Iranian women ‘not second class citizens’

Iranian women ‘not second class citizens’
Updated 20 April 2014
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Iranian women ‘not second class citizens’

Iranian women ‘not second class citizens’

TEHRAN: Iran’s President Hassan Rowhani admitted Sunday that women in his country still face discrimination and cultural barriers but he insisted they are not universally treated as second-class citizens.
In a speech marking Women’s Day in Iran, Rowhani, seen as a moderate reformer, said more had to be done but that the West did not offer a model that had to be followed.
The remarks were followed by confirmation that the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had agreed to pardon or commute the sentences of some women prisoners.
Rowhani’s speech was consistent with his promise of more social freedoms, a cornerstone of the campaign that gave him a surprise victory in the June presidential election.
“I, as the head of the government, confess there are still so many deficiencies with regards to the vindication of women’s rights,” Rowhani told a conference attended by members of Iran’s female elite.
“Based on the Islamic criteria, we neither consider men as the first sex nor the women as the second sex ... they both have the same human dignity and none is superior,” he said, drawing warm applause.