Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Ebadi criticizes Rowhani's rights record
Iranian Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi strongly criticized the human
rights record of President Hassan Rowhani, citing a dramatic increase in
executions since he took office this year and accusing the government
of lying about the release of political prisoners.
She also
pointed to spreading support for a hunger strike by human rights lawyer
Abdolfattah Soltani and three others in a Tehran prison to protest
inadequate medical care, which was joined Monday by about 80 prisoners
at another prison west of the capital.
Ebadi, a U.S.-based
human rights lawyer who since 2009 has lived outside Iran in self-exile,
said in an interview Tuesday with The Associated Press that Rowhani may
have the reputation of a moderate reformer, but so far "we get bad
signals" from the new government when it comes to human rights. Ebadi
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 for her efforts to promote democracy,
becoming the first Iranian and first Muslim woman to win the prize.
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