POPULARITY
Die Ukraine rüstet sich gegen die russischen Angriffe im Winter. Die Lage im Al-Shifa-Krankenhaus im Gazastreifen scheint katastrophal. Und die inhaftierte iranische Anwältin Nasrin Sotoudeh wird in Berlin geehrt. Das ist die Lage am Montag. Die Artikel zum Nachlesen: Wintervorbereitung in der Ukraine: Mit Sand, Beton und Raketen gegen die Kälte Israel-Gaza-Krieg: Warum der Kampf um die Krankenhäuser so gefährlich ist Ziviler Ungehorsam in Iran: »Wir glauben nicht mehr an Reformen« +++ Alle Rabattcodes und Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier: https://linktr.ee/spiegellage +++ Die SPIEGEL-Gruppe ist nicht für den Inhalt dieser Webseite verantwortlich.Alle SPIEGEL Podcasts finden Sie hier. Mehr Hintergründe zum Thema erhalten Sie bei SPIEGEL+. Jetzt für nur € 1,- für die ersten vier Wochen testen unter spiegel.de/abonnieren Informationen zu unserer Datenschutzerklärung.
Prominent Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh arrested and beaten, Venezuela's supreme court suspends opposition primaries, New Zealand volcano owner found guilty of safety breaches, James Webb Space Telescope captures new details of Crab Nebula, China predicts increase in winter power demand, record 6.9 million people displaced in Congo conflict, Russian citizens commemorate victims of Stalin's purges, Michael Bloomberg pledges $44 million to Israeli emergency medical service.
A new edition of Roqe from The Uprising series featuring interviews with tech entrepreneur and online energizer Kooshiar Azimian in Los Angeles, and writer and academic Dr. Ali Fathollah-Nejad in Berlin. Jian starts the show with an audio essay addressing President Biden following his recent State of the Union address and complete omission of any mention of Iran. Plus the regulars, Pegah and Shaya assemble with Jian for the Roqe Roundtable to discuss the The Future of Iran's Democracy Movement Conference in Washington DC, the global call to action and rallies taking place worldwide on Saturday Feb 11th, and the courage of dissident lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh in her latest bold interview whilst on medical leave from prison in Iran.
The death toll in Turkey and Syria after Monday's earthquake is rising, though survivors – including children – are still emerging from the rubble. Correspondent Salma Abdelaziz reports on the desperate efforts to get more help for the already war-torn Syria. Also on today's show: David Miliband, Former UK Foreign Secretary; Nasrin Sotoudeh, Iranian human rights lawyer; Martin Wolf, Author, “The Crisis of Democratic Capitalism” To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
Le 16 septembre une révolution a débutée en Iran NO COMMENT vous livre chaque jour une actualité factuelle de la situation dans le pays Au 111ème jour de cette révolution, les dernières données chiffrées vérifiées sont (*): 70 enfants tués 68 membres des forces du régime tués 19 301 individus arrêtés 4874 détenus identifiés 706 étudiants arrêtés 519 protestataires exécutés (*)Sources : Human Right Activists in Iran 109 contestataires risquent, à tout moment, d'être exécutés ou condamnés à mort. Ce chiffre est en deçà de la réalité car la plupart des familles sont sous pression et contraintes à taire les situations. Nasrin Sotoudeh est avocate et le visage des droits humains le plus connu d'Iran, nommée par Time Magazine comme l'une des 100 personnes les plus influentes au monde en 2021. Depuis sa sortie de prison, elle qualifie ouvertement les exécutions de meurtres.
Radio Nana voyage durant 1 mois et met à l'honneur des femmes iraniennes. La première ? Nasrin Sotoudeh, avocate iranienne qui s'est battue pour les droits humains. Pour cela, elle a écopé de 38 ans de prison.
TESTO DELL'ARTICOLO ➜ www.bastabugie.it/it/articoli.php?id=6976LA VIA CRUCIS DELLA CEI ESALTA CAROLA RACKETE, GRETA THUNBERG, GINO STRADA, UN'ATTIVISTA LGBT, ECC. di Andrea Zambrano"Santa Greta Thunberg, prega per noi"; "Beato Gino Strada, ora pro nobis"; "...e per intercessione del martire Mimmo Lucano, andate in pace...". Per la CEI sono questi i testimoni del nostro tempo, ma se anche non sono battezzati non è un problema, anzi, è quasi meglio. L'importante è che abbiano speso la vita per gli altri. Gli altri, cioè tutti tranne Cristo.E di esempi, l'ufficio che redige sussidi pastorali chiamato Missio, ne ha individuati 15. Tanti quante sono le stazioni della via Crucis, che è stata proposta alle diocesi e alle parrocchie italiane per la Quaresima 2022.15 testimoni scelti da - nientepopodimenoche - la Consulta Nazionale Missio Giovani, uno degli inutili organismi pastorali della Cei che si occupa di redigere sussidi e "sostenere e promuovere la dimensione missionaria della comunità ecclesiale italiana". Missio ha prodotto un sussidio chiamato Voce dei Martiri, Eco del Verbo, dedicato ai missionari martiri. Ma di cristiani che muoiono per dare la vita a Gesù non c'è traccia. Però, ci sono loro: attivisti, premi Nobel, giornalisti e politici di poche, ma selezionate cause, i quali, come filo conduttore non sembrano avere nulla che li accomuni, ad eccezione del fatto, a parte due, forse tre, di non essere nemmeno cristiani.La cosa ha fatto indignare i fedeli di una delle poche parrocchie che per la Quaresima '22 ha deciso di utilizzare lo schema della via Crucis di Missio, quella della Chiesa di madre di Castellamare del Golfo, diocesi di Trapani. Alcuni parrocchiani si sono indispettiti per i "contenuti antropocentrici e politicizzati" dei testi e dei testimoni scelti.LE STAZIONI DELLA VIA CRUCISVediamo, dunque. Alla prima stazione la condanna a morte di Gesù viene rappresentata da Marielle Franco Da Silva, definita "un'attivista brasiliana". Di Marielle, che è stata uccisa per la "causa della giustizia in Brasile", si scopre pure che era un'attivista Lgbt, che viveva con una "compagna" di lotta, pur non disdegnando di presentarsi come bisessuale.Seconda stazione: i Nobel per la Pace Maria Ressa e Dmitry Muratov, giornalisti premiati per le loro denunce e che qui, poco ci manca, sono additati come santi patroni dei giornalisti. Terza stazione, Andrea Caschetto, chiamato "Ambasciatore del sorriso". Con la quarta stazione è il turno di Lorenza Fornasir e Gian Andrea Franchi. È poi il minuto di celebrità di Alessia