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Opposition to Iranian regime 'growing,' claims Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi | Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi has said that opposition to the Iranian regime is growing because of an increase in
government violence, more human rights abuses and deepening poverty. The Iranian human rights lawyer, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 for her efforts to
promote democracy, said she has come to the United Nations to talk about the deteriorating
human rights situation in her country and seek support for a draft UN General
Assembly resolution that would condemn its record. The Daily Express quoted Ebadi,
as saying that although much of the opposition movement has gone underground since
the violent crackdown after the disputed June 2009 presidential election, but
it definitely was not faltering. "I can tell you that opposition is increasing
in Iran. Not only the government is becoming more violent every day, and there
are more violations of human rights, but also the issue of poverty has become
another issue now. ... And, of course, poverty plays a big role in opposition,"
she added. Ebadi, Ebadi, who lives in the U.K., further claimed of receiving latest
statistics, which showed that Iran's economy was growing by just 1.6 percent a
year, lower than the rates in Iraq and Afghanistan. She urged the international
community "to bring the voice of the people of Iran and the political prisoners
to the outside world", stressing that the human rights situation in Iran "is very
bad ... (and) is worsening". She singled out the case of prominent human rights
lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, who has been on a hunger strike since September 25, saying
that she had stopped drinking all liquids five days back to protest against her
detention in solitary confinement on suspicion of spreading propaganda against
the ruling system. Her arrest in September was seen as a signal of a possible
widening crackdown on the pro-reform opposition that took to the streets to protest
the victory claimed by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the paper added.
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