11/24/2011
actually sanctions are by China and Russia and India and many others are forced to do so...if the central bank of Iran is sanctioned then that would mean everybody in the world.
12:17 AM on 11/24/2011
Sounds true. Any better ideas?
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Internet Privacy Hah
No war with Iran.
09:36 PM on 11/23/2011
"There has to be a better way to empower a population looking to disempower the same regime we wish to destabilize."

I agree. What is it?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
canobserv
08:59 AM on 11/24/2011
education......ignorance will be the downfall of ANY nation..including America
09:11 PM on 11/23/2011
Imposing total ban on selling medicine or repair parts to Iranian aviation companies is a criminal act. Being anti Iranian is as bad as being anti-Semitic. We may need to send Ron Paul to White House to cure the hate tumor in America brains.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
08:59 PM on 11/23/2011
Sanctions hurt the very people they're supposed to help. They are wrong and immoral.
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
07:53 PM on 11/23/2011
The sanctions are illogical and completely unjustified. All knowledgeable people know that Iran has no nuclear weapons program. The 2007 and 2011 US NIEs have indicated so. Obama is just going through the motions to appease Israel. The goal is to cripple the Iranian economy so that it can be pushed around by the US and Israel. Hurting the people of Iran is the real goal since the Iranian government will never yield to pressure. This sadistic approach was evident in Iraq, where sanctions led to the death of about 500,000 children. Madeleine Albright proudly declared, "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it."
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
11:26 PM on 11/24/2011
Your slogan is 'accept no dogmas', yet you preach the dogma that Iran has no nuclear weapons program. But they are sure behaving suspiciously for a nation with no such program.
06:58 PM on 11/25/2011
Compared to other countries with similar uranium enrichment programs, Iran has been far more open and has exceeded anything legally required if it. The additional demands made on Iran are themselves illegal, and intended to deliberately drag out tgis conflict because the US needs the nuxlear issue as a pretext for regime change just like "WMDs in Iraq" was a pretext.
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Quinterius
Accept no dogmas
06:01 PM on 12/15/2011
It is not dogma. It is a simple fact based on the evidence or lack of evidence for the opposite. Do you have proof that Iran has nuclear weapons? What is it? I hope you are not going to the refer to the piece of fiction released by the IAEA recently.
07:32 PM on 11/23/2011
Excellent recap of Iranians women endeavors for betterment of their country, nevertheless no Iranian living in Iran want to destabilize their government in face of foreign power's desire to subjugate Iran as another client state, on contrary they want to improve their present system by keeping a republic part minus the theology part and that can be done peacefully through amendment of Iran's constitution and that will not happens until Iran security is firmly established and believed to be true by her masses!