By David Gollust, US State
Department
The U.S. State Department Wednesday called on the Iranian
government to cease what it said is the systematic repression of political
dissidents and activists from ethnic and religious minorities. The comments came
in response to reports of mistreatment of a jailed Azeri-Iranian prisoner, Abbas
Lisani. VOA's Davd Gollust reports from the State
Department.
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| Abbas Lisani (undated
photo) |
The Bush
administration has joined human rights groups in taking up the Lisani case,
which it says is indicative of a broader pattern of repression by the Iranian
government.
Amnesty International says Lisani, a long-time
activist for Iran's Azeri minority, is on a hunger strike in an Iranian prison
to protest the refusal of authorities to grant him medical leave, and their
harassment of his family for publicizing the case.
Lisani's latest jail term began in October after he
was convicted and sentenced to 18 months in prison, and 50 lashes, for allegedly
spreading anti-government propaganda
The charge stemmed from a demonstration by ethnic
Azeris in the northwestern Iranian city of Ardabil in May of 2006 after a
government newspaper published a cartoon seen as offensive to the
group.
Amnesty said Lisani has numerous health problems,
some that may be torture-related, and is being held in solitary confinement in
an unheated prison cell where temperatures can fall to minus 10 degrees Celsius
at night.
At a news briefing, State Department Spokesman Sean
McCormack said Iran has banned the Azeri language in schools, harassed Azeri
activists and unjustly jailed activists like Lisani for advocating cultural and
linguistic rights.
He said the United States calls on Iran's government
to cease what he termed the systematic repression of citizens, to respect their
human rights, and to release those, including Lisani, who are jailed for
insisting on universal rights of speech, press, assembly, worship and fair labor
standards.
"We are deeply concerned by the [Iranian] regime's
continuing repression of Iran's minority ethnic and religious groups including
Azeris, Kurds, Bahai, ethnic Arabs and others," McCormack said. "The regime's
repression effects religious minorities, students, women, labor unions,
journalists and academics. We are working with the international community
through the United Nations, foreign governments and international
non-governmental organizations to focus attention on the Iranian regime's
continued abuse of its own citizens, and to press for improvements in its dismal
human rights record."
The comments came amid high tensions between the
United States and Iran over alleged Iranian support for militias fighting U.S.
troops in Iraq and its defiance of the December U.N. Security Council resolution
demanding an end to Iranian uranium-enrichment activity.
But spokesman McCormack depicted it as a
confrontation not between Tehran and Washington but between Iran and the broader
world community.
He said Iran could erase all the problems by simply
not engaging in the kind of behavior that has made it what he termed an outlier
in international affairs, and by accepting what he said is a very attractive
offer by world powers on the nuclear issue.
In June of last year, the United States, Britain,
France Germany and Russia offered Iran a broad range of political and commercial
incentives in exchange for subjecting its nuclear program to greater
international scrutiny.
The December 23 U.N. resolution imposing sanctions on
Tehran came after it defied a Security Council call for a suspension of
enrichment-related activity widely seen as weapons-related. Iran insists its
nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only.
McCormack stressed the United States' readiness to
break a 27-year diplomatic freeze and engage Iran directly in negotiations, if
it met the U.N. nuclear terms.
The full text of the Amnesty
International statement is available on the organization's Web site.
The Iran sections of the State Department's annual
reports on human rights and religious
freedom are available on the department's Web
site.