(New York, April 7,
2007) – The Iranian government should immediately release two women’s rights
activists arrested on April 1 and end its harassment and persecution of human
rights defenders, Human Rights Watch said
today.
On April 1, 2007, security
forces arrested five women’s rights activists who were planning to gather
signatures for the One Million Signatures Campaign, a project aimed at
collecting one million signatures to demand an end to discrimination against
women in Iranian law. This includes a call for women’s testimony in court to
carry the same weight as that of men, equality of inheritance rights between men
and women, the elimination of polygamy, and equality of compensation payments in
the event of the wrongful death of a man and of a woman. The arrests took place
in Laleh Park in Tehran; three of the five were released two days
later.

Mahboubeh Hosseinzadeh
& Nahid
Keshavarz
“These arrests are the
latest sign that the Iranian government can’t tolerate people who demand rights
for women,” said Fadi Al-Qadi, Middle East advocate at Human Rights Watch. “Iran
should stop targeting peaceful activists, and abide by international human
rights law.”
According to eyewitness
reports provided to Human Rights Watch, a small group of women’s rights
activists were in Laleh Park preparing to ask passersby to sign their petition
when uniformed security forces approached them. They told the activists they
merely wished to speak to them but proceeded to arrest five: Mahboubeh
Hosseinzadeh, Nahid Keshavarz, Saideh Amin, Sarah Imanian and Imanian’s husband,
Homayoun Nami.
On April 3, authorities
transferred the five to a branch of the Revolutionary Court. According to a
colleague of Hosseinzadeh, court officials then asked the detainees to sign a
pledge to end their activities on behalf of the campaign. Hosseinzadeh and
Keshavarz refused.
Court officials told them
that their activities amounted to acting against Islam and the state and that
they would be charged accordingly and taken to Evin Prison.
That afternoon, officials
brought the five detainees to Niloufar Police Station in Tehran where they
released Amin, Imanian, and Nami. They transferred Keshavarz and Hosseinzadeh to
Evin prison.
On the evening of April 4,
Keshavarz called her husband from Evin Prison and told him that she and
Hosseinzadeh had been taken to the women’s general ward. She informed him that
the previous night they had been detained in a punishment block for women at
Evin, where she and Hosseinzadeh had feared for their safety.
Keshavarz’s lawyers, Nobel
laureate Shirin Ebadi and Nasrin Sotoodeh, went to the Revolutionary Court on
April 4 to inquire about the detainees. Authorities barred the two lawyers from
entering the court, thus preventing them from obtaining information about the
case against their clients.
Authorities have also
prevented the families of Keshavarz and Hosseinzadeh from meeting them since
their arrests. On April 5, relatives and friends of the two went to Evin prison
to request a visit. The prison officials told them that due to the warden’s
absence, they would be unable to see the detainees and that they should pursue
the matter at the Revolutionary Court. At the court, officials provided no
clarification about the detainees’ cases on the grounds that the presiding judge
was absent, and advised them to return on Saturday, April 7.
Iran is a party to the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and as such is
legally bound to protect freedom of expression, assembly and equality before the
law, and prohibit arbitrary detention, such as detention resulting from the
exercise of one of these rights. It must also guarantee due process and humane
treatment to those in detention.
During the past year, the
Iranian government has intensified its persecution of women’s rights advocates,
especially those involved in the One Million Signatures Campaign. On March 4,
four days before International Women’s Day, authorities arbitrarily arrested 34
women involved in the campaign, two of whom spent more than two weeks in
solitary confinement (http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/03/07/iran15452.htm). Keshavarz and Hosseinzadeh were among
those detained.
While all the women were
eventually freed on bail, prosecutions against them are proceeding. On April 4,
authorities summoned three of those detained on March 4 – Parastoo Dokoohaki,
Sara Loghayee, and Saghi Loghayee – to appear in court on Sunday, April 8 to
answer charges of “disturbing national security and the general order by
gathering illegally.”
“The Iranian government
should release Keshavarz and Hosseinzadeh immediately and stop persecuting those
who work peacefully for women’s rights,” said Al-Qadi.
To view photos and
short bios of some of the women detained on March 4, please
visit:
http://www.hrw.org/photos/2007/iran03/index.html
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