Bonari, l'infermiera di Grosseto divenuta celebre durante la pandemia perché ha mostrato i segni della mascherina sul volto. Dalla foto al palco di Sanremo il passo è stato velocissimo e dall'Ariston agli altari, ancora più rapido: la quinta stazione, quella del Cireneo, è la sua.Per trovare una suora cattolica bisogna aspettare la sesta stazione: è suor Gabriella Bottani, "missionaria comboniana impegnata nella lotta contro la tratta degli esseri umani" mentre la seconda caduta è affidata a Nasrin Sotoudeh, avvocatessa per i diritti umani in Iran attualmente in prigione per il suo impegno.La speronatrice di motovedette della Marina Carola Rackete è all'ottava stazione in compagnia delle pie donne. Molto pia non deve essere, ma il sussidio la chiama comunque "attivista della solidarietà". Eccoci arrivati alla terza caduta di Gesù con Mimmo Lucano che viene lodato per l'"audacia nell'accoglienza". Il tribunale di Locri che l'ha condannato in primo grado a 13 anni e 2 mesi di reclusione non parlerebbe proprio di audacia, dato che nelle motivazioni della sentenza parla di un "illegale approvvigionamento di risorse pubbliche per garantirsi una tranquillità economica".È invece una vera e propria apostola della "Cura della casa comune" Greta Thunberg, che viene così equiparata a una "Madonna" che desidera un futuro più sostenibile. Il "calvario" prosegue con Malala Yousafzai, anch'essa Premio Nobel alla voce "diritti", che compare alla dodicesima stazione subito dopo il sacerdote cattolico Alejandro Solalinde. Chiudono la via crucis Nicolò Govoni, l'artista Afghana Samsia Hassani e appunto, in resurrexione Domini, Gino Strada.NESSUN MARTIRE DELLA CHIESAChe cosa hanno in comune questi personaggi? Che nessuno di loro è martire della Chiesa e nemmeno fulgido esempio di fede. Ad essere preso ad esempio, qui, è il loro impegno civile, solidaristico, per cause se vogliamo lodevoli, ma comunque mondane come le migrazioni clandestine e il clima.I nuovi testimoni che i vescovi vogliono proporre ai giovani non sono più i santi, sono gli attivisti. O i premi Nobel, protagonisti mondani di battaglie sempre di altri, mai nate dentro la Chiesa. Alcuni di loro fanno azioni meritorie e lodevoli (della Rackete non potremmo dire nemmeno quello), ma in quanti lo fanno perché animati da una fede e quanti invece da ideali generici di solidarietà? Se ad essere d'esempio è solo l'attivismo senza caratterizzazioni di fede, quale è il valore aggiunto dato dalla fede cattolica per il bene della società? Perché, ad esempio, visto che si parla di diritti, non c'è nessuno che si occupi di aborto e di diritti dei nascituri? In Spagna hanno appena messo fuorilegge le preghiere davanti agli abortifici, non sono forse questi dei martiri delle fede più adeguati di quelli scelti?C'è poi un altro aspetto che deve fare riflettere: [...] tra i 15 "testimoni" scelti, soltanto due sono religiosi cattolici e nessuno si muove esplicitamente per una chiamata missionaria o evangelica. Alcuni, addirittura, sono stati uccisi o stanno subendo torture in carcere, ma mai per la causa di Gesù. Ebbene, non avrebbe forse trovato meritoriamente posto un'Asia Bibi, che di persecuzione religiosa se ne intende, tra di loro? Invece, sembra proprio che il messaggio che si vuole lanciare sia: non importa che tu sia cristiano o no, l'importante è che tu faccia del bene. [...]
Social justice is an on going struggle..."Nasrin" was secretly filmed in Iran by women and men who risked arrest to make this documentary. It is an immersive portrait of the world's most honored human rights activist and political prisoner, attorney Nasrin Sotoudeh, and of Iran's remarkably resilient women's rights movement. In the courts and on the streets, Nasrin has long fought for the rights of women, children, religious minorities, journalists and artists, and those facing the death penalty. In the midst of filming, Nasrin was arrested in June 2018 for representing women who were protesting Iran's mandatory hijab law. She was sentenced to 38 years in prison, plus 148 lashes.She's still in an Iranian prison today which gives credence to the fact that her story needs to continue to be told to this day.We got the distinct pleasure to sit down with director Jeff Kaufman and producer Marcia Ross about the making of the film, the bravery involved in telling this story and how anyone watching can help the fight that Nasrin Sotoudeh is continuing to fight to this day from her prison cell.
A powerful and inspiring documentary examining the life of Iranian human rights activist, Nasrin Sotoudeh.Find more reviews at https://www.bringme2life.com/thecinemascribe
Frankie Picasso host of Mission Unstoppable Radio and Brent Marchant, the Good Radio Network, Movie Critic interviewed the amazing team of Marcia Ross- Producer and Jeff Kaufman, Director of the documentary film, Nasrin, filmed secretly in Iran, using undercover camera crew to film lawyer and human rights activist Nasrin Sotoudeh, who is currently imprisoned in Evin Prison for defending a Women's right not to wear a Hijab in public. She has routinely defended, woman and children, LBGTQ, political prisoners and those facing the death penalty. In 2018 halfway through filming, Nasrin was sentenced to 38 years and 145 lashes. Nasrin is a mother and wife.
CNN international anchor Christiane Amanpour, filmmaker Jeff Kaufman and The Post’s Jason Rezaian discuss “NASRIN,” a new documentary about imprisoned human rights activist Nasrin Sotoudeh and Iran’s women’s rights movement.
Free to Think talks with Marcia Ross and Jeff Kaufman, the team behind NASRIN, a beautiful and inspiring new film about Nasrin Sotoudeh, Iranian human rights attorney. The film shows Sotoudeh's courage and compassion, as she represents those who have been forsaken by a brutal regime: political prisoners, religious minorities, women, and children. Arrested in 2018, while the film was being made, she was sentenced to 38 years and 148 lashes for the “crime” of defending women protesting the mandatory headscarf. Sotoudeh has been called "Iran's Nelson Mandela." The filmmakers show her as she is: a lawyer, activist, feminist, wife, mother, friend, and a central figure in an extraordinary generation of Iranian women who simply refuse to accept anything less than full and equal rights.
