NCRI Women's Committee

Institutionalized misogyny in the laws of the mullahs’ regime ruling Iran

February 28, 2022 NCRI Women's Committee Season 1 Episode 2
NCRI Women's Committee
Institutionalized misogyny in the laws of the mullahs’ regime ruling Iran
Show Notes

In this episode, we are going to discuss institutionalized misogyny in the laws of the Iranian regime. 

In one of its key publications, "Institutionalized misogyny in the laws of the mullahs’ regime ruling Iran”, the NCRI Women's Committee explains and proves that misogyny is not a culture, but a function of the regime ruling Iran. 

These misogynistic laws are the root cause and the underlying source of oppression and elimination of women from social, cultural, athletic, artistic and other fields of activities. These laws violate their rights, and promote violence against them both in society and family life.

The Constitution identifies women with motherhood and regards childbearing and rearing children as their first and foremost duty.

Part of the introduction to the Constitution reads, “Women regain their crucial and invaluable duty of motherhood in raising vanguard, ideological human beings, while they, themselves, are comrades of men in active fields of ‘life’…”

So, from the mullahs’ standpoint, a woman is simply defined as a mother whose duty is giving birth to human beings who adhere to the ruling regime’s ideology. 

Principle 21 on “women’s rights” points out that the “Custody of children is granted to qualified mothers to protect the children’s interests in the absence of a religiously-designated guardian.”

Paragraph 5 of this principle says that despite all the efforts of a mother to raise her child, a child’s guardian is first, the father, then the grandfather. If they do not exist, and if the mother was qualified according to the mullahs’ backward criteria, then she could have the custody of her child.

 The Iranian Civil Code has in various paragraphs practically defined women as male’s captives and sex slaves. 

Here is an example. A little girl only 9 years old can be married off to a much older man upon the consent of her father, or paternal grandfather if a judge approves it. 

She must live wherever her "husband" wants, and she doesn’t have the right to leave the house, or work and travel without her husband’s permission. 

It is clearly stated in Article 1114 that a woman must live in the house that the husband determines. 

The husband can prevent the woman from working or having a profession he does not like, under the pretext of being "incompatible with the interests of the family."

As to why it has become a social catastrophe, one must point out to the policies of the mullahs' regime and to the fact that child marriage is a category of violence and institutionalized misogyny in the laws.

 

Another example of misogyny in the laws of the Iranian regime concerns “divorce.”

According to Article 1105 of the civil code, the family is headed by the husband. 

According to Articles 1122 to 1130, a man can divorce his wife for any reason, including various diseases and blindness from both eyes. 

He can even divorce his wife without informing her.

In contrast, the civil code puts numerous conditions and complexities on the way of a woman seeking divorce.

In addition, when the husband and wife separate, the custody of children older than 7 years is granted to the father.