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Students protest sexual harassment
in Iran university
June 16, 2008
Agence
France-Presse
TEHRAN (AFP) — Thousands of university students
in an Iranian city have held a protest against the attempted sexual
harassment of a female colleague by a top university official, the
press reported on Monday.
About 3,000 students at the university in the
northwestern city of Zanjan staged the sit-in protest over the weekend
at a sports hall on campus, the reports said.
They demanded that the board of directors resign
and an apology from the higher education minister following the
alleged offence committed by the vice chancellor, the reformist
Etemad newspaper said.
The vice chancellor is alleged to have sexually
harassed the girl while she was in his office to resolve a problem
with the committee of conduct -- a disciplinary body which monitors
students' activities, the reports said.
"Students broke into the vice president's
office and handed him over to security after finding out that he
had sought to (sexually) harass a student," Etemad said.
Its report said the unnamed official had on several
occasions tried to shut down the students' Islamic association "under
the pretext that its members have moral problems and do not have
an Islamic behaviour."
ISNA news agency reported later on Monday that
the official in question had been suspended until investigations
were completed.
"We have asked the students to present relevant
evidence because this issue needs further examination," Zanjan
university director Ali Reza Naddaf told ISNA.
Naddaf called on the students to keep calm and
pursue the matter legally "as some students are after their
political aims."
"Unfortunately some hardline students today
forcefully prevented entry of the staff and academics and did not
allow exams to be held," he added.
Etemad newspaper said it had received a film of
"the details of university incidents" while a video of
the students breaking into the vice-chancellor's office has appeared
on YouTube.
Iranian universities are a hotbed of student activism
and protests are common despite stricter control on campus since
the government of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in
2005.
In April, students at a university in the northwestern
city of Tabriz held a week-long protest against strict rules and
17 were hospitalised after going on a hunger strike.
Scores of pro-reform student activists have been
detained and in the most high profile case three students were sentenced
to jail terms of up to three years on charges of publishing anti-Islamic
images in student newspapers.
The trio studied in Tehran's prestigious
Amir Kabir university where Ahmadinejad was famously heckled during
a speech in 2006.
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