To: Jeremy Corbyn, Leader of the Labour Party
7 January 2018
Dear Mr Corbyn
In solidarity with the heroic struggle of the people of Iran
against one of the most despotic, brutal, anti-working class and misogynistic
regimes in the world, and on behalf of the largest working-class party of the
left opposition in Iran, I am writing to ask you to distance yourself immediately
from the disgraceful comments made yesterday by the Shadow Foreign Secretary,
Emily Thornberry. I am asking you to break your silence and to come out
unreservedly on the side of the people in Iran in their heroic struggle against
their oppressors.
Siding with the oppressors of the people or even staying
silent or prevaricating on the rightful protests by the workers, women and the
youth in Iran against the corrupt and reactionary Islamic Republic, whose
leaders have amassed billions, while subjecting workers to abject poverty,
smashing workers’ organisations, throwing trade unionists to jail, committing
state-sanctioned discrimination and violence against women and LGBT people and
executing dissidents in their tens of thousands, would be a grave political
folly for the Labour Party. Once this regime is overthrown by the ongoing heroic
rising of the people, the people of Iran will not forget who was on their side
and who sided with their oppressors.
Your declared aims of fighting for a better world, for
economic equality and for social justice won you great following among millions
of people in Britain and internationally, who enthusiastically supported you in
your leadership campaigns and in the 2017 general election on a progressive
platform to address the widening inequality and the growing injustice in the
UK.
However, these are exactly the same issues - on a far
harsher and more brutal scale - that have brought millions of people onto to
the streets of Iran today. The workers, women and youth in Iran are protesting
against grotesque levels of inequality, lack of basic political and social
freedoms and a medieval religious dictatorship that is an affront to the
collective conscience of humanity in the 21st Century. People in
Iran do not want the accumulation of wealth in the hands of the 1% and the
billionaire clergy while they try to survive on a minimum wage that is one-fourth
of the official poverty line. They do not want the vile state discrimination
against women, which officially defines them as minors and the property of
their male guardians; they do not want compulsory veiling and gender apartheid.
They do not want the imposition of a religious state and religious thought. In
one word, the people of Iran do not want the Islamic Republic. They have risen
up against the Islamic Republic because they want economic equality and
political and social freedoms. They want a better world and a life worthy of
human beings. They are right to demand this, and should have the people of the
world’s unreserved support.
Siding with such an obnoxious regime and disgracefully
declaring, as Emily Thornberry has, that it is not clear who is right or wrong
in this struggle of the oppressed against their oppressors will forever stay in
the memory of the people of Iran. It will seriously harm the credentials of a
progressive and egalitarian party that you are trying to build. It will
disillusion millions of your supporters who rushed to your support precisely
because they believe in equality and social justice everywhere. It will alienate
your grassroots from the leadership, and mark a shameful moment in the life of your
new party. It will be an irredeemable political folly and a historic moral
disgrace for the Labour Party.
I hope the utterances of Emily Thornberry were an isolated
case, which she will come to regret and openly apologies for. In any case, I
urge you, as the Leader of the Labour Party, to distance yourself in the clearest
terms from those comments and to come out unreservedly and unambiguously on the
side of the people of Iran in these momentous days.
Hamid Taqvaee,
Leader of the Worker-communist Party of Iran