Source: Amnesty International
Amnesty International is calling on the Iranian authorities to allow peaceful
demonstrations, including by those opposed to the current government, on 11
February, the 31stanniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Iran.
Various officials from the police and the judiciary have warned in recent days
that anti-government demonstrations will be not be tolerated.

Iran's Green
Opposition Movement is gearing up for another show of force
on February 11, the anniversary of the Islamic Revolution
Amnesty International fears that the comments made by officials, and the wave of
arrests, unfair trials and executions illustrated below presage renewed violence
on the part of the state, should people heed the calls made by unsuccessful
presidential candidates Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi to take to the
streets to peacefully voice their opinions.
Amnesty International fully recognizes the Iranian authorities' duty and
responsibility to safeguard the public and maintain order but this does not
justify the suppression of peaceful protests, as has happened repeatedly over
recent months, nor violence by state forces against peaceful demonstrators. All
policing must be conducted in accordance with internationally recognized
standards relating to policing and the use of force, and should be conducted by
appropriately-trained law enforcement personnel - not the politically-partisan
volunteer Basij militia, which has a record of committing serious human rights
violations and is neither trained nor equipped for proper police work. No one
should be subjected to assault and strong-arm treatment by the security forces
and any persons accused of violent acts, such as stone-throwing or criminal
damage, should be charged and tried fairly in full conformity with Iran's
obligations under international law.
Mass
demonstrations against the government are expected to go ahead on 11 February
despite recent "show trials" of people accused of links to various opposition
groups and orchestrating protests which have resulted in the imposition of long
prison sentences and two executions. Those targeted have included alleged
members of: a monarchist group, the Anjoman-e Padshahi Iran (API - Kingdom
Assembly of Iran); the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI); a
"Communist grouplet"; and members of the Baha'i faith.
Amnesty International is concerned that the Iranian authorities appear to be
coercing detainees to falsely "confess" to links with particular political
groups or organizations alleged to be fomenting the demonstrations in order to
scapegoat them for the continuing protests against the government and ongoing
human rights violations. The targeting of these groups and the severity of the
government's actions appear to be intended, at least in part, to deter further
protests, including those planned for 11 February.
The
two men who were executed in January - Arash Rahmanipour and Mohammad Reza
Ali-Zamani - were arrested before last June's disputed presidential election. At
their trials, in which they were represented by court appointed lawyers and to
which their own lawyers were denied access, they made coerced "confessions" and
were convicted of having links to the API and attempting to make explosives.
Arash Rahmanipour was allowed one 15-minute meeting with his lawyer after his
trial. He said he had been forced to "confess" to the allegations presented by
his interrogators, who had brought his pregnant sister before him and threatened
that she would be harmed if he refused to do so.
These
trials and executions have been used by Iranian authorities to support their
contention that the mass popular protests of recent months have not been an
expression of popular discontent about the disputed outcome of the presidential
election and the authorities' brutal repression of protests but, rather, were
fomented by foreign powers and exiled opposition groups intent on achieving
regime change in Iran.
Background and recent cases documented by Amnesty International
Demonstrations against the government since the disputed presidential election
of June 2009 have been met with harsh repression. The authorities have
acknowledged over 40 deaths; Amnesty International believes the true number is
at least 80, and possible many more. Thousands have been arrested, many tortured
or otherwise ill-treated and scores have been charged with vaguely-worded
offences relating to national security, and convicted after "show trials" which
have made a mockery of justice. More than 100 are believed to have been
sentenced to prison terms, flogging or to be executed. At least nine people are
believed to be at risk of execution. Several others among a group of 16
defendants whose "show trial" is currently underway and who face the charge of
moharebeh(enmity against God), which can carry the death penalty, may
also be at risk. Amnesty International, which opposes the death penalty in all
cases, is urging the Iranian authorities to commute all death sentences.
The
most recent mass protests took place at the time of the Tasoa and Ashoura
religious festivals on 26 and 27 December 2009, when more than a thousand people
were detained. Since then more than 200 others are said to have been arrested at
their homes or workplaces and detained. Those held include: Mahin Fahimi,
Ardavan Tarakameh and three others, detained at the former's home early on 28
December, and Omid Montazeri, Mahin Fahimi's son, who was arrested the next day.
Mahin
Fahimi is a historian and a member of the group Mothers for Peace, which
campaigns against possible military intervention in Iran over its nuclear
programme, seeks "viable solutions" to the region's instability and campaigns
against the arrest, detention and harassment of ordinary Iranians. She is also
the aunt of Sohrab Arabi, one of the victims of the excessive use of force
during the summer demonstrations (see http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/arrests-deaths-continue-iran-authorities-tighten-grip-20090722).