Imagine being torn away from your husband and son, brutally arrested, and tossed into solitary confinement. Imagine being prevented from calling your family or even speaking to your lawyer. Imagine having to go on a hunger strike to get attention. This was the actual experience of one Iranian woman, Shaparak Shajarizadeh. Her “crime”? Protesting the Iranian theocracy’s law mandating that women wear a headscarf in public. With the help of noted human-rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, Shaparak was released on bail. Facing mounting persecution for her activism and the likelihood of a significant prison term, Shaparak decided to flee the country. She eventually found asylum in Canada. For the New Ideal podcast, I recently interviewed Shaparak about her struggle in Iran and the plight of her fellow activists, which she describes in a recent book (currently only available in French, La liberté n’est pas un crime, or Freedom Is Not a Crime). We start with the reality of life under Iran’s theocratic regime, from the vantage of one of its victims. Ordinary Iranians “live under the shadow of fear,” she noted. Women in particular are second-class citizens who “face violence every day” and “never feel safe” in public, amid the patrols of the “morality police,” who enforce the compulsory hijab. Having turned away from Islam, Shaparak went on to join protest movements, notably “#WhiteWednesdays,” and challenged the religious oppression of women. In one statement, she defied the authorities: “Don’t drag me to your heaven! I know what to do with my life!” As peaceful protests grew, the regime sought to crush such opposition. Probably the most poignant, and dismaying, topic we discussed is the apathy of Western countries to the fate of Iranians seeking a modicum of freedom. One example she brought up was the 2015 agreement that the Obama administration signed with Iran over its nuclear program. Some people had hoped that U.S. diplomats would pressure the regime about its abysmal record on rights. But Obama’s landmark deal was silent about the Iranian regime’s systematic violation of individual rights. It left activists like Shaparak out in the cold. You don’t know how much Iranian people look to the outside world for support, she told me. But the world, she said, is silent. Or worse: Without intentional irony, the United Nations recently added Iran to a commission on women’s rights. “They come, they lie, and they go,” she said of Iranian diplomats at the UN — and the world lets them get away with it. Determined to help change that, she has spoken out about the UN and worked to bring awareness to the struggles of Iranian activists — especially her lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh. For defending Shaparak and many other political activists, Sotoudeh has been sentenced to 38 years in jail, and 148 lashes. For me the conversation — which you can watch or listen to below — holds a lesson for America about the absence of, and urgent need for, a principled foreign policy. Such a policy should uphold the ideal of freedom as a standard to live up to, regard its absence in other regimes as a moral failing, and lend moral support to individuals genuinely seeking freedom, in Iran and elsewhere. Podcast audio:
A special episode of Press the Button features an exclusive interview with the filmmakers behind Nasrin, a documentary film about Iranian political prisoner Nasrin Sotoudeh. A prominent human rights lawyer and activist, Sotoudeh was arrested in June 2018 for representing women who were protesting Iran’s mandatory hijab law, and she was sentenced to 38 years in prison, plus 148 lashes. An Amnesty International petition calling for her release received over a million signatures from 200 countries. Director/producer Jeff Kaufman and producer Marcia Ross speak with guest host and Ploughshares Fund board member Farshad Farahat about the making of the film, and Sotoudeh's status today. Learn more about the film and how to watch at www.nasrinfilm.com/
This week we’re joined by documentary filmmakers Marcia Ross and Jeff Kaufman who talk to us about their new film Nasrin, which centers on the riveting story of Nasrin Soutoudeh, a human rights lawyer imprisoned in Iran. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Carl Dix on the January 6 attempted coup. What happened and what do we need to continue to do to stop fascism? Why the danger is not passed – and why there is no going back to “normal times.” Jeff Kaufman and Marcia Ross, makers of “NASRIN,” an immersive portrait of one of the world’s most courageous human rights activists and political prisoners, Nasrin Sotoudeh, and of Iran’s remarkably resilient women’s rights movement.
Gran Bretagna: con la Brexit, abolita la tassa sugli assorbenti. In Spagna congedi parentali uguali per mamma, papà e tutti i genitori. Iran: a Nasrin Sotoudeh il premio Eleneor Roosevelt. Yemen, cinque donne uccise durante un attacco a una festa di nozze. Egitto, condanna a tre anni per un molestatore seriale che aveva innescato il #MeToo nel paese
Gran Bretagna: con la Brexit, abolita la tassa sugli assorbenti. In Spagna congedi parentali uguali per mamma, papà e tutti i genitori. Iran: a Nasrin Sotoudeh il premio Eleneor Roosevelt. Yemen, cinque donne uccise durante un attacco a una festa di nozze. Egitto, condanna a tre anni per un molestatore seriale che aveva innescato il #MeToo nel paese
Directed, produced, and written by Jeff Kaufman and produced by Marcia S. Ross (Terrence McNally: Every Act of Life) NASRIN is an immersive portrait of one of the world’s most courageous human rights activists and an outspoken leader of Iran's remarkably resilient women's rights movement. She is currently in the fifth week of a hunger strike and serving a long sentence in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison. Millions of people from over 200 nations have called for Nasrin’s release including President-elect Joe Biden; journalist Christiane Amanpour; journalist/activist Gloria Steinem; author Margaret Atwood; Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, and many others. Secretly filmed in Iran by men and women who risked arrest, NASRIN features interviews with acclaimed filmmaker Jafar Panahi, Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi, journalist Ann Curry, and Nasrin’s husband and fellow-activist Reza Khandan. NASRIN is narrated by Oscar® winning actress Olivia Colman and also features an original song by Tony Award®-winning composers Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty and performed by 4-time Grammy® winner Angélique Kidjo. In addition, Washington Post columnist and former political prisoner Jason Rezaian serves as one of the film’s Executive Producers. Director Jeff Kaufman and Producer Marcia S. Ross join us to talk about one of the world’s most courageous woman and about the daily challenges she and other civil and women’s rights activist face in one of the world’s most repressive regimes. Update on Nasrin: As of today, Nasrin Sotoudeh has been ordered back to prison in Iran. Earlier last month, she was released from prison due to health reasons and the corona -19 virus. Then, she had just ended her 40+ day hunger strike at the end of October in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison. Please join us in telling her story and amplifying her voice for her freedom. Nasrin hashtag #StandUp4NASRIN continues to grow daily. For news, screenings and updates go to: nasrinfilm.com
FEATURING JEFF KAUFMAN – A new documentary about one of Iran’s most celebrated dissident lawyers called simply Nasrin, paints a portrait of one woman’s struggle against authoritarianism. Nasrin Sotoudeh, who is serving a 38-year sentence in Iran, was released from prison in November and then in early December, ordered back. Her story is central to the...
