Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Why the book bans and censorship? Those who rule want to crush knowledge — and freedom

Chris Hedges - Yesterday 

A student holds up a sign against banning CRT holds up a sign as members of the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School Board meeting© Provided by Salon

A student holds up a sign against banning CRT as members of the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School Board meet in Placentia, California, on March 23, 2022. Leonard Ortiz/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty ImagesThis article originally appeared at ScheerPost. Used by permission.

August Wilson wrote 10 plays chronicling Black life in the 20th century. His favorite, "Joe Turner's Come and Gone," is set in 1911 in a boarding house in Pittsburgh's Hill District. The play's title comes from "Joe Turner's Blues," written in 1915 by W.C. Handy. That song refers to a man named Joe Turney, the brother of Peter Turney, who was the governor of Tennessee from 1893 to 1897. Joe Turney transported Black prisoners, chained in a coffle, along the roads from Memphis to the Tennessee State Penitentiary in Nashville. While en route, he handed over some of the convicts, for a commission, to white farmers. The prisoners he leased to the farmers worked for years in a system of convict leasing — slavery by another name.

In Wilson's play, Herald Loomis, a convict who worked on Turner's farm, arrives in Pittsburgh after seven years of bondage with his 11-year-old daughter, Zonia, in search of his wife. He struggles to cope with his trauma. At a boarding house, he meets a conjuror named Bynum Walker, who tells him that in order to face and overcome the demons that torment him, he must find his song.

It is your song, your voice, your history, Walker tells him, which gives you your identity and your freedom. And your song, Walker tells him, is what the white ruling class seeks to eradicate.

This denial of one's song is instrumental to bondage. Black illiteracy was essential to white domination of the South. It was a criminal offense to teach enslaved people to read and write.

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The poor, especially poor people of color , remain rigidly segregated within educational systems. The backlash against critical race theory (CRT), explorations of LGBTQ+ identities and the banning of books by historians such as Howard Zinn and writers such as Toni Morrison, are extensions of this attempt to deny the oppressed their song.

PEN America reports that proposed educational gag orders have increased 250 percent compared with those issued in 2021. Teachers and professors who violate these gag orders can be subject to fines, loss of state funding for their institutions, termination and even criminal charges. Ellen Schrecker, the leading historian of the McCarthy era's widespread purge of the U.S. education system, calls these gag bills "worse than McCarthyism." Schrecker, author of "No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the Universities," "Many Are the Crimes: McCarthyism in America" and "The Lost Promise: American Universities in the 1960s," writes:

The current campaign to limit what can be taught in high school and college classrooms is clearly designed to divert angry voters from the deeper structural problems that cloud their own personal futures. Yet it is also a new chapter in the decades-long campaign to roll back the changes that have brought the real world into those classrooms. In one state after another, reactionary and opportunistic politicians are joining that broader campaign to overturn the 1960s' democratization of American life. By attacking the CRT bogeyman and demonizing contemporary academic culture and the critical perspectives that it can produce, the current limitations on what can be taught endanger teachers at every level, while the know-nothingism these measures encourage endangers us all.

The more social inequality grows, the more the ruling class seeks to keep the bulk of the population within the narrow confines of the American myth: the fantasy that we live in a democratic meritocracy and are a beacon of liberty and enlightenment to the rest of the world. Their goal is to keep the underclass illiterate, or barely literate, and feed them the junk food of mass culture and the virtues of white supremacy, including the deification of the white male slaveholders who founded this country.

When books that give a voice to oppressed groups are banned, it adds to the sense of shame and unworthiness the dominant culture seeks to impart, especially to children.

When books that give a voice to oppressed groups are banned, it adds to the sense of shame and unworthiness the dominant culture seeks to impart, especially toward marginalized children. At the same time, bans mask the crimes carried out by the ruling class. The ruling class does not want us to know who we are. It does not want us to know of the struggles carried out by those who came before us, struggles that saw many people blacklisted, incarcerated, injured and killed to open democratic space and achieve basic civil liberties from the right to vote to union organizing. They know that the less we know about what has been done to us, the more malleable we become. If we are kept ignorant of what is happening beyond the narrow confines of our communities and trapped in an eternal present, if we lack access to our own history, let alone that of other societies and cultures, we are less able to critique and understand our own society and culture.

