Last month, on his nationally syndicated radio show, Bill O’Reilly—bastion of restraint and rationality that he is—opined that, “in a sane world, every country would unite against Iran and blow it off the face of the earth.� I would argue that, in a sane world, the vitriolic Mr. O’Reilly would be fortunate to obtain part-time employment with Roto-Rooter. Be that as it may, the saber-rattling against Iran appears to be in full swing, as the Bush administration—apparently not content to wage war just in Iraq and Afganistan—is hootin’ and hollerin’ about the tyrannical Tehranis fixin’ to git some nukes. Deja vu, huh? Anyhow, before the xenophobia reaches a fever pitch and the carpet bombing begins, I thought it might be helpful to pass along the following news story by Hannah Allam of Knight Ridder, which casts Iran in a rather different light:
Iran’s AIDS-prevention program among world’s most progressive
TEHRAN, Iran – It took 30 meetings just to create a slim AIDS-awareness handbook for Iran’s conservative high schools. A drawing of a condom disappeared early on; a photo of a syringe survived. A mention of sexual transmission was approved, but only with a reminder that sex before marriage is forbidden.
Even after the government’s wordsmiths were satisfied, AIDS workers in Tehran had to take the book south to the holy city of Qom, the spiritual center of Iran’s all-powerful clergy. To everyone’s surprise, the clerics endorsed it.
Iran’s fight against the spread of HIV hinges on a delicate give-and-take between activists who talk frankly about sex and drugs and the ruling ayatollahs, who fiercely protect the Islamic Republic’s puritan image. The combination has made Iran the Middle East leader in preventing HIV and AIDS.
The country’s program, which melds deep-rooted religious values with cutting-edge research, is being exported to Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, Sudan, Pakistan and other Muslim nations.
“I told my colleagues in the United Arab Emirates, `You’re not more rigid than us. We’re the only country in the world where it’s the law to wear a head scarf, where it’s a pure Islamic government, where you can’t drink,'” said Dr. Arash Alaei, one of Iran’s most respected AIDS researchers. “`If we have a prevention program, why don’t you?'”
In a region where other Muslim governments ignore the epidemic, quarantine HIV-infected people or preach abstinence as the only solution, Iran’s approach is especially remarkable.
It still doles out floggings to Iranians caught with alcohol, but it gives clean syringes and methadone treatment to heroin addicts. Health workers pass out condoms to prostitutes. Government clinics in every region offer free HIV testing, counseling and treatment. A state-backed magazine just began a monthly column that profiles HIV-positive Iranians, and last year the postal service unveiled a stamp emblazoned with a red ribbon for AIDS awareness. This year the government will devote an estimated $30 million to the program.
One of Iran’s most acclaimed advances comes from its notoriously secretive network of prisons, where hundreds of drug-addicted inmates sometimes share the same makeshift syringe to inject heroin smuggled in by guards or visiting relatives. In a startling acknowledgment of sex and drugs even in its most closely guarded quarters, the Tehran administration has made condoms and needles available in detention centers across the country.
“Iran now has one of the best prison programs for HIV in not just the region, but in the world,” said Dr. Hamid Setayesh, the coordinator for the U.N. AIDS office in Tehran. “They’re passing out condoms and syringes in prisons. This is unbelievable. In the whole world, there aren’t more than six or seven countries doing that.” [full text]
You can’t be serious. Your sympathies lie with Iran? Here’s what Iran’s leader said just this week: “Like it or not, the Zionist regime is heading toward annihilation. The Zionist regime is a rotten, dried tree that will be eliminated by one storm.”
He also said recently: “Our answer to those who are angry about Iran achieving the full nuclear fuel cycle is just one phrase. We say: ‘Be angry at us and die of this anger'”
This from UN Undersecretary of Arms Control Robert Joseph: “If it had nuclear weapons, I am sure (Iran) would be even more ambitious in its use of terror to undercut the prospects of peace in the Middle East.”
Your hatred for our president allows you to be sympathetic towards a theocratic regime that stomps on freedom and the human rights of its citizens. Why? Because they pass out condoms to prisoners?
Iran is a VERY dangerous place. Have you listened to any of the rhetoric coming from its leaders? Those concerned with its position in the Middle East are hardly xenophobic. While no one, including the President, wants war with Iran, you’d be a fool to ignore it (a la Jimmy Carter).
Mike said exactly what I was thinking save the hatred for the prez part. Granted, I don’t think we should go-a-hunting for a faceoff between ourselves and Iran, but Iran seems to be the smoking gun that we must address (same with North Korea).
It would be a grave error to ignore the situation in Iran because of mistakes made in Iraq.