Source:
Human Rights Watch
Recited Confessions,
Broad Accusations but No Specific Charges
(New York, August 4, 2009) - Iran's decision to stage a "trial" of more than 100
critics of the recent presidential election, complete with broadcast
"confessions" of several reformist leaders, underscores the arbitrary nature of
their detention, Human Rights Watch said today. The trial began on August 1,
2009, with no notice to the defendants' families or lawyers, and is scheduled to
resume on August 6, the day after the inauguration of President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad for his second term.

At the August 1 hearing,
Abdolreza Mohabbati, a deputy prosecutor for the general and revolutionary
courts in Tehran, read a long indictment accusing the defendants of attempting a
"velvet coup," but not charging any of them with specific violations of Iranian
law. The indictment, the full text of which has not been released by the
authorities, named a number of prominent government critics, such as Nobel
laureate Shirin Ebadi, who up to now have not been detained.
"The prosecutor's so-called indictment shows that that these accusations are
political, through-and-through," said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at
Human Rights Watch. "Since it's crystal clear that the authorities can't find a
recognizable criminal offense to charge these people with, they should release
them all immediately and unconditionally."
Most of those on trial were ordinary protesters, but at least seven reformist
leaders were among them. Two of them - Seyyed Mohammad Abtahi, a former
vice-president; and Mohammad Atrianfar, a journalist and former interior
ministry official - recited statements in which they "confessed" that they had
decided before the presidential election that they would mount a protest
campaign, and that there was no basis for charging that President Ahmadinejad's
reelection was fraudulent.
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Seyyed Mohammad Abtahi |
Fahimeh Mousavinejad,
Abtahi's wife, told Human Rights Watch that she learned about the trial when
state-controlled media reported it. She said that she had been able to visit her
husband only once, on July 30. "We sat together in a room where a video camera
filmed us and if we deviated slightly from personal affairs, we were
reprimanded," she said. Abtahi "was weak and unhealthy, his body was shaking. He
had lost more than 36 pounds. I was surprised to see him taken into court in
that condition."
In an interview on the state television news program "20:30," broadcast on
August 2, a government journalist asked Atrianfar why he had radically changed
his views about the election. Atrianfar replied: "It is only God who can change
one's heart. When one is put in a situation in which one might not be alive the
next day, then one can experience an evolution."
Maziar Bahari, a reporter for Newsweek magazine whose "confession" had
been broadcast on June 30, was also among the defendants but did not speak on
Saturday.
Other alleged confessions cited in the indictment included those of Mostafa
Tajzadeh, a former Interior Ministry deputy; Abdullah Ramazanzadeh, former
government spokesman under President Mohammad Khatami; and Behzad Nabavi and
Mohsen Safayee Farahani, former members of parliament. The indictment devoted an
entire paragraph to Kian Tajbakhsh, an Iranian-American scholar who had
previously been forced to give a televised confession while he was detained from
May to September 2007. He was released on bail in September 2007, and was
rearrested on July 9, 2009.
"It is clear that Iran's rulers are using this farce of a trial not just to
punish those in custody, but also to intimidate anyone who speaks out against
injustice," Stork said. "There is nothing quite like a show trial and televised
confessions to demonstrate the authoritarian tendencies of those running the
government."
Saeed Mortazavi, the chief Tehran prosecutor, warned on August 2 that anyone
criticizing the legitimacy of the trial would also be liable to prosecution.
A lawyer for one of the defendants said that none of the lawyers had seen in
advance the indictment read in court by the deputy prosecutor. Only
state-controlled media had access to the August 1 hearing. Family members of
defendants told Human Rights Watch that they learned of the trial only from
state broadcasts. "When I first heard about it on Fars News, I quickly got
myself to the courtroom," the wife of one defendant told Human Rights Watch. "I
entered the Revolutionary Court building, but all access to the courtroom was
blocked."
Wives of three defendants whose names are mentioned in the indictment told Human
Rights Watch that security authorities contacted them to say that if they deny
what their spouses say in court, their husbands will be subjected to even
greater hardships and will be brought before television cameras to refute their
wives' statements.
Citing what it said was the confession of an unnamed "spy," the indictment
describes the "velvet coup" as comprising six components - the women's rights
movement, ethnic groups, human rights groups, the labor movement,
nongovernmental organizations, and students. Among the leaders of the women's
movement, it names Shadi Sadr, a human rights lawyer who was
arrested on July 15 and subsequently released, and Ebadi. The indictment
also names Ebadi as a leader of the human rights movement. In this section the
indictment lists numerous alleged foreign supporters, including Human Rights
Watch.
Human Rights Watch expressed concern that the next session of the trial would
feature additional staged confessions. On August 3, the pro-government Fars News
Agency reported that the confessions of seven leading reformists had been
delivered to the state television for broadcast. Zeinab Hajjarian, the daughter
of Saeed Hajjarian, a prominent reformist imprisoned since June 15, told Human
Rights Watch that the authorities had contacted her family to say that her
father would be featured at the Thursday session.
For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Iran, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/en/middle-eastn-africa/iran
Related Stories:
American detainee's family vehemently deny charges lodged by Ahmadinejad regime
|

Kian Tajbakhsh at "a press conference" on August 1st |
Kian Tajbakhsh, an American
citizen, is being charged in an Iranian show trial as an American agent who
helped orchestrate the post-election protests. He was arrested in Tehran at
9pm on July 9 in front of his wife and small daughter and has since been
held in an undisclosed location without access to a lawyer, family or
friends.
Waiting for Maziar
Caught in Iran's political maelstrom, forced
to "confess" at the show trial in Tehran, will Newsweek's Maziar Bahari be free
in time to see the birth of his first child?
|

Maziar Bahari at a "press conference" on August 1st along with another
detainee Kian Tajbakhsh |
Paola Gourley, 40, does not want to know whether
the baby she's carrying will be a boy or a girl. At least, not yet. The father,
Maziar Bahari, 42, is in prison in Iran, where he has been held without access
to a lawyer or any chance to see his family since June 21.
... Payvand News - 08/05/09 ... --