W.E.B. Du Bois argued that white society feared educated Blacks far more than they feared Black criminals.

"They can deal with crime by chain-gang and lynch law, or at least they think they can, but the South can conceive neither machinery nor place for the educated, self-reliant, self-assertive black man," he wrote.

Those, like Du Bois, who was blacklisted and driven into exile, who pull the veil from our eyes are especially targeted by the state. Rosa Luxemburg. Eugene V. Debs. Malcolm X. Martin Luther King Jr. Noam Chomsky. Ralph Nader. Cornel West. Julian Assange. Alice Walker. They speak a truth the powerful and the rich do not want heard. They, like Bynum, help us find our song.

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In the U.S., 21 percent of adults are illiterate and a staggering 54 percent have a literacy level below sixth grade. These numbers jump dramatically in the U.S. prison system, the largest in the world with an estimated 20 percent of the globe's prison population, although we are less than 5 percent of the global population. In prison, 70 percent of inmates cannot read above a fourth-grade level, leaving them able to work at only the lowest-paid and most menial jobs upon their release.

You can watch a two-part discussion of my book "Our Class: Trauma and Transformation in an American Prison," and the importance of prison education, here and here.

Like Loomis, those freed from bondage become pariahs, members of a criminal caste. They are unable to access public housing, barred from hundreds of jobs, especially any job that requires a license, and denied social services. The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) estimates in a new report that 60 percent of the formerly incarcerated are jobless. Of more than 50,000 people released from federal prisons in 2010, the report found, 33 percent found no employment at all over four years, and at any given time, no more than 40 percent of the cohort was employed. This is by design. More than two-thirds are rearrested within three years of their release and at least half are reincarcerated.

You can see a two-part discussion on the numerous obstacles placed before those released from prison with five of my former students from the NJ-STEP college degree program here and here.

White members of the working class, although often used as shock troops against minorities and the left, are equally manipulated and for the same reasons. They, too, are denied their song, fed myths of white exceptionalism and white supremacy to keep their antagonism directed at other oppressed groups, rather than the corporate forces and the billionaire class that have orchestrated their own misery.


White members of the working class are equally manipulated. They, too, are denied their song, fed myths of white exceptionalism and white supremacy to keep their antagonism directed at other oppressed groups.

Du Bois pointed out that poor whites, politically allied with rich Southern plantation owners, were complicit in their disenfranchisement. They received few material or political benefits from the alliance, but they reveled in the "psychological" feelings of superiority that came with being white. Race, he wrote, "drove such a wedge between white and black workers that there probably are not today in the world two groups of workers with practically identical interests who hate and fear each other so deeply and persistently and who are kept so far apart that neither sees anything of common interest."

Little has changed.

The poor do not attend college, or, if they do, they incur massive student debt, which can take a lifetime to pay off. U.S. student loan debt, totaling nearly $1.75 trillion, is the second-largest source of consumer debt behind mortgages. Some 50 million people are in debt peonage to student loan companies. This debt peonage forces graduates to major in subjects useful to corporations and is part of the reason why the humanities are withering away. It limits career options because graduates must seek jobs that allow them to meet their hefty monthly loan payments. The average law school student debt of $130,000 intentionally sends most law school graduates into the arms of corporate law firms.

Meanwhile, fees to attend colleges and universities have skyrocketed. The average tuition and fees at private national universities have jumped 134 percent since 2002. Out-of-state tuition and fees at public national universities have risen 141 percent while in-state tuition and fees at public national universities have risen 175 percent.

The forces of repression, backed by corporate money, are challenging in court Biden's executive order to cancel some student debt. A federal judge in Missouri heard arguments from six states attempting to block the plan. To qualify for the debt relief, individuals must make less than $125,000 a year or $250,000 for married couples and families. Eligible borrowers can receive up to $20,000 if they are Pell Grant recipients and up to $10,000 if they haven't received a Pell Grant.

Education should be subversive. It should give us the intellectual tools and vocabulary to question the reigning ideas and structures that buttress the powerful. It should make us autonomous and independent beings, capable of making our own judgments, capable of understanding and defying the "cultural hegemony," to quote Antonio Gramsci, that keeps us in bondage. In Wilson's play, Bynum teaches Loomis how to discover his song, and once Loomis finds his song, he is free.

