It was barely 4 months ago that 3 men were deported for being too
handsome and now despite promises made by Iran's new President, Hassan
Rowhani, that women's civil rights will improve under his government, a
city councilor has been barred from office for being "too séxy"
Nina Siakhali Moradi was prevented
from taking up a post on the city council in Qazvin, the ancient capital
of the Persian Empire, 100 miles north west of Tehran, after her
election was overturned by religious conservatives.
Even with more than 10,000 votes in the June election, putting her
14th out of 163 candidates and winning her a council seat, the
27-year-old engineer and website designer had her political career cut
short because she was deemed too attractive to take up the post.
"We don't want a catwalk model on the council," a senior official in Qazvin told local press.
Moradi ran under the slogan "Young ideas for a young future," pushing
for better women's rights in Qazvin, the restoration of the old city
and greater youth involvement in town planning.
She had been vetted and approved as a candidate by Iran's judiciary and intelligence services.
Her liberal views appeared popular with the electorate. Moradi's
campaign posters showed her wearing strict hijab without a strand of
hair on display.
Despite this, conservative religious groups launched protests to
demand her disqualification as soon as her election was confirmed.
In a letter to the governor of Qazvin, a coalition of religious
groups condemned the "vulgar and anti-religious" posters and said they
breached Islamic law.
News website IranWire reported that there were other objections to
her campaign. According to the website, her headquarters became a
gathering place for local young people, whose behavior and clothing
provoked criticism from her opponents, mostly older conservative men.
The complaint was challenged but ultimately upheld. She was disqualified for not "observing the Islamic norms."
Citing local media, IranWire reported that authorities had also
confiscated the campaign posters of two other female candidates, Maryam
Nakhostin-Ahmadi and Shahla Atefeh, and detained both for questioning.
President Rowhani is expected to bring a new era in women's rights.
In a televised debate during his election campaign, he announced: "I
will form a women's affairs ministry to return their trampled rights to
them."
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