In Episode 1 of Series 6, Todd is talking with Dr. Nina Ansary an award-winning Iranian-American author, historian, and women's rights advocate. Nina is the UN Women Global Champion for Innovation and Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics Centre for Women, Peace & Security, and author of Anonymous Is a Woman: A Global Chronicle of Gender Inequality. They discuss the impact of the COVID19 pandemic on women's rights and on the citizens of Iran. 00.00 - 05.06 Todd begins by asking Nina for her reflections on the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic on Iran. She comments that: Covid 19 has served to exacerbate existing economic problems and far from supporting the population the regime has continued its crackdown on advocates for freedom and closer ties with the West The health service is under severe strain not helped by the impact of sanctions resulting in shortages of medical equipment and medicines Overall Iranians now feel more isolated than ever While there are numerous organisations engaged in lobbying on human rights issues the international community could do more The impact of Covid 19 has pushed human rights issues to the background 05.06 – 06.55 Todd moves on to ask Nina for her take on the existing nuclear power deal and US sanctions. She argues that while the sanctions are not the cause of Iran's economic difficulties they have accelerated the impact of economic mismanagement and corruption, which has fallen on the people and not the regime or its leaders. 06.55 – 11.05 The discussion moves onto the impact of Covid 19 on women's rights. Prior to the pandemic, Nina says: The advancement of women's rights was moving at a ‘glacial' pace. Discrimination was present in a wide range of economic and political activity Stereotyping of women was commonplace The effect of the pandemic has been to exacerbate inequalities, expose vulnerabilities, encourage discriminatory practices, and set back the advancement of women's rights, in particular those who are most vulnerable and those who are marginalised. Nina notes that women have been losing employment at a disproportionate rate as a result of Covid 19. She concludes by referencing the Beijing World Conference on Women 1995 and the lack of progress made since then. 11.05 – 15.05 When asked about the impact of the pandemic on women in the USA Nina refers to existing reforms which have been too narrow and the need to “move beyond the reforms of the past” to create a more equitable future. Todd then asks whether Nina foresees a move to resurrect the Equal Rights Amendment in the USA (ERA). In reply she points out that women in the USA are not united around this topic and that even within the ERA movement there was/is a tendency to fragment into different groups which is a limiting factor and an obstacle to reform. 15.05 – 19.40 Todd moves on to discuss Nina's work at the U.N. Appointed as a Global champion for innovation in 2019. Her focus is to drive transformational change by, Creating more opportunities for women and girls especially in technology and entrepreneurship Raising awareness of barriers to progress Highlighting women who have made significant contributions in those fields which have been overlooked downplayed or ignored. Nina refers to Dr. Jessica Wade who been challenging theses stereotyped b posting the names of women who have made significant contributions in the field of science. Working towards equality in participation, representation and opportunity in those fields Discrimination and stereotyping which serve to hold women back. Here she references the infamous post by Google engineer James Damores, whose internal memo suggested that women were biologically less capable of working in the fields of science and technology 19.40 – 21.25 Todd wonders whether it is time for a feminising of the curriculum in line with the decolonising the curriculum movement. Nina refers to gender mainstreaming as a major tool in moving away from entrenches stereotypes and unequal trajectories of development. 21.25 – end Todd brings the discussion full circle by asking for Nina's thoughts on the current situation in Iran and to comment on the motivations of the state in its crackdown on women activists. Nina describes a regime that feels threatened by powerful women and enacts discriminatory policies in law as a means of enacting coercive control over women. She cites the example of the incarceration of a prominent lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh for representing women's rights activists In this way women are being denied access to legal defence by the state Far from addressing what she sees to be the legitimate concerns of the Iranian people, instead, the regime is expending large sums on religious endowments and the funding of foreign terrorist organisations Additional references Impact of COVID on Iran https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/iran/ https://www.brookings.edu/opinions/iran-the-double-jeopardy-of-sanctions-and-covid-19/
Dr. Charles Gardner, the medical officer of health for the Simcoe Muskoka District Health Unit discusses the rising rate of infection in his jurisdiction; Our Queen's Park reporter Mike Crawley talks about the Ford government's controversial tactic of including legislation unrelated to the pandemic into bills that were ostensibly about tackling the effects of the coronavirus; Sandy Buchman, the former head of the Canadian Medical Association explains what he sees as the priorities as the provinces and territories prepare to meet with the federal government to discuss health care funding; Rabbi Mendel Nakkar talks about Hanukkah celebrations; Two former students from Queen's University in Kingston, Jeremy Wiener and Daniel Hornstein, tell us why they campaigned to have Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh awarded an honourary degree; Family doctor Peter Lin talks about the challenges that will remain as the vaccine for COVID-19 becomes available across Canada; Dr. Joseph Belliveau of Doctors Without Borders explains the inequity in access to the vaccine between developed and developing countries; Tariq Ahmed of Revel Cider tells us why he frustrated with some of the LCBO's policies when so many licensed establishments are struggling to survive.
Letzten Donnerstag wurde ihr der Alternative Nobelpreis verliehen -für ihr furchtloses Engagement unter hohem persönlichen Risiko für die Menschenrechte im Iran. Die iranische Anwältin und Menschenrechtlerin Nasrin Sotoudeh konnte bei der Verleihung nicht dabei sein: Sie ist 2019 im Iran verurteilt worden, zu 33 Jahren Gefängnis und 148 Peitschenhieben. Der Gesundheitszustand der 56-jährigen Menschenrechtlerin ist äußerst gefährdet -nach einem Hungerstreik und nun einer Covid19-Erkrankung. Am heutigen Internationalen Tag der Menschenrechte wollen sich vier prominente Deutsch-Iraner- und Iranerinnen, darunter der Schriftsteller Navid Kermani, vor der Bundespressekonferenz für die Freilassung von Nasrin Sotoudeh und anderer iranischer Gefangener einsetzen und Gespräche über Menschenrechte im Iran fordern. Wir sprechen mit der Journalistin und Professorin für Islamwissenschaft an der Uni Köln, Katajun Amirpur. Außerdem: Was ist schön? Wissenschaftsjournalist Gabor Paal hat sich mit Ästhetik und Erkenntnis auseinandergesetzt. Wir stellen sein Buch vor. / Tina Lorenz ist die Digitalbeauftragte am Staatstheater Augsburg. Ein Porträt. / und: Spiel mit der Chronologie: Gaspar Noé schneidet seinen Skandal-Film Irreversible von 2002 um.
Iran: Rinviata di alcuni giorni l'esecuzione del medico iraniano svedese Ahmad Reza Djalali / Malata, debole, positiva al coronavirus, torna in prigione l'avvocata Nasrin Sotoudeh. Etiopia: Accesso umanitario all'Onu nel Tigray. Amnesty condanna la terribile “follia delle esecuzioni” in Egitto. L'app israeliana che “rende facile uccidere un palestinese come ordinare una pizza”. Iraq: aumentano i suicidi tra i giovani. Venezuela: verso il voto di domenica. Giappone: auto elettriche entro il 2035, emissioni zero entro il 2050. Questo e molto altro nel notiziario di Radio Bullets, a cura di Barbara Schiavulli. Musiche di Walter Sguazzin
Iran: Rinviata di alcuni giorni l’esecuzione del medico iraniano svedese Ahmad Reza Djalali / Malata, debole, positiva al coronavirus, torna in prigione l’avvocata Nasrin Sotoudeh. Etiopia: Accesso umanitario all’Onu nel Tigray. Amnesty condanna la terribile “follia delle esecuzioni” in Egitto. L’app israeliana che “rende facile uccidere un palestinese come ordinare una pizza”. Iraq: aumentano i suicidi tra i giovani. Venezuela: verso il voto di domenica. Giappone: auto elettriche entro il 2035, emissioni zero entro il 2050. Questo e molto altro nel notiziario di Radio Bullets, a cura di Barbara Schiavulli. Musiche di Walter Sguazzin
Nasrin Sotoudeh is a women's rights attorney and winner of the prestigious Sakharov Prize. Over the years, she has become a voice for the voiceless, representing children, Iran's persecuted minority communities, as well as leading opponents of the death penalty. Back in 2019, the jailed 57-year-old was sentenced again, for defending women who had removed their hijabs. Last week, she was temporarily released on furlough to receive medical treatment. All that and more has been depicted in a new film, "Nasrin". We speak to Jeff Kaufman and Marcia Ross, who are behind the four-year project.
A special edition of Roqe: The Case for Nasrin. Iranian lawyer and human rights activist Nasrin Sotoudeh has been sentenced to 38 years in prison in Iran for defending those charged with political offences. While she was just awarded the Alternative Nobel Prize for human rights, her imprisonment continues, her situation is dire, and due to a hunger strike and heart issues, she is in a weakened state. We are joined by a diversity of voices from around the world to speak to the importance of Nasrin and the symbolic nature of her case, including: Elahe Sharifpour Hicks, Natalie Amiri, Ramin Jahanbegloo, Abdolkarim Lahiji, Mehrangiz Kar, Hossein Raeesi, Jeff Kaufman, and a message from Nasrin Sotoudeh’s husband, Reza Khandan, in Tehran.