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about the censorship battles of 2022
"Statewide book bans" are coming to Florida's classrooms, enforced by the far right

Irish republican party Sinn Fein asks Canada to halt trade talks with U.K.
Yesterday 

OTTAWA — An Irish political party pushing to unify the island of Ireland wants Ottawa to halt post-Brexit trade talks with Britain, arguing that London is undermining the agreement that brokered peace between Catholics and Protestants.



"It is the duty of friends to sometimes pull each other up, whenever they are behaving in a way which is not acceptable," said Sinn Fein member of Parliament John Finucane.

This week, the Belfast MP, who sits in the United Kingdom's House of Commons, travelled to Toronto and Ottawa to ask Canadian leaders for their help.

He wants them to nudge Britain to abide by the rules that have historically allowed seamless travel betweenNorthern Ireland, mainland Britain and the Republic of Ireland.

Sinn Fein operates in both countries. The party was once the political wing of the Irish Republican Army, a Catholic militant group embroiled in three decades of armed conflict with the British over the status of Northern Ireland, which is a region of Britain.

The conflict largely ended in 1998 with the Good Friday Agreement, which set out rules for the U.K. and Ireland to maintain peace, including an effectively invisible border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, which remains part of the European Union.

After Britain left the EU, the two countries negotiated an agreement that allows for customs checks of goods transiting in the sea between Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

The move avoided the need for a hard borderon the island, while annoying those who want to keep the region as a regular part of the U.K.

But this spring, Britain tabled legislation to curtail the border rules, which the European Commission argues violate international law.

The British government is also modifying human-rights legislation in ways that Amnesty International argues will violate the Good Friday Agreement, though London insists otherwise.

"We are dealing with a British government, through numerous examples, that seems to have very little respect for international law or indeed international agreements," Finucane argued.

Washington has cited those concerns in tapping the brakes on trade talks with Britain, while London has resorted to talking with individual American states as it tries forming post-Brexit trade links.

Meanwhile, Canada launched formal trade talks with Britain in March to replace the interim deal that followed Brexit.

But Finucane wants Ottawa to make those trade talks conditional on the U.K. respecting rules aimed at avoiding a reignition of sectarian conflict.

"It (should be) not even allowing a trade deal negotiation to get off the ground, if there's damage to the Good Friday Agreement," he said.

Trade Minister Mary Ng had no comment on his request.

"Canada will always support maintaining the integrity of the Good Friday Agreement," spokeswoman Alice Hansen wrote.

In a statement, the British government said its priority is to protect the agreement.

"Our focus has been, and will always be, preserving stability in Northern Ireland," wrote Ottawa high commission spokesman Tom Walsh.

"The U.K.'s preference has always been for a negotiated solution, but we have also said we need to resolve the situation in Northern Ireland soon," he wrote, saying this is the purpose of the legislation Britain tabled this spring.

Finucane noted that Canadian officials played a part in forming the Good Friday Agreement in the first place — including former Supreme Court justice Peter Cory and Gen. John de Chastelain.

"Canada has invested too much. The international community has invested too much to allow it to be undermined or indeed undone by the actions of the British government," he said.

Sinn Fein is also pushing for a citizens' assembly on what a united Ireland would look like, arguing that census data, electoral trends and polls suggest growing support for unity.

In May, voters handed Sinn Fein the largest share of seats in Northern Ireland's assembly, marking the first time a Catholic party has outranked Protestant groupings in the region.

Finucane said that's due, in part, to the chaos resulting from Brexit, which he argues has made it less appealing for the region to remain part of the United Kingdom.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 18, 2022.

Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press
CSIS worried convoy protests were being used as 'recruiting ground' for violent 'hardened elements'

Christopher Nardi - Yesterday



OTTAWA – Midway through the Freedom Convoy protests, Canada’s spy agency worried that they were being used as a “recruiting ground” for other causes but saw no sign of foreign threat actors supporting the movement.

A first glimpse into assessments of the convoy by Canada’s secretive intelligence agencies is contained in a summary of a call between municipal, provincial and federal government officials on Feb. 6, nine days after protests began in Ottawa.

The document was tabled at the Public Order Emergency Commission (POEC) Tuesday.

