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Sunday, October 29, 2000
Iranian Group Seeks One Voice to Help Democracy at Home
By PATRICK J. MCDONNELL, Times Staff Writer
The placards, hung in the banquet room
of the Hilton in Woodland Hills, bespoke some fundamental struggles.
"Freedom of Assembly."
"Freedom of Press."
"Recognition of Basic Human Rights."
Most graphic was a black-and-white
poster featuring more than a dozen snapshots of men, young and old. The
text accompanying the poster read, "Martyrs of Iran." All of those pictured
were assassinated activists.
This was the setting Saturday of the
first meeting of the Iranian National Congress, a Reseda-based exile group
formed last year and dedicated to bringing democracy to Iran.
The congress, its backers say, is an
effort to unite what has often been a fractured Iranian opposition abroad.
"We believe in the right of the Iranian
people to choose a democratic government for themselves," said Behzad
Tabatabaei, a doctoral student at UCLA who serves as the group's chief
information officer.
The congress, supporters say, is
composed of representatives from many groups, reflecting the Iranian
population's cultural and religious diversity. Organizers say membership is
in the thousands, including participants from Europe, Canada and the United
States. About 150 showed up for Saturday's session.
Although Iran is a predominantly Muslim
nation, its population includes substantial numbers of Christians, Jews,
Bahai and others. Ethnic groups include Armenians, Kurds and Turks.
Speakers and participants during
Saturday's session decried the lack of freedom in contemporary Iran. The
Iranian regime has shut down more than a dozen newspapers and jailed
opposition leaders since the victory of reformist politicians in
parliamentary elections earlier this year. "We do not have freedom of the
press in Iran," said Mojgan Moghadam, who works for the Persian- and
English-language press in the United States.
According to the group, about 4 million
Iranians live outside of Iran, 800,000 of them in California, concentrated
in and around Los Angeles. Many are wealthy, with investments of more than
$80 billion in California alone, according to the congress.
Nonetheless, differences among Iranian
groups in exile have tended to reduce their overall effect in Iran,
activists say.
"We are trying to send a message that we
are pro-democracy--not just representing a particular faction," said
Mohammad T. Moslehi, a translator based in Southern California.
Among the Iranian National Congress'
central goals are the establishment of a parliamentary democracy in Iran
and the separation of state and religion. A major aim of the congress is
to spread knowledge of the repressive nature of Iran's current rulers.
"We have no common point of interest
with the regime itself," said Tabatabaei, who, at 27, was one of the
youngest speakers.
Many of those addressing the crowd fled
the country around the time of the Islamic Revolution in 1979, which
toppled the shah of Iran, the nation's longtime strongman and a staunch
U.S. ally. The revolution also unleashed a wave of emigration from Iran.
Some congress members favor the restoration of a monarchist regime.
Among those speaking was Ebrahim
Motamedi, a retired major general under the shah.
Though most speakers were men, an
oft-repeated theme at the conference was the repression of women in
contemporary Iran.
Parvin Darabi, an electronic engineer in
Lake Tahoe, recalled during an interview the story of her sister, Homa
Darabi, once a prominent child psychiatrist in Iran. She committed suicide
in 1994 by burning herself in a public square in Iran to protest the regime.
"Nothing has changed for women in Iran,"
said Darabi, who noted that they still must wear veils when appearing in
public. "Women are not even free to choose the way they dress."
©Copyright 2000, Los Angeles Times
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