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conservative Iranian television host, drinking beer in switzerland

Why do you think she deserves the heat?
She is free to do whatever she wants.
Case closed
You diverted from the point, but whatever...

Every public person, not only her. As a public person it is entitled that all aspects of ones life can be debated in public. That is why it is called public life. If she wants a private life then she can leave the public domain. Furthermore she is a hypocrite since she is in one hand advocating hijab so that she can get lucrative jobs and on another she is sitting without hijab in public, drinking an alcoholic beverage. She is definition of a hypocrite. It's not an opinion, it's a fact!
 
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BBC Trending



Azadeh Namdari: Backlash over conservative Iranian television host
By Patrick EvansBBC News
  • 25 July 2017
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Image copyrightUNKNOWN
Iranian state television presenter Azadeh Namdari has faced accusations of hypocrisy on social media after a video emerged showing her drinking beer and not wearing her hijab while on holiday in Switzerland.

Alcoholic drinks are banned in Islam and in Iran, where it is the law for women to wear the headscarf.

Namdari is known in Iran as a proponent of the Islamic dress code.

A photo of her in full hijab was once published in the conservative Iranian newspaper Vatan-e Emruz under the headline: "Thank God, I wear the veil".

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Image copyrightVATAN-E EMRUZ
Image captionAzadeh Namdari promoted Islamic dress in Iranian newspaper Vatan-e Emruz
Hypocrisy
In response to the revelations, Namdari published another video of herself in which she offered reasons for not wearing a hijab.

The two-minute long video was published by the hardline Young Journalists' Club(YJC) news agency under the headline "Azadeh Namdari's reaction to the publication of scandalous photos in cyberspace".

This time wearing a hijab, she explained she was sitting with family members and "maharem" - close relatives among whom a woman does not need to wear a hijab - in a park. She said her scarf fell suddenly and the video was taken at that instant by an unknown person.

She gave no explanation about drinking beer in the video.

Ideology, culture, system
The explanation brought further criticism from social media users, citing Namdari's "hypocrisy" and "dual-behaviour," and using her name as the Persian hashtag #Azadeh_Namdari.

Since the initial video emerged on 24 July the hashtag has been used over 11,000 times.

Twitter user @merry_8_4 juxtaposed an image of the TV presenter in full hijab alongside two further photos of Namdari without a hijab and while drinking beer: "What she feeds us with versus what she feeds herself with!"

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"She does not have the right to encourage people to observe the rules that she herself does not observe," user @sisil4030 tweeted.

A tweet from an account attributed to the pro-government cleric Abolfazl Najafi-Tehrani read: "The problem is not #Azadeh_Namdari or people like her. The problem is the ideology, culture and the system that forces individuals in society to have dual-behaviour for some reasons."

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Image copyright@SISIL4030
'Taking people for a fool'
However, reactions to the second video were harsher. Users called Namdari a "liar" and a "hypocrite" who tried to fool the people.

The Facebook page Iran Without Clerics addressed Namdari in a post and wrote: "We do not have any problem with you not wearing hijab or drinking beer. Our problem is that you... take the Iranian people for a fool!"

Twitter user @halVlid asked for how long she is going to deceive people, while @iustmilad wrote her "lies" were an "insult to the people".

However, there were a few social media users who believed she could wear and do whatever she wants.

"It is her life. It is none of our business," wrote Facebook user Safiye Safiye.

By UGC and Social News team, additional reporting by BBC Monitoring.
Every iranian i know here drinks alcohol and so does many if the Pakistanis, especially those who are on student visas....as long as you're not an a hole and hurt others, you're hood in my eyes
 
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99.9% of the Iranians I have met in my life so far have been extremely anti-Islam OR irreligious.

I generally agree, as you hardly find people with similar anti-Islam sentiments as them, even among some White or Christian communities in the West (as these Christian or White would at least be politically correct by avoiding extreme language).
 
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Right....let's respect her private life while this hypocrite is telling Iranian women how to dress according to Islamic values.Ofcourse, she has money coming to her for all the propaganda she's doing for the regime, so she can afford to go to Switzerland, drink beer and do all kind of stuff opposed to the values she's parroting back home.
We all know that you don't give a f+++ about religion in your private life in a Western country while you're defending the current political class of Iran no matter what. You're probably a male version of this woman in real life. Am I right?
1- Drinking none alcoholic beer is not haram and there is no ban for it. In Iran we drink beverages and none alcoholic beers.

2- not veiling hair is not great sin

3- Quran prevent us from ferreting in other people life

Quran: O you who believe! avoid most of suspicion, for surely suspicion in some cases is a sin, and do not spy nor let some of you backbite others [49:12]
 
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Furthermore she is a hypocrite since she is in one hand advocating hijab so that she can get lucrative jobs and on another she is sitting without hijab in public, drinking an alcoholic beverage. She is definition of a hypocrite. It's not an opinion, it's a fact!

One side of Problem is the government of Iran (or better to say the religion itself) which puts a ban on jobs for the people who don't adhere to it's Sharia, thus compelling them to become hypocrite, the only way for them to get the jobs.

Therefore, for states Secular system is the best which provides equal opportunities to all of it's citizens irrespective of their belief.
 
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Let me be the detective
I think she was drinking Feldschlösschen beer. It's a swiss beer.
http://www.feldschloesschen.ch/unsere-biere
Lets say she was drinking the "alkoholfrei" version, but in Swiss "alkoholfrei" (alcohol free) is not pure malt, it still contain up to 0,5% alcohol to be labeled as alkoholfrei. But from the color of the lable, i dont know if she was drinking the "alkoholfrei" version, because that one has a more goldish lable instead.. it could also be the "original" version which has 4,8% alcohol.
Azadeh-Namdari-2.jpg


420x590_original-de.png

I was going to post it... you beat me to it.
This one has 4.9% alkohol.

Couple of times. Iranian agents never chased me to death LOL.

Which city?
 
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Mashhad, Tehran.
I expected so. In and around the shrine you only meet, mulla, IRGC, and Pakistan's most wanted. You need to drive around the city and country to get to know Iran and common public.
 
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I expected so. In and around the shrine you only meet, mulla, IRGC, and Pakistan's most wanted. You need to drive around the city and country to get to know Iran and common public.

Hahaha how old are you man? You crack me up with your cheap humor always. I am not here to give you a complete list of cities I visited. There is no Mullah in Tehran neither IRGC. Recommending to visit other Iranian cities. You kid seem to have never even visited some other Pakistani City except your hometown.
 
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Hahaha how old are you man? You crack me up with your cheap humor always. I am not here to give you a complete list of cities I visited. There is no Mullah in Tehran neither IRGC. Recommending to visit other Iranian cities. You kid seem to have never even visited some other Pakistani City except your hometown.

Ah sorry... I missed Tehran, actually in haste I read it Iran.
What I cracked about shrine surroundings, is 100% true.
 
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