During the call, Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) director David Vigneault said that at that point, the Freedom Convoy was “primarily a domestic issue” and that there was little to no evidence of influence by foreign actors.

But he did worry that the convoy had been infiltrated at protests across Canada — namely Parliament Hill, Quebec City, Toronto and Alberta — by “hardened elements” from “other” unnamed causes who “will likely use violence.”

“However, they are not actively participating or organizing it and are likely using this as a recruiting ground,” Vigneault is reported as saying.

The document also reveals CSIS was not seeing any signs of foreign funds flowing towards the convoy nine days into its arrival in Ottawa.

“CSIS has also not seen any foreign money coming from other states to support this,” Vigneault is reported as saying. “There is no foreign actors identified at this point supporting or financing this convoy.”
Trudeau accused Ford of 'hiding from his responsibility' during Freedom Convoy
Mendicino 'concerned' RCMP withheld badge numbers of officers who cleared Freedom Convoy protest

His private comments were made at a time of growing concern from experts and other government officials that some of the millions of dollars raised for the Freedom Convoy via crowdfunding websites such as GoFundMe was coming from foreign threat actors hoping to destabilize Canada.

By Feb. 6, GoFundMe had already frozen the fundraiser set up by convoy organizer Tamara Lich (which had topped $10 million) and begun refunding donors.

“We strictly prohibit user content that reflects or promotes behavior in support of violence — in this case, the organizer met our requirements and the fundraiser did not violate our Terms of Service at the time of creation,” the company said at the time.

In the meantime, a new fundraiser had also been launched on U.S.-based “Christian fundraising” website GiveSendGo.

Vigneault said FINTRAC and banks were already tracking the money being fundraised for the convoy and “making sure that it is not used for a non-peaceful purpose.”

He also noted that there was no “major organizing” of truckers coming to Canada from the United States at that time, and that the protest was mainly driven by domestic concerns.

“There is not a lot of energy and support from the USA to Canada,” the document says he noted.

Further intelligence assessments by CSIS of the Freedom Convoy after Feb. 6 have not yet been made public by the commission.

But 10 days after the Feb. 6 call and a few days after controversially invoking the Emergencies Act, Liberal ministers described border blockades in Ontario and Alberta as well as the Ottawa protests as foreign-funded, foreign-organized attacks meant to undermine our nation’s sovereignty.

“We have seen strong evidence that it was the intention of those who blockaded our ports-of-entry in a largely foreign-funded, targeted and coordinated attack, which was clearly and criminally intended to harm Canada, to harm Canadians, to interrupt vital supply lines, to idle our workers and close our factories,” Emergency Preparedness Minister Bill Blair told reporters on Feb. 16.

Blair, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and a slew of other Liberal ministers are also set to testify at the commission, likely in November.

With additional reporting by Bryan Passifiume.
Biden set to go to the mat with Big Oil over gas prices



Adam Cancryn
Tue, October 18, 2022 

The White House is intensifying a pressure campaign against the oil industry over rebounding gas prices as it tries to contain the political fallout of rising fuel costs just ahead of the midterms.

Top Biden administration officials in recent weeks have publicly warned companies against inflating prices. In private, their message has been even more direct. They’ve aired complaints to executives over their ballooning profits and threatened drastic new restrictions — such as limits on companies’ fuel exports — if the industry refuses to help ease the price at the pump, according to people familiar with those discussions.

Biden this week is expected to authorize releasing more oil from the administration’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve — continuing a months-long pattern aimed at heading off even more significant price increases.

The administration’s efforts to keep pump prices low underscore how intertwined the cost of gas and electoral fortunes tend to be for the party in power. They also illustrate how limited the policy options are for the occupant inside the White House.


A mix of factors outside the government’s control is driving fuel prices, analysts said. Among them are refinery outages in California and the Midwest, tightening European sanctions on Russia, entrenched supply and demand imbalances and the recent decision by OPEC to defy the White House and cut its oil production. So the White House has settled on a long-shot strategy of arm-twisting — publicly excoriating oil companies while privately pressuring their executives.


The offensive comes as the cost of gas trended up again nationwide, erasing weeks of declines that President Joe Biden had championed as evidence his economic policies were working. Though that trend abated over the past few days, the longer-term picture looks bleak, alarming officials who worry that fluctuating prices could cause eleventh-hour damage to Democrats’ midterm chances.

