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  1. Rahnavard is a university professor, artist, and intellectual who was under house arrest from February 2011 to May 2018. In 2009, Foreign Policy magazine named her one of the world's most distinguished thinkers. [3] She is the wife of former Iran Prime Minister Mir Hussein Musavi.

  2. Zahra Rahnavard (em persa: زهرا رهنورد; nascida Zohreh Kazemi; 31 de Outubro de 1945), é uma artista e política iraniana [1]. Rahnavard é casada com Mir-Hossein Mousavi, ex-Primeiro-ministro do Irã, e tem três filhas: Kokab, Narges e Zahra. Ela e Mousavi se casaram em 18 de setembro de 1969.

  3. Rahnavard has been under unofficial house arrest since February 2011 for her and her husband’s political activism in support of anti-government protests and women’s rights. No charges have been pressed against them and no official legal proceedings have begun. Activists in 2023 raised concerns about the couple’s health, suggesting ...

  4. 14 de fev. de 2021 · The Iranian authorities must immediately end the unlawful and arbitrary detention of former presidential candidates Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi, and Mir Hossein Mousavi’s wife, Zahra Rahnavard, and provide them with adequate reparation for the violation of their right to liberty and other harm suffered, Amnesty ...

  5. 9 de mar. de 2023 · Political activist Zahra Rahnavard, who has been under house arrest with her husband for years, in a message, has called the widespread attacks on schools with poisonous gas as the revenge of the Iranian regime’s rulers and reactionary groups against schoolgirls and the “worst anti-women scenario.”

  6. In 2009, Foreign Policy magazine described Zahra Rahnavard as “charismatic,” while the Los Angeles Times compared her to Hillary Clinton for being the “driving force behind her husband's political career.”

  7. Zahra Rahnavard (Persian: زهرا رهنورد; born Zohreh Kazemi; 19 August 1945) is an Iranian university professor, artist and politician. [2] Rahnavard was put under house arrest from February 2011 to May 2018. According to Foreign Policy magazine, she was one of the world's most important thinkers. [3]