Oct 23rd 2020: the toxic legacy of Iraq war- NASRIN, documentary on Nasrin Sotoudeh by KPFA: Voices of the Middle East and North Africa
For more than two decades, Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh has fought for the rights of women, children and minorities in her country.Her work has won her international acclaim but also the wrath of the Iranian government. She has been arrested several times and is currently serving a 38-year sentence in prison. Her family has been detained and harassed as well.This month, a new documentary called “Nasrin” takes viewers inside the life of Sotoudeh. In this Nov. 1, 2008, file photo, Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh poses for a photograph in her office in Tehran, Iran. Credit: Arash Ashourinia/File photo/AP ‘Child of the Revolution’Hadi Ghaemi, founder and director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran, describes Sotoudeh as “a child of the Iranian Revolution.”Born in 1963 in Langarud, Iran, Sotoudeh experienced the 1979 Revolution and its aftermath during her formative years, Ghaemi said.Sotoudeh was a bank employee before she became a journalist and later, decided to study law and become a lawyer. As part of her work, she provided pro bono services to minorities and prisoners of conscience.Related: As Iran arrests Instagram influencers, some seek safety abroad“[Nasrin Sotoudeh] was breaking grounds with some of her colleagues in providing defense to those cases that no one else would take on like the LGBT community, religious minorities, people on death row."Hadi Ghaemi, founder and director, Center for Human Rights, Iran“She was breaking grounds with some of her colleagues in providing defense to those cases that no one else would take on like the LGBT community, religious minorities, people on death row,” Ghaemi said. Iranian authorities arrested Sotoudeh several times in the past. She was jailed from August 2010 to September 2013 for her professional and human rights activities.Her most recent arrest came in 2018 after she represented women who had taken off their headscarves to protest compulsory hijab laws, according to Human Rights Watch. In March 2019, the court sentenced her to 38 years in prison.Related: Iranians share stories of sexual harassment on social mediaFilmed secretly Nasrin Sotoudeh holds a protest sign in Tehran in a scene from the film "Nasrin," directed by Jeff Kaufman and narrated by Oscar winner Olivia Colman. Credit: Courtesy of Floating World Pictures “Nasrin” was directed and produced by Jeff Kaufman and Marcia Ross, who began work on the film in 2017, before Sotoudeh was arrested. The duo kept details about the film under wraps to avoid getting those involved in trouble with Iranian authorities.“We kept it very quiet,” said Ross.“Very often, when you make an independent documentary, you find public ways to raise money through a Kickstarter campaign, GoFundMe, and we did absolutely none of that with this film,” she said.Kaufman and Ross hired anonymous contributors to follow Sotoudeh as she went about her daily life. They captured Sotoudeh at her office, home and in her car as she drove to court appointments.The film also shows some rarely seen footage from inside a courtroom in Tehran, the capital. Sotoudeh is wearing a bright blue headscarf held in place by a knot under her chin. She is standing behind a podium, a stack of paper in one hand, her eyeglasses in the other. Sotoudeh is defending Shirin Ebadi, winner of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize.In the courtroom, Hossein Shariatmadari, a representative of Iran’s Supreme Leader, laments that Ebadi is “taking money from foreigners,” referring to the financial reward that comes with the Nobel Prize. When Sotoudeh addresses the court in the video, she’s polite but firm. After a few minutes of back and forth, Sotoudeh tells the court that her rights and the rights of her client are being trampled on.Then, she suddenly turns her back and walks out. Shariatmadari looks stunned.“To step inside a revolutionary court and actually see Nasrin stare down and argue down a prosecutor and a judge is pretty intense." Jeff Kaufman, filmmaker, "Nasrin"“To step inside a revolutionary court and actually see Nasrin stare down and argue down a prosecutor and a judge is pretty intense,” said Jeff Kaufman in an interview with The World.“Nasrin Sotoudeh, I think, represents all the standards we need for a role model around the world today. Not just for Iran. She’s a remarkable woman,” he said.In “Nasrin,” the audience gets to know Sotoudeh as the defiant lawyer who stands up for the rights of women, children and religious minorities, but also as an art lover, a wife and a mother.In one scene, Sotoudeh picks up her son from school and they hold hands as they walk home.“In every society, it’s the youth that are most vocal about injustice,” she says in the narration. “I hope one day, there’s peace in my country. Then, we can make films and write poems about it.”‘No regrets’Incidentally, when The World reached Sotoudeh’s husband, Reza Khandan, by phone in Iran, he too was about to pick up their son from school.Later, Khandan explained that his wife’s health has been deteriorating in prison. Sotoudeh went on a hunger strike last month as a way to protest the conditions in prison and the treatment of her family by the authorities.Khandan said his wife is suffering from heart problems, too, and she is in need of medical attention.On Wednesday, Khandan tweeted that instead of being taken to a hospital, Sotoudeh has been transferred from the notorious Evin prison to a prison outside Tehran.Today the guards of Evin prison called Nasrin and instructed her to be ready for transfer to the hospital. Instead, she has been transferred directly to Qarchak prison!— Reza Khandan (@RezaKhandan4) October 20, 2020“This government is fearful of people like my wife. ... They know she is not giving up.”Reza Khandan, husband of Nasrin Sotoudeh The people come together in support of Iranian human rights lawyer and activist Nasrin Sotoudeh, in a scene from the film, "Nasrin," directed by Jeff Kaufman and narrated by Oscar winner Olivia Colman. Credit: Courtesy of Floating World Pictures “This government is fearful of people like my wife,” Khandan told The World. “They know she is not giving up.”Khandan said his focus now is to try and make life as normal as possible for the couple’s two children — to give them the support they need in the absence of their mother.Filmmakers Kaufman and Ross said they learned a lot about Iran, but the film also made them reflect on what could be at stake here in the US: “An effort over and over again to push back on civil rights and human rights, voting rights, women’s rights, minority rights, pushing religious intolerance, all that’s been happening in this country as we’ve been making this film about human rights in Iran,” Kaufman said.Related: In Iran, all eyes are on US election's impact on sanctions, security He hopes that the film serves as a reminder to Americans not to let their liberties slip away.And to get out and vote.