“If you own it on the way up, you own it on the way down,” said Tobin Marcus, a former Biden adviser and current senior policy and politics strategist at Evercore ISI. “They got some really good political mileage from highlighting the sharp improvements over the summer … and now must make the best of a non-optimal situation.”

The average cost of gas now sits at $3.87 per gallon, roughly 20 cents higher than a month ago. In more than a dozen states, prices have topped a $4 mark that Biden allies see as particularly troublesome for a Democratic party trying to sell voters on an improving economy.

Biden and his advisers have fixated on the political importance of the cost of gas, believing it shapes how voters feel about the economy. Absent immediate policy fixes, they’ve turned their fire on the industry, attacking oil companies for collecting record profits and suggesting they could single-handedly lower gas prices if not for their own greed.

Biden in late September directly urged oil and gas companies to slash prices, accusing them of profiting excessively off higher fuel costs, even as the global price of oil declined.

“Bring down the prices you’re charging at the pump to reflect the cost you pay for the product,” he said. “Do it now. Not a month from now. Do it now.”

More recently, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm singled out oil giant ExxonMobil after it objected to administration demands that the industry limit exports abroad in favor of boosting supply in the U.S.

“These companies need to focus less on taking every last dollar off the table, and more on passing through savings to their customers,” Granholm said, adding that ExxonMobil “misreads the moment we are in.”


In a statement, White House spokesperson Abdullah Hasan characterized the administration's aggressiveness toward the industry as aimed at "advancing the interests of the American people — whether that meant asking the industry for their ideas to increase oil and gas production, or calling them out for setting record profit margins at a time of war."

Senior Biden officials — including National Economic Council Director Brian Deese and top State Department energy adviser Amos Hochstein — have been even more persistent in private, pressing industry representatives repeatedly to find new ways to push down prices, people familiar with the discussions said.

Though the administration has always kept an open channel to the industry, the people familiar said conversations have grown blunter and more frequent of late — with officials increasingly convinced companies could be doing more.

That’s prompted protests from the oil and gas industry that there’s little it can do to single-handedly move prices, especially on the administration’s accelerated timeline. Energy market experts largely agree, noting prices are affected by a range of global dynamics and companies can’t produce more oil on a whim.

“You can yell at them all you want,” said Ryan Kellogg, an economist and professor at the University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy. “There’s no switch you can turn that’s immediately going to cause a bunch more oil to come out of the ground.”


But Biden aides remain undeterred. In public and private, officials have complained that oil refiners have been slow to restart facilities, pressing them to boost production as quickly as they shut it down when demand cratered early in the pandemic. They've also focused on the time it takes for lower oil prices to translate into cheaper gas for consumers, arguing energy companies and retailers should reflect the savings when oil prices fall just as fast as they hike prices when oil markets surge.

"We're still not up to pre-pandemic levels [of supply] and yet demand has almost gotten there," said one Energy Department official involved in the talks, adding that continued low inventories represent the core of the administration's frustration. "We really do need to understand what's holding back industry."

The more aggressive turn has produced little in the way of measurable progress lately, though an administration official said there has been some pick-up in refinery restarts this year. But it's further soured an already frosty relationship between the administration and the oil industry. One senior industry official, granted anonymity to talk candidly about the White House, questioned Biden aides’ understanding of the energy markets. The person summed up the intense focus on daily price fluctuations as the administration “asking the wrong questions and taking the wrong steps.”

Another industry official said that despite months of discussions, Biden and the industry share virtually no common ground on policies they believe could ease fuel costs.

“We appreciate an open engagement with the administration,” said Frank Macchiarola, senior vice president of policy, economics and regulatory affairs at the American Petroleum Institute. “But the administration needs to change its policies, and it needs to stop its rhetoric about price gouging, which has been debunked consistently.”


Still, the approach has thrilled some Democrats who long believed the White House should take a harder line with the oil industry over its outsized profits — a tactic they argued could also help deflect frustration with gas prices that voters might otherwise train on Biden himself.

Several Democratic lawmakers, as well as California Gov. Gavin Newsom, have called for imposing a tax on the so-called windfall profits that oil companies earn from high prices.

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), an early advocate for the windfall tax, told POLITICO he’s now working on a bill restricting refined gasoline exports after the Biden administration signaled it was open to the idea.

