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Key Points
- Independent senator Fatima Payman has said that Westerners were not aware of the rights that Iranian women enjoyed.
- The comments have attracted criticism from community groups and experts in Iranian politics.
- Payman has said: “As a leader, it’s important for me to keep an open mind and listen to both sides.”
The minister has since apologised for her participation and said she does not share the views expressed by panellists at the event.
The protests were met with a “brutal government crackdown that resulted in hundreds of deaths and tens of thousands of arbitrary arrests,” according to Human Rights Watch.
“Why agree to be interviewed by Press TV, English language propaganda arm of the Islamic Republic known for broadcasting false confession videos and forced interviews with prisoners before they are executed?”
Payman, event organisers respond
“In today’s Iran, a woman’s access to employment, education, social benefits and proper health care — and even her mere public presence in society— depends on complying with compulsory hijab laws, which are routinely enforced through a web of rules and arbitrary interpretation by state agents as well as businesses,” Human Rights Watch’s Tara Sepehri Far wrote.
“I do not share the views expressed by the panellists at this event.”