Nobel winner challenges West over war

IRAN: Iran's Shirin Ebadi yesterday became the first Muslim woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize and sent a bold anti-war …

IRAN: Iran's Shirin Ebadi yesterday became the first Muslim woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize and sent a bold anti-war message to the West, accusing it of hiding behind the September 11th attacks to violate human rights.

Reformist lawyer Ms Ebadi was handed the $1.4 million prize and a gold medal by the head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee at a glittering ceremony at Oslo City Hall.

A tireless campaigner for women's and children's rights, Ms Ebadi has challenged fundamental articles of Iranian law, such as those saying a woman's life is worth half that of a man's or that a woman needs her husband's permission to leave the country.

Hailed as a hero among Iranian reformists and shunned by Tehran's hardline clerics, Ms Ebadi accused the US administration of ignoring UN resolutions in the Middle East yet using them as a pretext to go to war in Iraq.

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"In the past two years, some states have violated the universal principles and laws of human rights by using the events of September 11th and the war on international terrorism as a pretext," she said in her acceptance speech.

"Regulations restricting human rights and basic freedoms ... have been justified and given legitimacy under the cloak of the war on terrorism," Ms Ebadi told the ceremony, attended by Norwegian royalty.

Wearing no headscarf, a stern Ms Ebadi spoke in Farsi to an audience including Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, star hosts of the Nobel concert.

Norway's Crown Prince Haakon, acting as regent for his ailing father King Harald, attended the ceremony with his mother Queen Sonja and his pregnant wife Crown Princess Mette-Marit.

"Your name will shine in the history of the Peace Prize," committee head Ole Danbolt Mjoes said in a speech, adding that he hoped the award would inspire reform.

"And let me hasten to add: this applies to the Western world as well."

As a defence lawyer, Ms Ebadi earned a reputation for taking on cases others dared not touch.

She insists human rights can go hand in hand with Islam and many exiled pro-reformists criticise her as too soft on Tehran, while Iranian hardliners call her a Western stooge.

Iran's hardline Jomhuri-ye Eslami newspaper lambasted Ms Ebadi for appearing on television without a headscarf and for shaking hands with men. "They gave this supposed Nobel prize to her to become a tool of foreign powers' goals in Iran," it said.

The 56-year-old laureate, who was jailed in Iran in 2000 as a result of one of her high-profile legal cases, lashed out at what she called breaches of the Geneva conventions at the US Guantanamo Bay military jail.

The full text of Shirin Ebadi's Nobel speech may be read on the Irish Times website, www.ireland.com