The White House has yet to fully embrace either a windfall profits tax or an export ban, both of which represent major interventions that experts and some officials worry could backfire and drive prices higher by destabilizing the oil markets and the delicate geopolitical landscape. Aides are wary, for example, that restricting exports could hurt European allies already facing high energy costs because of their sanctions on Russia.

Yet even if it doesn’t translate into new policy or make a measurable dent in gas prices, Democrats maintain that keeping pressure on the oil industry is worth the potential political payoff.

“They’re trying to keep it from being any worse than it has to be as a political matter between now and the finish line of the midterms,” Marcus said. “Political narratives function best when there’s an identifiable villain.”

Ben Lefebvre contributed to this report.

Worry grows for Iran athlete who competed without her hijab



South Korea Iran Protest

Iranian athlete Elnaz Rekabi competes during the women's Boulder & Lead final during the IFSC Climbing Asian Championships in Seoul, Sunday, Oct. 16, 2022. Rekabi left South Korea on Tuesday, Oct. 18, 2022 after competing at an event in which she climbed without her nation's mandatory headscarf covering, authorities said. Farsi-language media outside of Iran warned she may have been forced to leave early by Iranian officials and could face arrest back home, which Tehran quickly denied. 
(Rhea Khang/International Federation of Sport Climbing via AP)

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — An Iranian competitive climber left South Korea on Tuesday after competing at an event in which she climbed without her nation's mandatory headscarf covering, authorities said. Farsi-language media outside of Iran warned she may have been forced to leave early by Iranian officials and could face arrest back home, which Tehran quickly denied.

The decision by Elnaz Rekabi, a multiple medalist in competitions, to forgo the headscarf, or hijab, came as protests sparked by the Sept. 16 death in custody of a 22-year-old woman have entered a fifth week. Mahsa Amini was detained by the country's morality police over her clothing.

The demonstrations, drawing school-age children, oil workers and others to the street in over 100 cities, represent the most-serious challenge to Iran's theocracy since the mass protests surrounding its disputed 2009 presidential election.

A later Instagram post on an account attributed to Rekabi described her not wearing a hijab as “unintentional," though it wasn't immediately clear whether she wrote the post or what condition she was in at the time. The Iranian government routinely pressures activists at home and abroad, often airing what rights group describe as coerced confessions on state television.

Rekabi left Seoul on a Tuesday morning flight, the Iranian Embassy in South Korea said. The BBC's Persian service, which has extensive contacts within Iran despite being banned from operating there, quoted an unnamed “informed source” who described Iranian officials as seizing both Rekabi's mobile phone and passport.

BBC Persian also said she initially had been scheduled to return on Wednesday, but her flight apparently had been moved up unexpectedly.

IranWire, another website focusing on the country founded by Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari who once was detained by Iran, alleged that Rekabi would be immediately transferred to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison after arriving in the country. Evin Prison was the site of a massive fire this weekend that killed at least eight prisoners.

In a tweet, the Iranian Embassy in Seoul denied “all the fake, false news and disinformation” regarding Rekabi’s departure on Tuesday. But instead of posting a photo of her from the Seoul competition, it posted an image of her wearing a headscarf at a previous competition in Moscow, where she took a bronze medal.

Calls to the Iranian Embassy in Seoul rang unanswered Tuesday.

Rekabi didn’t put on a hijab during Sunday’s final at the International Federation of Sport Climbing’s Asia Championship, according to the Seoul-based Korea Alpine Federation, the organizers of the event.

Federation officials said Rekabi wore a hijab during her initial appearances at the one-week climbing event. She wore just a black headband when competing Sunday, her dark hair pulled back in a ponytail; she had a white jersey with Iran's flag as a logo on it.

The later Instagram post, written in the first person, offered an apology on Rekabi's behalf. The post blamed a sudden call for her to climb the wall in the competition — although footage of the competition showed Rekabi relaxed as she approached and after she competed. It also sought to describe her travel back to Iran on Tuesday as being “on schedule.”

Rekabi was on Iran’s 11-member delegation, comprised of eight athletes and three coaches, to the event, according to the federation.