Egitto: Scrittore e critico del presidente muore pochi giorni dopo essere stato rilasciato di prigione. Iran: sempre più gravi le condizioni dell'avvocata detenuta Nasrin Sotoudeh. Esplosione in Libano: l'Fbi non raggiunge alcuna conclusione. Tunisia: timori per l'aumento del tasso di crimini violenti. Turchia: a Istanbul vietato uno spettacolo – tratto da un testo di Dario Fo - in lingua curda. Si dimette parlamentare cipriota coinvolto nella vendita illegale di passaporti e scoperto da una giornalista in incognito. Cina e Russia tra quelli che abusano dei diritti umani eletti al Consiglio dei diritti umani dell'Onu. Al via oggi tra Libano e Israele negoziati storici sulle acque contese. Il presidente del Kirghizistan respinge il neo premier. Questo e molto altro nel notiziario di Radio Bullets, a cura di Barbara Schiavulli
Egitto: Scrittore e critico del presidente muore pochi giorni dopo essere stato rilasciato di prigione. Iran: sempre più gravi le condizioni dell’avvocata detenuta Nasrin Sotoudeh. Esplosione in Libano: l’Fbi non raggiunge alcuna conclusione. Tunisia: timori per l’aumento del tasso di crimini violenti. Turchia: a Istanbul vietato uno spettacolo – tratto da un testo di Dario Fo - in lingua curda. Si dimette parlamentare cipriota coinvolto nella vendita illegale di passaporti e scoperto da una giornalista in incognito. Cina e Russia tra quelli che abusano dei diritti umani eletti al Consiglio dei diritti umani dell’Onu. Al via oggi tra Libano e Israele negoziati storici sulle acque contese. Il presidente del Kirghizistan respinge il neo premier. Questo e molto altro nel notiziario di Radio Bullets, a cura di Barbara Schiavulli
عربي تحت Malihe Razazan spoke to Human Rights Watch (HRW) Iran Researcher Tara Sepehri Far about Nasrin Sotoudeh's hunger strike and the criminalization of peaceful protests in Iran. Sotoudeh is an Iranian human rights lawyer, who was arrested in 2010 and started her second hunger strike this year in August to protest the inhumane treatment of Iranian political prisoners during the COVID pandemic. Courtesy of Voices of the Middle East and North Africa (VOMENA). أسباب إضراب نسرين ستوده عن الطعام احتجاجاً على ظروف السجن الرهيبة في إيران تحدثت مليحة رزازان إلى الباحثة الإيرانية في منظمة هيومن رايتس ووتش تارا سبهري فار حول إضراب نسرين ستوده عن الطعام وتجريم الاحتجاجات السلمية في إيران. ونسرين ستوده محامية إيرانية في مجال حقوق الإنسان كانت قد اعتقلت في عام 2010 وبدأت إضرابها الثاني عن الطعام هذا العام في أغسطس احتجاجاً على المعاملة اللاإنسانية للسجناء السياسيين الإيرانيين خلال جائحة كورونا
Nazanin Boniadi was 23 when she upended her 10-year plan. Medical school was the next natural step for the recent pre-med graduate from the University of California at Irvine, but her mind was racing toward something else. “I wanted to go to med school because that's what every good Persian girl does,” she tells Bustle. “I wanted to help people.” But she also wanted to be an actor. Breaking that kind of news to immigrant parents is never easy, especially when your father fled his home country, Iran, to escape execution. “I called my dad and said, ‘Thanks for putting me through college, but I really want to go act,’” she says. “So I basically told him, ‘Just give me a little bit of time. Give me a year.'" He was worried, Boniadi adds, about the potential job stability. Since that decision almost 17 years ago, she’s had a steady rise — "not meteoric," she says — in Hollywood, including roles on General Hospital and in procedurals and crime dramas before landing a stint on the sitcom How I Met Your Mother, where she played Nora, a peppy journalist who finally pulls perennial womanizer Barney Stinson (Neil Patrick Harris) out of his brosky ways. But she’s also followed her father’s activist footsteps, both on screen and off. On screen, it required pushing against typecasting. “It was the first time in my career where I was just playing a girl,” she says of Nora. “There's so much stigma associated with the portrayal of Middle Eastern characters, or just being Middle Eastern these days,” adds Boniadi, now 41, who’s since joined political dramas like Showtime’s Homeland and ABC’s Scandal. “When you can portray a character that’s just a girl falling in love, that in itself is a baby step of victory.” Her latest project, on Amazon Prime's Lord of the Rings prequel, is rumored to be focused on the woodland elves. Her role, which hasn't yet been announced, shouldn't require a geographically ambiguous Middle Eastern accent; she shouldn't need to study counterterrorism for character preparation. She was shooting Lord of the Rings in New Zealand when COVID-19 hit, sending her across the Pacific, back to Los Angeles, to quarantine at home with her mother. In a year of disasters — a pandemic, World War III scare, countless wildfires — she’s using the mandated pause to lean into her other calling: human rights advocacy. In June, she was named an Amnesty International ambassador. “[Her] fearless determination has advanced the rights of women and refugees in Iran and across the globe,” said Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi earlier this month when honoring Boniadi for a humanitarian award. She views acting and activism as two sides of the same coin. “I always say, as an actor, I get to portray the human condition,” she says. “And then as that activist, I get to hopefully change the human condition.” Her dad is "completely on board." Boniadi was born in Tehran in 1979, around the beginning of the Iranian Revolution, which resulted in a religious republic with authoritarian tendencies, in which dissidents were persecuted and killed. Boniadi’s father was one such dissident. “It was a matter of, if we don't escape, my dad could be executed,” she says. “His friends were being executed, and [my parents] didn't want to raise a daughter in a social, legal, and political climate that was growing increasingly oppressive toward women and girls.” They escaped to London a month later, where her uncle lived at the time, but Iran was never far from their minds. Boniadi's father read her poetry by 14th-century Persian poet Hafez. At as early as 5 years old, she’d watch the news and track conflicts in the Middle East. Her parents sent her to Saturday Persian school so that she could master the language, despite being raised nearly 3,500 miles away. “When you're born into a situation like that, it informs everything about you,” says Boniadi, who now splits her time between London and Los Angeles. She has no plans to return to Iran, fearing that her advocacy work with the Center for Human Rights could put her in danger, but it’s a compromise she’s willing to make. Last year alone, the Iranian government executed 251 people. In November, it announced the execution sentences for three 20-something protesters, one of whom says their confession was coerced. Like many activists, Boniadi used her platform to call for leniency. (Ultimately, their executions were stayed, but they’re still imprisoned.) This fall, she's calling for the release of Iranian human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, who was hospitalized this month after a six-week hunger strike. She's since been returned to a Tehran prison. The flip side of being involved in human rights work, Boniadi says, is the pain of watching the world's apathy. “It makes me question everything,” she says. “What would it take for people to [care about] the suffering of the people in the Middle East?” Last July, she visited the Calais and Dunkirk refugee camps in France, which are notorious for hellish conditions. She felt an instant connection to the people there, she says. Two weeks after her visit, the French government bulldozed the Dunkirk camp. I ask if any moments from those trips stuck with her. She tells me a story of a young boy, around 8 years old, whom she met at the Dunkirk camp. His family had fled Iran because they were facing persecution, as hers had, and they had been stuck in the camp for close to 10 months. “What do you want to be when you grow up?” Boniadi asked him. “A doctor,” he told her, “so that I can help people.”
Nasrin Sotoudeh möchte sich nicht den Mund verbieten lassen. Das hat zu einer langen Haftstrafe geführt. Seit mehreren Wochen ist sie nun im Hungerstreik. Ihr Mann macht sich deswegen große Sorgen.
durée : 00:02:43 - Un monde d'avance - Le sort de cette femme qui incarne le combat des droits de l’homme est désormais très préoccupant, vu son état médical.
Welcome to a new week and happy Labor Day if you are celebrating where you are. In this week's episode we will discuss a number of stories. From a new law in Australia, that is so stringent that even sexual assault victims cannot publicly tell their story without fear of jail time, to the Zimbabwean government making plans to return seized farmland to white farmers, and finally the story of how Pakistan is cracking down on dating apps. Visit the blog (https://taplink.cc/tunukamedia) for pictures and references.
Season 2, Episode 5 - The COVID-19 Crisis & Prisons in Iran - FLD Intro: 00:00 - 02:02 - Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Prize Winner & Lawyer: 02:03 - 05:03 - Roya Boroumand, Executive DIrector, AB Center: 05:03 - 20:44 (including testimonies from Iranian prisoners) This episode of Rights on the Line focuses on the prison situation in Iran during the COVID-19 pandemic, and is a collaboration between Front Line Defenders and the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran, a non-governmental non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion of human rights and democracy in Iran. In its documentation of human rights defenders cases in Iran, Front Line Defenders has often drawn attention to the poor health conditions in the prisons. The Abdorrahman Boroumand Center has also documented these conditions, most recently in its April 2020 report, “COVID-19 Fear in Iran’s Prisons”, available on the Center’s website, www.iranrights.org The first COVID-19 cases were reported in Iran on February 19th in Qom. A month later, the annual Persian New Year celebrations of Nowruz meant that Iranians traveled extensively throughout the country as the government did not impose social distancing policies. As a result of the government’s response, compounded by sanctions and a faltering economy, Iran today is one of the global epicenters of the pandemic. As of May 11, there are almost 110,000 cases and over 6,500 dead according to official figures. Iran is among the 10 most affected countries both in terms of number of cases and number of deaths per 100,000. The government has released approximately 100,000 prisoners in an effort to improve overcrowding at prisons, but poor conditions remain. And notably, imprisoned human rights defenders have almost entirely been excluded from furlough or release. In fact, in recent weeks, Front Line Defenders has reported on cases of HRDs being summoned to report to prison to start serving prison sentences, including Shapour Ehsanirad, Nahid Khodajo and Soha Mortezaei. Sam Rajabi, who is imprisoned in the notorious Evin Prison, was returned to prison despite having tested positive at a civic hospital while receiving treatment for another serious health condition. And long-term cases, Atena Daemi, Narges Mohammadi and Nasrin Sotoudeh remain imprisoned.
