Iran: End Persecution Of Peaceful Activists
Iran: End Persecution Of Peaceful Activists
Accusations and Official Charges Place Activists at Risk of Death Penalty
Iran: End Persecution of Peaceful Activists | Human Rights Watch
January 9, 2010 (Washington) - Members of two groups active in peaceful demonstrations following the disputed June presidential elections have been accused of - and in some cases formally charged with - crimes that carry the death penalty, Human Rights Watch said today.
Iranian
authorities have filed charges of "being at enmity with God"
against members of the Liberal Student and Alumni
Association and have detained people working with the
Committee of Human Rights Reporters and accused them of
membership in an armed opposition group.
"The
authorities should be working to ensure the rights and
safety of citizens exercising their rights to gather
peacefully," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at
Human Rights Watch. "Instead, they are preparing the
groundwork to impose the harshest of punishments."
In
the context of Iranian laws, the vaguely defined charge of
"being at enmity with God" can be applied to membership in
or support for an organization that seeks to overthrow the
Islamic Republic. High-ranking clerical members of the
government have accused opposition groups of fueling the
ongoing unrest and of "sedition."
On January 1,
Ayatollah Seyyed Yousef Tabatabaee Nejad, the Friday prayer
leader of the city of Esfehan and a member of the Assembly
of Experts (an elected body charged with selecting the
Supreme Leader), claimed that demonstrators were taking
orders from the Mujahedin-e Khalq organization. Mujahedin-e
Khalq is an Iraq-based opposition group that has previously
taken up arms against the Iranian government.
Authorities have accused both the Liberal Student and Alumni Association and the Committee of Human Rights Reporters of ties to the Mujahedin-e Khalq. Neither Ayatollah Tabatabaee Nejad nor other authorities have furnished any proof to support his accusation.
The Liberal Student and Alumni Association
(LSSA), a four-year-old campus group, has been active in
peaceful demonstrations following the disputed presidential
election in June.
On November 19, 2009, security forces
arrested seven members of the group as they were leaving a
meeting at the home of Ehsan Dolatshah. Four have since been
released on bail, but Mehrdad Bozorg, Dolatshah, and Sina
Shokohi remain in detention. The authorities have charged
Bozorg and Dolatshah with "being at enmity with God" for
their alleged affiliation with Mojahedin-e Khalq. On
December 24, state-run television broadcast the two men
"confessing" to having ties to Mojahedin-e Khalq. They have
not had access to lawyers and are awaiting trial.
Saeed
Ghaseminejad, a spokesperson for the group, told Human
Rights Watch that the two men's statements were obtained
under severe physical duress. The group's website says that
other members who were released have reported physical abuse
at the hands of their interrogators and that those who
remain in detention suffered particularly harsh treatment.
A member of the Committee of Human Rights Reporters
(CHRR) who spoke with Human Rights Watch said that
interrogators at Evin Prison in Teheran have threatened to
bring similar charges against members of that group. The
Committee consists of independent activists who have been
monitoring human rights violations in Iran for nearly five
years. They have also been peaceful participants in
demonstrations following the elections.
On the evening
of December 20, security forces in Enqelab Square in Tehran
arrested Shiva Nazar Ahari, Koohyar Goodarzi, and Saeed
Haeri, all members of the group. The three were on a bus
about to leave for Qom, where they had planned to attend the
funeral of Grand Ayatollah Montazeri. A member of the group
told Human Rights Watch that an interrogator known to the
group by the name of "Alavi" boarded the bus and read their
names from a list, after which security forces detained the
three. On January 2, two other members of the group, Parisa
Kakai and Mehrdad Rahimi, were arrested when they responded
to a summons to report to the Intelligence Ministry in
Teheran.
Authorities are also holding in Evin Prison two
other members of the group detained since December 1, Saeed
Kalanaki and Saeed Jalalifar. None of the detainees have
been allowed access to lawyers or have been formally
charged.
A member of the group who spoke to Human Rights Watch said that on December 29, interrogator "Alavi" directed Ahari, Kalanaki, and Jalalifar to ask members of the group to shut down the group's website. The person said that "Alavi" himself got on the phone to threaten the group with "severe consequences" if they did not obey and accused the group of links with Mujahedin-e Khalq.
Members report
that detainees from the group face severe pressure to
confess falsely to having links with Mojahedin-e Khalq. The
group denies having any connection to that organization.
"Peaceful protesters should be free, not in jail facing
harsh penalties," Stork said. "If authorities have credible
evidence that anyone has engaged in violence, let them prove
it in fair and open trials."
ENDS
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