Federation officials said they were not initially aware of Rekabi competing without the hijab but looked into the case after receiving inquires about her. They said the event doesn’t have any rules on requiring female athletes wearing or not wearing headscarves. However, Iranian women competing abroad under the Iranian flag always wear the hijab.

“Our understanding is that she is returning to Iran, and we will continue to monitor the situation as it develops on her arrival,” the International Federation of Sport Climbing, which oversaw the event, said in a statement. “It is important to stress that athletes’ safety is paramount for us and we support any efforts to keep a valued member of our community safe in this situation.”

The federation said it had been in touch with both Rekabi and Iranian officials, but declined to elaborate on the substance of those calls when reached by The Associated Press. The federation also declined to discuss the Instagram post attributed to Rekabi and the claims in it.

Later Tuesday, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry acknowledged that the Iranian athlete and her team had left the country, without elaborating.

Rekabi, 33, has finished on the podium three times in the Asian Championships, taking one silver and two bronze medals for her efforts.

So far, human rights groups estimate that over 200 people have been killed in the protests and the violent security force crackdown that followed. Iran has not offered a death toll in weeks. Demonstrations have been seen in over 100 cities, according to the group Human Rights Activists in Iran. Thousands are believed to have been arrested.

Gathering information about the demonstrations remains difficult, however. Internet access has been disrupted for weeks by the Iranian government. Meanwhile, authorities have detained at least 40 journalists, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeatedly alleged the country's foreign enemies are behind the ongoing demonstrations, rather than Iranians angered by Amini’s death and the country's other woes.

Iranians have seen their life savings evaporate; the country's currency, the rial, plummeted and Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers has been reduced to tatters.

In a statement Tuesday, the office of the United Nations high commissioner for human rights called for the immediate release of all those “arbitrarily detained” in the protests. It also criticized the “unabated violent response by security forces” that has seen even children reportedly arrested and killed.

“The continued unnecessary and disproportionate use of force against protesters must stop," the statement said. "Arresting people solely for exercising their rights of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression constitutes an arbitrary deprivation of liberty.”

___

Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writers John Marshall in Phoenix and Kim Tong-hyung in Seoul contributed to this report.

Iranian climber Elnaz Rekabi could face repercussions after competing without a hijab in Seoul


An Iranian professional climber could face jail time in Iran after she competed without a hijab during the International Federation of Sport Climbing’s Asian Championships in Seoul, South Korea, on Sunday.

Elnaz Rekabi, 33, reportedly left Seoul on Tuesday morning and will be transported directly from the airport to Evin Prison in Tehran, Iran, upon her arrival, according to IranWire, a news outlet founded by Iranian-Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari in 2014.

This report comes hours after speculation about Rekabi's whereabouts following the event. Rekabi had initially been reported as missing by the BBC, but IranWire later reported she was "tricked" into entering the Iranian embassy building in Seoul by Reza Zarei, the head of Iran's Climbing Federation, on the orders of Mohammad Khosravivafa, Iran's Olympic Committee chairman, in order to more easily bring her back to Iran.

Rekabi wrote in an Instagram story on Tuesday morning that she was indeed leaving Seoul for Iran.

News of Rekabi's departure from Seoul to Tehran was later confirmed by the BBC, the Iranian embassy in Seoul and the International Federation of Sport Climbing. The embassy tweeted it "strongly denies all fake news, lies and false information" regarding Rekabi's situation. The IFSC also released a statement Tuesday morning acknowledging Rekabi's travel plans and also stated their support of athlete safety and the right to free speech.

"There is a lot of information in the public sphere regarding Ms Rekabi and as an organisation we have been trying to establish the facts," the IFSC wrote. "We have also been in contact with Ms Rekabi and the Iranian Climbing Federation.

"Our understanding is that she is returning to Iran, and we will continue to monitor the situation as it develops on her arrival.

"It is important to stress that athletes' safety is paramount for us and we support any efforts to keep a valued member of our community safe in this situation.

Rekabi recently won bronze in the women's combined event at the 2021 IFSC Climbing World Championships in Moscow. She's won three other medials since 2013 at various Asian Championship events.

Rekabi's decision not to wear a hijab went against Iranian law

Rekabi defied Iranian law which requires women to wear a headscarf covering at all times in public when she didn't don a hijab in Seoul. Rekabi has worn a hijab during other events, including her earlier appearances in Seoul, but said not wearing one on Sunday was "unintentional." Instead, she wore a black headband with her hair in a ponytail.

