I'm not necessarily talking about governments per se, but groups. There is no funding for human rights groups inside Iran. That used to be the case for Morocco and Algeria and other places. Iran is not unique in that sense.
I remember working on women's rights in Morocco, and the woman who was helping me had to go to her law office to earn a living--hardly--and then try to work on the cases of these poor women, victims of domestic violence, on her holidays, at night, and at lunch time. She was very good, but she couldn't be as effective. If she had a salary and could only do her women's rights activism, the issue would have more gains. So I think that's what I mean. One student told me it's the phone, how much her phone bills cost every month when she tries to organize with the students in Zanjan and the students in Tabriz. Her cellphone bill is expensive, and her family cannot afford it.
So I think that when the human rights community can support the human rights community in Iran and elsewhere, governments are a little bit more sensitive. I'm sure there are ways to do that. But the Iranian government, by criminalizing any contact between the outside world and Iran, has deterred the human rights community from getting money, and that slows them down. I say money, but support, moral support, visibility, all of this is what I say. If you have people who regularly translate what they write there, that's already support, because if their issues get visibility here, the government will be on the retreat.
So I'm talking of all of this together—they need help. If the government tells you that if you help them, they're going to accuse you of spying, you say, “Okay, let's move on.” That's what happened, you know. First it was workshops for civil society, then there was a retreat. The workshops were outside Iran on the borders. Then that became dangerous too. So the workshops, instead of being on women's rights, or civil rights, or whatever, became photography and journalism.
In the end, no one is doing anything, because anything that the international community does, and the Iranian people want them to do, becomes a criminal act. So we have to stop this, and I don't know how to stop this. But by retreating we won't stop it; we will encourage it.