1-Iran. Confermata la condanna a 33 anni di carecere per Nasrin Sotoudeh, l'avvocata che difende le donne senza velo. ( Riccardo Noury Amnesty Italia, Farian Sabahi) ..2-Russiagate. Democratici spaccati sull'impeachment per Donald trump. ..Si teme un effetto boomerang a 18 mesi dalle presidenziali. ( Roberto Festa) ..3-Sri Lanka. Ancora molti dubbi sugli autori degli attentati di Pasqua nonostante la rivendicazione dell'isis. ( Guido Olimpio) ..4-Ulster. La nuova Ira ammette l'uccisione della giornalista Lyra McKee giovedì notte a Derry e riconosce che fu un errore. ( Alessandra Puppi) ..5-Spagna. Domenica elezioni anticipate. ( Giulio Maria Piantadosi) ..6- Terre agricole. Il ruolo dell'Agribusiness nelle crisi contemporanee. ( Marta Gatti)
1-Iran. Confermata la condanna a 33 anni di carecere per Nasrin Sotoudeh, l’avvocata che difende le donne senza velo. ( Riccardo Noury Amnesty Italia, Farian Sabahi) ..2-Russiagate. Democratici spaccati sull’impeachment per Donald trump. ..Si teme un effetto boomerang a 18 mesi dalle presidenziali. ( Roberto Festa) ..3-Sri Lanka. Ancora molti dubbi sugli autori degli attentati di Pasqua nonostante la rivendicazione dell’isis. ( Guido Olimpio) ..4-Ulster. La nuova Ira ammette l’uccisione della giornalista Lyra McKee giovedì notte a Derry e riconosce che fu un errore. ( Alessandra Puppi) ..5-Spagna. Domenica elezioni anticipate. ( Giulio Maria Piantadosi) ..6- Terre agricole. Il ruolo dell’Agribusiness nelle crisi contemporanee. ( Marta Gatti)
1-Iran. Confermata la condanna a 33 anni di carecere per Nasrin Sotoudeh, l’avvocata che difende le donne senza velo. ( Riccardo Noury Amnesty Italia, Farian Sabahi) ..2-Russiagate. Democratici spaccati sull’impeachment per Donald trump. ..Si teme un effetto boomerang a 18 mesi dalle presidenziali. ( Roberto Festa) ..3-Sri Lanka. Ancora molti dubbi sugli autori degli attentati di Pasqua nonostante la rivendicazione dell’isis. ( Guido Olimpio) ..4-Ulster. La nuova Ira ammette l’uccisione della giornalista Lyra McKee giovedì notte a Derry e riconosce che fu un errore. ( Alessandra Puppi) ..5-Spagna. Domenica elezioni anticipate. ( Giulio Maria Piantadosi) ..6- Terre agricole. Il ruolo dell’Agribusiness nelle crisi contemporanee. ( Marta Gatti)
PHISHING E RESPONSABILITÀ BANCA – I PROCESSI TELEMATICI: DEPOSITO SENTENZA IN CASSAZIONE – “A NASRIN SOTOUDEH” – #SvegliatiAvvocaturaNella puntata di oggi parliamo in esclusiva con:Dott. Michael LecciCo-Director presso Diritto del Risparmio & Trainee lawyer at Gigante Greco & Partner’sIntervista a cura di: Avv. Angelo MarzoAvv. Maurizio RealeCultore della materia di informatica giuridica Università Statale – MilanoIntervista a cura di: Avv. Angelo MarzoAvv. Giuseppe Caravita da TorittoForo di RomaA cura di: Avv. Domenico MonterisiCon la conduzione di: Avv. Brigida Mulinelli e Avv. Fabrizio CarboneRegia: Ornella Sala
The elephant in the room... We look at the horrific hate crime in New Zealand. This was a heinous act. But the reaction of the regressive left won't leave it alone, and we look at some of the reactions indicative of what Gad Saad has called "collective munchausen syndrome". Catholic Watch The state of West Virginia is suing a diocese, charging they knowingly employed pedophile priests. Alain de la Morandais demonstrates his pedophilic propensities and child molestation apologetics on a French television program. Pope Francis says corruption is a devastating cancer harming society. He should know, as head of the world's largest organization of corruption. A poll taken in the US suggests more than an third of Catholics are questioning their membership. What the hell does the Church have to do before they finally leave? Quack Tracts... The Calgary Health Region has set up a "vaccine hesitancy clinic" whose goal is to convince parents on the fence to get their children vaccinated. In the face of a recent measles warning, at least one clinic in Calgary has asked that parents not bring their unvaccinated children. A father of three young boys with a rare genetic disorder which compromises their immune systems makes an appeal to Albertans to vaccinate. Meanwhile, physicians are urging Health Canada to take action against the sale of homeopathic vaccine "alternatives". Eye on Islam... A human rights lawyer in Iran has been sentenced to 33 years in prison and 148 lashes. Nasrin Sotoudeh is well known for defending women who dared to show their hair in public. Her crime? "Gathering and colluding to commit crimes against national security" and "insulting the Supreme Leader".
