NEW YORK, 28 July 2008 (BWNS)
-- Acts of arson targeting homes and vehicles are the latest violent tactics
directed against the Baha'is of Iran.
"In the early hours of the morning of 18 July, the
house of the Shaaker family in Kerman went up in flames, only weeks after their
car had been torched and in the wake of a series of threatening phone calls,"
said Bani Dugal, principal representative of the Baha'i International Community
to the United Nations.
"As would be expected in the light of the
mistreatment Baha'is in Iran are routinely receiving, the officials who
investigated the fire either ignored or dismissed obvious signs of suspicious
activity, including a muffled explosion, simply saying that it was the result of
an electrical problem," she said.
At least a dozen cases of arson that target Baha'is
have been reported in Iran in the last 15 months, Ms. Dugal said. She gave the
following examples:
-- On 15 July at 1:15 a.m., Molotov cocktails were
thrown into the front courtyard of the home of Khusraw Dehghani and his wife,
Dr. Huma Agahi, in Vilashahr, only months after anonymous threats directly
related to her being a Baha'i forced Dr. Agahi to close her clinic in nearby
Najafabad where she had practiced medicine for 28 years.
-- On 25 July, the car of a prominent Baha'i in
Rafsanjan, in Kerman province, was torched and destroyed by arsonists on
motorbikes. Soheil Naeimi, the owner of the car, and 10 other Baha'i families in
the town had received threatening letters from a group calling itself the
Anti-Baha'ism Movement of the Youth of Rafsanjan that, among other things,
threatened jihad (holy war) against the Baha'is.
-- On 10 June, an outbuilding on the property of the
Mr. and Mrs. Mousavi, elderly Baha'is living in the village of Tangriz in Fars
province, was destroyed by fire when it was doused with gasoline. The Mousavis,
along with their two sons who were sleeping close to the building, narrowly
escaped injury when the gasoline tank used to start the fire exploded. The
Mousavis believe that the perpetrator thought they were all sleeping in the hut
when he set the fire. Mr. Mousavi issued a formal complaint against the person
they suspected, but the legal office has declined to pursue the case because the
suspect swore on the Qur'an that he was not guilty. Out of respect for the
Qur'an, the Mousavis have dropped the charges.
-- On 4 April, the home of a Baha'i was set on fire
in Babolsar, in the north of Iran.
-- In February in Shiraz, a 53-year-old businessman
was attacked on the street, chained to a tree, doused with gasoline, and
assaulted by unknown persons who then attempted to throw lighted matches at him.
-- Also in Shiraz in February, several arson
attempts were made against vehicles and a home belonging to Baha'is.
-- On 1 May 2007, arson destroyed the home of 'Abdu'l-Baqi
Rouhani in the village of Ivil, in Mazandaran.
-- In Karaj, the burial section of a Baha'i cemetery
was set on fire.
"These latest attacks follow the authorities'
attempts to deprive the Iranian Baha'i community of its leadership," Ms. Dugal
said, referring to the arrests in March and May this year of the seven members
of Iran's national Baha'i coordinating group, all of whom are still locked up in
Evin Prison in Tehran without any charges and without access to an attorney or
to their families.
"As Baha'is worldwide watch with alarm this
escalation in violence," she added, "their fears that a sinister plan of
persecution is unfolding become increasingly confirmed. Their only hope is that
enough voices of protests are raised around the world to compel the government
in Iran to put an end to this violence."
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