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  • ross1948 18:09 on January 15, 2020 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: ‘Feminist’ sell-outs, , , , , Shohreh Bayat, women's chess championship   

    Home Sweet Home? Not When Evil Sexists Hold The Keys! 


    Pity poor 32-year-old Shohreh Bayat, stuck in Vladivostok, where the Women’s World Chess Championship was taking place!

    ………

    Photos of Ms Bayat circulated in Iran showing her with the headscarf around her neck

    She now feels unsafe to return to Iran, where women can be arrested for violating strict Islamic dress code.’

    Although she says the ‘incriminating’ photo was taken while she was preparing to don her ayatollah-dictated scarf of subservience, “despite disagreeing with the rule…

    .

    ..

    …she faces a real risk of persecution by the evil regime in Tehran, an evil encouraged in its intolerant iniquity by collaborateuses like Australia’s Julie Bishop…

    ======

    Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop holds a press conference with her Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif following a meeting in Tehran on April 18, 2015.

    ====

    …and notorious appeasement freaks like the Brussels Empire’s apparatchik, Red Fed Mogherini…

    ===

    While she shakes the hands of these men, she thinks of the nine-year-old girls who are “legally” forced into marriage with the consent of the government?

    https://de.gatestoneinstitute.org/10912/feministinnen-dschihadisten

    ===
    ….and those immensely ‘liberated’ and ‘feminist’ Swedes grovelling to shariah too, remember?

    All those prominent, influential women should have stood up bravely with the warm wind of Tehran blowing their God-given hair hither and thither – and, were they not such unattractive wenches, bare-mid-riffed and clad in mini-skirts!

    =

      Iran – Contemptible Swedish Cows Crawl To Shariah Sexists 

    =======

    Back to the Iranian chess lady’s courageous assertion, which –

    ‘It’s against my beliefs. People should have the right to choose the way they want to dress, it should not be forced…’

    – makes it highly likely that the grotesque delusionary (un-elected, the old despot claims he’s responsible only to God Almighty!) dictator there will have her punished if she dares to go home.

    Regime change is urgently required. A referendum giving the people of Iran at least three options –

    a – continuation of the existing evil edifice

    b – restoration of the monarchy, modelled on the democratic European kings and queens we all know

    or

    c  – a secular democratic republic of some sort.

    Judging from the royalist slogans heard from anti-ayatollah pro-testers over the past year…

    …I’d say the exiled Reza Shah would have a good chance of winning back his father’s throne.

    Wouldn’t that be a great day!

     

     
    • Noreen Paterson 18:26 on January 15, 2020 Permalink | Reply

      Iran should be an outlaw state!

      Like

    • Kezia 10:35 on January 16, 2020 Permalink | Reply

      Noreen you are wise to say that.
      Here in Indonesia too we have very bad movements who would force women to wear hijab all the time.
      We do not want to become like Iran.

      Like

    • Elly Marsh 12:32 on January 23, 2020 Permalink | Reply

      Mogherini and Bishop and those Swede women should be shut out of public life for their betrayal of decent Irani women who won’t submit to sharia sexist bullying.

      Like

  • ross1948 23:14 on October 5, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , women's chess championship,   

    Women’s World Chess – Sign Up, Against Evil Ayatollahs! 


    I posted on this last week, and was hoping somebody might start a petition.

    Shariah Chess? Fide Kow-Tows to Evil Ayatollahs! 

    Now here it is!

    —–

    Stop Women’s Oppression at the World Chess Championship by Challenging FIDE’s Decision

     

    We demand that FIDE reconsider its decision to award the Women’s World Chess Championship to Iran. In its handbook, FIDE explicitly states its guiding moral principles and one of them is that the organization “rejects discriminatory treatment for national, political, racial, social or religious reasons or on account of sex.” (F.01(1)(2)). Yet, by awarding the Championship to Iran, it is breaking that pledge to its members and subjecting them to discrimination on all fronts.

    These violations include:

    • Dress restrictions for female players. In Iran, women are legally required to cover up with a hijab. Failure to do so is punishable by fines or imprisonment.
    • Speech restrictions for female players. Women have been arrested for speaking out in favor of women’s rights in Iran.
    • Several countries (including the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom) have issued travel warnings to Iran. Participants who are citizens of those countries would be traveling at their own risk.

    These are just some of the many potential dangers faced by players who have qualified to compete in the World Championship. These women are being asked to choose between achieving their greatest aspirations and protecting their civil liberties – and their lives.

    We propose two solutions:

    • Change the venue or postpone the competition until another organizer is found to host the championship in a “no conflict” venue.
    • Require that wearing a hijab be optional and guarantee no discrimination based on gender, nationality, or any other human rights as pointed out in the FIDE handbook (listed above).

    These issues reach far beyond the chess world. While there has been social progress in Iran, women’s rights remain severely restricted. This is more than one event; it is a fight for women’s rights. By signing this petition, you can help support the cause and make a real, positive change in the world.

    https://www.change.org/p/stop-women-s-oppression-at-the-world-chess-championship-by-challenging-fide-s-decision

    Thank you for your support!
    Nazi Paikidze
    U.S. Women’s Champion

     
     
    • Pamela 03:18 on October 6, 2016 Permalink | Reply

      Oh, good for her.
      I was looking to start a petition on this myself, but now I only have to sign, then pass it on.
      Thanks for letting us know about it.

      Like

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