We discuss the case of Nasrin Sotoudeh the Iranian lawyer, who's been jailed for 38 years, and sentenced to 148 lashes for defending women's rights. We hear from Mansoureh Mills Middle East Researcher from Amnesty and from Rana Rahimpour from the BBC Persian Service.Five years ago Wendy Mitchell was diagnosed with young onset dementia, she was just 58 years old. She tells us how she copes with the disease which is robbing her of her memories.After winning the SheBelieves Cup in America recently England's women are now setting their sights on the World Cup. Nike and Adidas have come on board with sponsorships but what difference, if any, will this make? Rebecca Myers, Sports Journalist from the Sunday Times explains the significance of big brands getting involved in the women's game.Baroness Liz Barker, the Liberal Democrat Peer and an ambassador for Lesbian, Bisexual and Trans Women's health week, tells us why lesbian and bisexual women say they feel invisible to their doctors and nurses.Fern Champion was raped three years ago but has waived her anonymity to call on the government to provide more support to people like her. She tells us why she's set up a petition to ask for rape counselling to be made available to anyone who needs it and Rebecca Hitchin the Campaign Manager at End Violence Against Women, explains why there is a funding shortfall for these services.Margaret Busby the editor of the anthology New Daughters of Africa and writer and contributor Candice Carty-Williams tell us about the new volume.And with Instagram full of cleaning tips we ask if cleaning has become cool? Lynsey Crombie Instagram's Queen of Clean and journalist Zing Tsjeng discuss.Presented by Jane Garvey Producer: Rabeka Nurmahomed Editor: Erin Riley Interviewed Guest: Mansoureh Mills Interviewed Guest: Rana Rahimpour Interviewed Guest: Wendy Mitchell Interviewed Guest: Rebecca Myers Interviewed Guest: Baroness Liz Barker Interviewed Guest: Fern Champion Interviewed Guest: Rebecca Hitchin Interviewed Guest: Margaret Busby Interviewed Guest :Candice-Carty-Williams Interviewed Guest: Lynsey Crombie Interviewed Guest: Zing Tsjeng
Questa puntata di Kiosk è dedicata ai "diritti negati da conquistare", ai femminismi e alla lotta alla discriminazione. In questa puntata, lo facciamo attraverso storie che che partono da est, dall'ampia regione di cui ci occupiamo, ma che parlano anche di noi e delle dinamiche in corso nella nostra società.La puntata inizia con le testimonianze e le riflessioni di Alice Chiarei e Francesca Bonfada del collettivo Onde Janon / Polonia-FuoriRotta 2018, che ci raccontano come le donne polacche stiano rialzando la testa per fronteggiare le restrizioni sui diritti riproduttivi e sfidare i tabù legati all'aborto.Ci spostiamo più ad est allargando lo sguardo sulla regione dell'ex Unione Sovietica, per parlare di diritti delle donne nel mondo del lavoro con Stefania Kulaeva, direttrice dell'Anti-Discrimination Centre Memorial e portavoce della campagna "All Jobs for All Women". Si tratta di una battaglia legale contro le cosiddette "liste delle professioni proibite" e contro una visione obsoleta e retrograda del ruolo della donna nella società.Ci occupiamo poi di un tema particolarmente importante nel contesto italiano di oggi, ma con lo sguardo sempre rivolto ad est: il Congresso Mondiale delle Famiglie che sarà ospitato dalla città di Verona tra il 29 e il 31 marzo. Con Yuri Guaiana dell'organizzazione All Out andremo ad approfondire le dinamiche che legano a doppio filo il Congresso delle Famiglie e la Russia conservatrice, che lo usa per diffondere un'ideologia discriminatoria e coltivare i rapporti con le estreme destre europee.Infine, attraverso le parole di Amnesty International esprimiamo solidarietà per Nasrin Sotoudeh, avvocata e difenditrice dei diritti delle donne, condannata da un tribunale iraniano alla scioccante pena di 38 anni di carcere e 148 frustate.PLAYLIST• Nem Kaldi - Derya Yildirim & Grup Şimşek | https://itunes.apple.com/it/album/nem-kaldi/1188637048?i=1188637058• Shortparis - Strashno | https://itunes.apple.com/us/album//1446769573 • Gang Śródmieście - Discopolka | https://itunes.apple.com/pl/album/discopolka/1316691851?i=1316692105 • Na doroge - Alla Zimina nell'interpretazione di Faina Šmerkina | http://www.allazimina.ru/index.php?page=2&songId=4 • Zere - Kys | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivlRPb75-VU
L'actualité vue par Les Effrontées: Les écoles qui tombent en ruine et la vulgarité dans la musique pop. Entrevue avec Djemila Benhabib: Lourde peine de prison pour la militante des droits humains Nasrin Sotoudeh. Chronique avec Vanessa Destiné: Entre 14 et 35 % des jeunes hommes seraient incapables de maintenir une érection au point de devoir considérer l’utilisation de pilules telles que le Viagra. Chronique avec Caroline Murphy: Les potins de la semaine. Une production de QUB radio Mars 2019
Puntata del 13 marzo - A cura di Tommaso Perrone
Entrevue avec Djemila Benhabib: Lourde peine de prison pour la militante des droits humains Nasrin Sotoudeh.
1-Brexit, questa sera il voto della verità. In un ultimo tentativo Theresa May ha portato a casa le rassicurazioni dell'unione europea. ( Emanuele Valenti) ..2-Iran: l'avvocata NASRIN SOTOUDEH condannata a 33 anni di carcere e e 148 frustate. Amnesty International l' ha definito una “vergognosa ingiustizia”. ( Riccardo Noury) ..3-Algeria. Gli studenti guidano la protesta contro l'ultima proposta di buteflika. Il punto di esteri ..4-La vita in Venezuela sotto il blackout. Il racconto da caracas ..( Stefano Pozzebon) ..5-Un gasdotto fin dentro new york city. Scatena le polemiche il progetto della società energetica Williams. ( Roberto Festa) ..6-Terre agricole. da un patto agricolo a un patto alimentare in Europa: ( Marta Gatti)
1-Brexit, questa sera il voto della verità. In un ultimo tentativo Theresa May ha portato a casa le rassicurazioni dell’unione europea. ( Emanuele Valenti) ..2-Iran: l’avvocata NASRIN SOTOUDEH condannata a 33 anni di carcere e e 148 frustate. Amnesty International l’ ha definito una “vergognosa ingiustizia”. ( Riccardo Noury) ..3-Algeria. Gli studenti guidano la protesta contro l’ultima proposta di buteflika. Il punto di esteri ..4-La vita in Venezuela sotto il blackout. Il racconto da caracas ..( Stefano Pozzebon) ..5-Un gasdotto fin dentro new york city. Scatena le polemiche il progetto della società energetica Williams. ( Roberto Festa) ..6-Terre agricole. da un patto agricolo a un patto alimentare in Europa: ( Marta Gatti)
1-Brexit, questa sera il voto della verità. In un ultimo tentativo Theresa May ha portato a casa le rassicurazioni dell’unione europea. ( Emanuele Valenti) ..2-Iran: l’avvocata NASRIN SOTOUDEH condannata a 33 anni di carcere e e 148 frustate. Amnesty International l’ ha definito una “vergognosa ingiustizia”. ( Riccardo Noury) ..3-Algeria. Gli studenti guidano la protesta contro l’ultima proposta di buteflika. Il punto di esteri ..4-La vita in Venezuela sotto il blackout. Il racconto da caracas ..( Stefano Pozzebon) ..5-Un gasdotto fin dentro new york city. Scatena le polemiche il progetto della società energetica Williams. ( Roberto Festa) ..6-Terre agricole. da un patto agricolo a un patto alimentare in Europa: ( Marta Gatti)
Au micro de Votre Honneur, Me Roksana Naserzadeh nous parle de ses convictions et de sa vision de la justice. Me Roksana Naserzadeh est née en 1977. Elle a prêté serment le 12 décembre 2008. Sa toque est la numéro 1846. Durant notre entretien, elle nous parle de sa pratique très personnelle du métier d'avocat. Elle évoque également son parcours, ses origines et ses engagements. De puis Octobre 2018, elle est coprésidente avec Me Eric Jeantet, ancien Bâtonnier du Barreau de Lyon, de Prison Insider. Ce site a vocation à faire l'état des lieux des prisons dans le monde. (https://www.prison-insider.com/) Elle site ses confrères et mentors Me François Saint-Pierre et Me Thierry Levy. Elle nous parle aussi de Nasrin Sotoudeh, Shirin Ebadi et de son pays l'Iran. Quelques citations en bref : "Je suis une abolitionniste des prisons" "Il n'y a qu'une personne qui a une place primordiale dans le procès car sa liberté d'aller et de venir est en jeu, c'est la personne qu'on est en train de défendre." "Ce n'est jamais l'avocat qui sauve son client mais le client qui sauve l'avocat."