The event did not have rules requiring athletes from wearing headscarves. In a 2016 interview with Euronews, Rekabi said that wearing a hijab could be "a problem" when it gets too hot but that her team created an outfit "that respects the hijab and is compatible with practicing the sport of climbing."

IranWire later reported that Rekabi "made her decision to appear without a hijab around a month ago" but chose not to seek asylum because her husband was still in Iran.

This is only the second time an Iranian athlete openly broke the country's law regarding hijabs. Professional boxer Sadaf Khadem competed without a headscarf and also wore shorts in an international competition in France in 2019. She stayed in France following the event after Iran issued a warrant for her arrest.

Rekabi's act comes during a time where Iranian women have been protesting the headscarf law by burning hijabs and cutting their hair following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini on Sept. 16. Amini was arrested and detained by Iran’s morality police on Sept. 13 after she reportedly wore her hijab too loosely. She died three days later in police custody.

Elnaz Rekabi could face jail time after defying Iranian law. (Rhea Khang/International Federation of Sport Climbing via AP)
Elnaz Rekabi could face jail time after defying Iranian law. (Rhea Khang/International Federation of Sport Climbing via AP)

Safety concerns mount for Iranian rock climber Elnaz Rekabi, who competed without a headscarf, as she quietly flies back to Tehran 2 days earlier than planned

Iranian sport climber Elnaz Rekabi competes in a previous competition.MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Iranian rock climber Elnaz Rekabi competed on Sunday without wearing a hijab.

  • Her decision was seen as an act of solidarity with the women-led protests raging through Iran.

  • Reports say she flew back to Tehran two days earlier than planned, prompting fears for her safety.

Iranian rock climber Elnaz Rekabi has flown back to Tehran from an international competition in South Korea two days earlier than planned, according to multiple reports, prompting rising concerns for her safety.

Rekabi made headlines on Sunday after she competed without wearing a customary hijab in a finals event at the International Federation of Sport Climbing's Asian Championships.

Wearing the hijab is mandatory for female Iranian athletes when they compete overseas, and Rekabi's declining to don the headscarf was widely seen as a historic show of solidarity with the women-led protests rocking Iran.

Rekabi's choice during her Sunday climb had been expected to lead to severe repercussions upon her return to Iran. On Monday evening, BBC Persian reported that the athlete disappeared hours after contact with her friends was cut off. Her passport and mobile phone were also taken, per the outlet.

BBC Presenter Rana Rahimpour later tweeted that Rekabi was on a flight to Iran two days earlier than planned.

Iranian citizen journalism website IranWire reported that Rekabi will be directly transferred to Evin Prison once she arrives in Tehran, citing an unnamed source. Rekabi was summoned to the Iranian embassy in Seoul after being told by a sporting official that she would be granted safe travel to Iran, the source told the outlet.

"Elnaz made her decision to appear without a hijab around a month ago and knew that she was going to compete without the mandatory hijab," the source said, according to IranWire.

"She did not seek asylum either because her husband is in Iran, and she wanted to return after the competition. She always makes such bold decisions," they added, per the outlet.

The Iranian embassy in Seoul did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

A Persian-language report by IranWire also wrote that Rekabi's brother, Daud Rekabi, was arrested by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps on Monday morning Iran time. Insider was unable to verify the authenticity of this report.

Both IranWire reports claim the Rekabi siblings were intercepted under the order of Mohammad Khosravivafa, the chairman of Iran's Olympic Committee, who the outlet said received orders in turn from the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The Iranian Olympic Committee did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment.

Rekabi's refusal to wear the hijab came amid weeks of protests in Iran over women's rights. The movement resurged in September after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who died after being taken into custody of Iran's morality police. She had been arrested on accusation of not following Iran's strict rules on wearing the hijab. Officials claim that Amini died of a sudden heart attack, but her family and witnesses say she was taken into a van and beaten.

The resulting protests have seen women marching on city streets and removing their headscarves in acts of defiance. While these rallies have grown to also encompass dissent over economic conditions in Iran, women's rights have remained at the forefront of the movement.

Iranian leaders have since cracked down against the demonstrations, with security forces firing tear gas and arresting thousands.