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Originally published February 6, 2012 at 4:22 PM | Page modified February 7, 2012 at 6:24 AM

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D'oh! Simpsons dolls join Barbie on Iran's toy blacklist

Dolls of the Simpsons cartoon characters reportedly have been added to a toy blacklist in Iran because they are seen as promoting Western culture, but the Islamic Republic is making an exception for dolls of Superman and Spider-Man, "who support oppressed people."

The Associated Press

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TEHRAN, Iran — An Iranian government-affiliated agency has banned dolls of the Simpsons cartoon characters, who join Barbie and others on a toy blacklist, an independent newspaper reported Monday.

The report said that the Simpsons were banned to avoid the promotion of Western culture. But Superman and Spider-Man were allowed because they helped the "oppressed."

"We do not want to promote this cartoon by importing the toys," Shargh daily quoted Mohammad Hossein Farjoo, secretary of policymaking at the Institute for the Intellectual Development of Children and Young Adults, as saying.

He did not elaborate on what was wrong with the Simpsons specifically. But he noted that any doll on which genitals are distinguishable, as well as dolls of adults, are banned. So were toys with speakers that blare out the voices of Western singers, or toy kitchen sets that include glasses for drinking alcoholic beverages.

Farjoo said, however, that dolls of Spider-Man and Superman were authorized for sale. "They help oppressed people and they have a positive stance," he said.

The agency is the same one that called Barbie dolls a "Trojan horse" in 1996. In January, police said they closed down dozens of toy shops for selling Barbies.

Since the 1979 Islamic revolution that ousted a pro-Western monarchy, Iran has tried to fight Western cultural influence.

Despite bans on many books, movies, satellite TV channels, music, haircuts and fashion from the West, many young people follow Western culture avidly and can often obtain illegal products on the black market.

In 2011 Iran imported $57 million worth of toys. Officials believe some $20 million more worth of toys were smuggled across the border the same year.

One-fourth of Iran's population of 75 million is under 15 years old.

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