Authorities Should
Release 19 Detained Students and Activists at Once
(Washington, DC, July 27,
2007) – The Iranian government should immediately release 19 students and
activists arrested in May and June on apparently politically motivated charges,
Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights
Watch expressed concern that the authorities have been subjecting them to abuse
to coerce confessions.
On July 24, the families of
detained students Majid Tavakoli, Ahmad Ghasaban, and Ehsan Mansouri sent an
open letter to Ayatollah Shahrudi, head of the Judiciary, about the physical and
psychological abuse of their sons in section 209 of Tehran’s Evin prison, a
security section of the prison where Human Rights Watch has documented many
cases of prisoner abuse, including torture to coerce
confessions.
Following two visits with
their sons, the families alleged that authorities have subjected them to 24-hour
interrogation sessions, sleep deprivation, and threats of harming the prisoners
and their families. The families also said that the detainees had been confined
in cells with dangerous convicted prisoners, beaten with cables and fists, and
forced to remain standing for long periods of time.
“Reports that Iranian
authorities have beaten and threatened these students to obtain confessions are
all too consistent with accounts we have collected in the past,” said Joe Stork,
deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch. “The
government should release these 19 students and activists
immediately.”
The three students were
among eight whom agents of the Ministry of Intelligence arrested in May on
charges of “insulting state leaders,” “inciting public opinion,” and “printing
inflammatory and derogatory materials” in student publications. The students
consistently maintained that the publications were forged and that they had no
role in producing them. On July 18, five of the students were released on bail.
Six additional students were
arrested on July 9 during a peaceful demonstration to protest the detentions
outside the main gate of Amir Kabir University. They were holding a sit-in at
the university to commemorate the anniversary of extensive student protests in
July 1999 that the government violently suppressed. According to reports from
activists, police and plainclothes security agents beat and arrested the six
students and transferred them to Evin section 209.
Later that day, at 11:30
a.m, plainclothes officers arrived at the Office of the Alumni Association of
Iran. They fired in the air before forcefully entering the premises and
arresting 10 students and activists. The police then closed down the offices.
The Office of the Alumni
Association of Iran is legally registered in accordance with amendment 10 of the
Law of Political Parties. According to Iranian law, written notices and court
appearances are required for shutting down legally registered
organizations.
On July 10, Alireza
Jamshidi, the official spokesperson for the Iranian Judiciary, confirmed these
arrests. He denied that any of the detainees were students and said that the
charges against them related to “security issues,” including “gathering
illegally” and “colluding to act illegally.”
Since the July 9 arrests,
security officials stormed the homes of seven of the detainees and confiscated
their personal belongings.
On July 18, security agents
ransacked the home of Abdollah Momeni, bringing him along from prison in
handcuffs. According to activists who met with Momeni’s family following the
search, Momeni’s face and body showed visible signs of beatings, and he appeared
to have lost a considerable amount of weight during his nine days in custody.
Security agents reportedly conducted the other home searches in a similar
fashion.
According to sources in Iran
who have been in touch with Momeni’s family, security agents have been
attempting to force him to confess to acts he has not committed, such as being
connected to forces outside the country who are attempting to implement a “soft
revolution.”
International human rights
law protects detainees from mistreatment, including forced “confessions.” The
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a party,
protects the right of every person “[n]ot to be compelled to testify against
himself or to confess guilt.”
Human Rights Watch is also
concerned about the well-being of 19-year-old Amir Yaghoub Ali, a student
supporter of the One Million Signatures Campaign, which aims to eliminate
discriminatory laws against women.
On the evening of July 11,
Yaghoub Ali was collecting signatures at Tehran’s Andishe Park on Shariati
Street. Park security officers, after detaining him in the park’s security
headquarters, transferred him to the 104th police station in Niloufar Square,
where he spent the night. The next morning, authorities transferred him to the
Revolutionary Court on Moallem Street, where Judge Sobhani ordered that he
continue to be held pending completion of investigations into his case. His
mother and sister were not able to obtain information about their son either at
the police station or the courthouse on July 11. Upon their return to the court
on July 12, Judge Sobhani informed them that he had ordered Yaghoub Ali’s
transfer to Evin section 209.
Activists in Iran told Human
Rights Watch that authorities are particularly vindictive toward male supporters
of campaigns for women’s rights. A witness to the peaceful women’s protest of
March 8, 2006 in Tehran’s Daneshjoo Park told Human Rights Watch that when
security and police forces attacked the gathering with batons in order to
disperse the crowds, they severely beat the men who were
present.
The names of the students
arrested on July 9 in front of the main gate of Amir Kabir University
are:
1. Bahareh
Hedayat
2. Mohammad
Hashemi
3. Ali
Niko-Nesbati
4. Mehdi
Arabshahi
5. Hanif
Yazdani
6. Ali
Veghfi
The names of the students
and activists arrested on July 9 at the Office of the Alumni Association
are:
1. Abdollah
Momeni
2. Bahram
Fayazi
3. Morteza
Eslahchi
4. Mojtaba
Bayat
5. Habib
Haji-Heidari
6. Massoud
Habibi
7. Saieed
Hosseinia
8. Arash
Khandel
9. Ashkan
Gheysvandi
10. Ezatollah
Ghalandari
11. Mohammad Hossein
Mehrzad
Activists who have been in
contact with the detainees’ families have confirmed to Human Rights Watch that
at least eight persons detained on July 9 are being held in solitary
confinement. They are:
1. Bahareh
Hedayat
2. Mojtaba
Bayat
3. Abdollah
Momeni
4. Ali
Niko-Nesbati
5. Hanif
Yazdani
6. Ali
Veghfi
7. Mehdi
Arabshahi
8. Mohammad
Hashemi
Read Human Rights Watch’s June 22 news release on
the detained students.
... Payvand News - 7/28/07 ...