By
Riad Zein Edeen, IOL Iran Correspondent
TEHRAN,
Aug 25 (IslamOnline) - Women taxi drivers in the streets of Iran started
to prevail after the Iranian Ministry of Interiors authorized women, who
want to be taxi drivers, to get a license.
The
latest statistic by the Ministry showed that 124 Iranian women are
currently driving taxis with a sign reading “Weiza Zanan” (Women
only), touring the streets of some Iranian cities, especially the
capital Tehran.
The
move was welcomed by women, who find it embarrassing to have to sit
beside stranger men in taxis, or those who suffer economic problems and
want to work as drivers to earn a living. On the other hand, the move
was rejected by those calling for the end of separation between males
and females in public transportation, a system working in Iran since
1982.
Worth
mentioning here that one third of seats in buses and trains in Iran is
usually booked for women. In cases of crowdedness, some buses and trains
are used only by women, and visa versa.
After
the success of the “women taxi drivers” move in some Iranian cities,
a group of women, who want to join the club of women drivers, urged the
government to generalize the idea in the capital, where more than 10
million people live. However, the taxi drivers union vehemently rejected
the demand.
The
rejection did not stop some 20 women from using their private cars as
“women only taxis” in the streets of Tehran. The traffic police, for
their part, look the other way when the women drivers pass by, even
though the female taxi drivers do not have a license.
“I’m
a widow, mother of four girls. This car is my only source of living, my
husband left it when he died,” a woman taxi driver, Tando Kiyan, told
IslamOnline Saturday, August 24, 2002. She was speaking at Tehran
Airport, where she uses her private car as a “Weiza Zanan”.
“I
have to work at night at the airport, hide my car somewhere till I find
a female passenger. The Drivers Union refused to give me a license,”
she added.
Tando
Kiyan sees the Union’s rejection as “discrimination against
women”.
“If
they insist on their position, they should find us a decent source of
earning a living,” she charged.
Another
woman driver, Fatma Sheriefi, asserted she would not quit her job,
“whether the Union liked it or not”.
“People
like the job we do. I just do not understand the justifications of the
Union’s stand. Do they want it a “men only job”, and deprive us
from a decent way of making a living?” she wondered.
Many
women in Tehran support the “Weiza Zanan” idea, hoping it will be
generalized in the crowded capital.
A
Ministry of Interiors source told IslamOnline that 500 Tehran resident
women applied for a taxi driver’s license, and received initial
approval. However, the Driver’s Union, Tehran Branch, is still
refusing to accept them as members