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Iranian court orders arrest of filmmaker
By David Walsh
1 September 2001
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Iranian film director Tahmineh Milani was arrested August 26
(or August 27, according to some reports) on orders of Tehrans
Revolutionary Court and remains in custody, despite efforts to
win her release. The detention was reported by several international
sources on Wednesday and confirmed in a press release from the
Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) on Friday.
The IRNA item reports that Milani was arrested for her
support for counterrevolutionary grouplets in her
last movie [ The Hidden Half]. The news agency quoted
the court, which declared that she has abused arts as a
tool for actions which will suit the taste of the counterrevolutionary
and mohareb [those who fight god] grouplets.
According to the BBC, which reported that she was detained
on Monday, Milani has been held since then and her husband
is reported to have seen her for just a few minutes. Milanis
arrest is only the latest in a series of attacks by reactionary
Iranian officials against all signs of opposition and independent
political or intellectual life.
Born in Tabriz in 1960, Milani is one of Irans leading
female filmmakers. She is best known for Two Women (1999),
which appeared at the New Directors/New Films series at
the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in July 2000. The film
criticized the situation of women in contemporary Iran, epitomized
in the figure of a woman trapped in an oppressive and abusive
marriage. Its depiction of domestic violence was apparently hailed
for its treatment of a taboo subject.
Film director Bahram Beizaei told the Associated Press (AP)
that it is widely said that her arrest was related to her
latest film, The Hidden Half, and her interviews with newspapers
in recent weeks. In one of those interviews Milani said
feminism was a means of fighting [Irans] male-dominated
system and a way of salvation for women who are deprived
of equal rights. So I spend my energy making films that inform
the public of the consequences of injustice against women.
Ray Privett of Facets Video, who has issued several press releases
on the arrest, cites Dr. Jamsheed Akrami, a professor at William
Paterson University in New Jersey, in regard to recent comments
made by Milani to an Iranian newspaper: Apparently she was
talking in that interview about the Iranian Left and the role
they played during the Revolutionabout how they were suppressed
by the Islamic government, and about a number of friends who had
been executed and arrested.... It seems that this is what angered
the Islamic courts who ordered her arrest. Milani is the
first filmmaker to be arrested in years, although rumors circulated
last year that Jafar Panahi, director of The Circle, might
face legal problems.
Milanis arrest was also linked, by a relative who spoke
to the AP on condition of anonymity, to a speech Milani gave in
New York last month in which she criticized Irans clerical
establishment for imposing restrictions on women.
The film that the Revolutionary Court criticizes
in its statement, The Hidden Half, which is currently playing
in Iran, apparently depicts a married womans memories of
an affair in the early 1980simmediately after the 1979 revolution
that ousted the Shah and brought the Islamic clerics to power.
In a sign of nervousness about reactions to Milanis arrest,
the student news agency ISNA quoted an unnamed official at the
Culture and Islamic Guidance Ministry who commented, In
our opinion, the accusations leveled against Tahmineh Milani are
based on a misunderstanding which we are trying to resolve. We
hope to be able to announce her release as soon as possible.
In another sign of political and social tension in Iran, a
major riot erupted in the northeastern part of the country on
Thursday. Crowds went on the rampage in Sabzevar, in Khorasan
province, blocking roads, setting tires on fire and attacking
public buildings, including the governors office, a religious
site and the site of Friday prayers. The protests followed the
Iranian governments announcement a few days earlier that
Khorasan was to be split up into three provinces and that the
city of Mashhad and the towns of Birjand and Bojnurd would become
provincial capitals. Residents of Sabzevar want the province divided
in four so their town will also serve as a capital, in the hope
that this status might attract funds and government projects to
the poverty-stricken area that borders Afghanistan.
See Also:
Iran
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