Her husband, Hamid Montazeri, was executed for political reasons during the
infamous"prison massacre" of 1988, when thousands of political prisoners were
executed.
Zohreh
Tonekaboni, aged 62, a friend of Mahin Fahimi and co-member of Mothers for
Peace, has been detained since 28 December 2009. A former prisoner of conscience
for whom Amnesty International campaigned when she was imprisoned in the 1980s
(see Iran: Women Prisoners of Conscience AI Index MDE 13/05/90, May 1990), she
is also the widow of a prisoner killed during the 1988 "prison massacre".
On 27
January 2010, a Deputy Minister of Intelligence alleged that about 30 people
detained in connection with the Ashoura demonstrations have links to left-wing
groups, naming the People's Fedaiyan Organization of Iran, both its Majority and
Minority factions, or have neo-communist sympathies, in relation to which he
named Mothers for Peace. The families of Zohreh Tonekaboni and Mahin Fahimi both
strongly deny that they currently have any such links or that Mothers for Peace
has any political affiliations.
Since
his arrest, Omid Montazeri, a 24-year-old law student and journalist, has been
shown in televised excerpts of a "show trial" of 16 people accused of fomenting
the Ashoura demonstrations. He was shown "confessing" to the charges against
him, which include "gathering and conspiring to commit crimes against national
security" and "propaganda against the system by participating in protests on
Ashoura and giving interviews to foreign media". Another student, 20-year-old
Mohammad Amin Valian appeared in the same trial, accused of moharebeh for
participating in the demonstrations and throwing stones. Arrested on 12 January
2009, his family has received no information as to his whereabouts other than
that he is being held in a "special location" - possibly a detention centre run
by the Revolutionary Guards. He has not been allowed any family visits nor has
he been allowed access to a lawyer of his choice despite the serious charges
brought against him.
Omid
Montazeri said during his trials that he had written for the on-line cultural
magazine Sarpich. Only six issues of Sarpich ever appeared, the
last in May 2009, but other contributors included Ardavan Tarakmeh, detained
since 27 December 2009, and students Yashar Darolshafa and Maziar Samiee, who
were arrested during the night of 3-4 February. Yashar Darolshafa's mother and
brother were also arrested as was Ardavan Tarakmeh's 25-year-old sister Bahar,
but they were released two days later. Yashar Darolshafa's two cousins,
Banafsheh Darolshafayi, a music instructor, and her sister Jamileh, a
script-writer and journalist, are both believed to be detained since their
arrest on 5 February.
At
least 10 members of the Baha'i faith have also been arrested since the Ashoura
demonstrations, of whom at least one - identified by the initials P.F - was
among the 16 included in the "show trial" which began in January. The Baha'i
International Community has strenuously denied any connection with the
demonstrations. Others among the 16 defendants on trial in Tehran include
individuals who the authorities allege are linked to the PMOI, which is banned
in Iran.
Others
detained since Ashoura include Mehraneh Atashi, an internationally-renowned
photographer and her husband Majid Ghaffari. They were arrested from home on 12
January and are believed to be held in solitary confinement in Section 209 of
Evin Prison, without access to family visits or lawyers of their choice. The
precise reason for their arrest remains unclear.
Ali
Reza Firouzi and Sorna Hashemi, both students expelled from Zanjan University
for their role in exposing the sexual abuse of a female student in 2008, are
also believed to have been detained after leaving Tehran on 2 January 2010 to
visit Tabriz in north-western Iran, though this has not been acknowledged by the
authorities. They appear to be victims of enforced disappearances. Their
families have been unable to obtain information about them but believe they have
been arrested as their internet accounts have been used by others, possibly
Ministry of Intelligence officials. According to the website Reporters and Human
Rights Activists in Iran, detainees recently released from Evin Prison who were
shown a photograph of Sorna Hashemi say he was held there until late January but
then moved to some other place.
Family
members of perceived opponents of the government have also been detained,
including the relatives of Ardavan Tarakmeh and Yashar Darolshafa mentioned
above, and Noushin Ebadi, the sister of Nobel Peace prize Laureate Shirin Ebadi.
Noushin Ebadi was detained from 28 December for almost three weeks, apparently
to put pressure on Shirin Ebadi, who is currently abroad, to cease speaking out
about human rights violations in Iran.
Relatives of prominent political figures who are reported to be still detained
include Leila Tavassoli, who was arrested on 28 December. Her father, Mohammed
Tavassoli, who is also being detained, is active in the Freedom Movement, and
her uncle, Ebrahim Yazdi, is the leader of the Freedom Movement. He too has been
held since 28 December. Leila Tavassoli's sister, Sara, has been detained since
3 January and her husband, Mohammad (Farid) Taheri, is also being held.
Amnesty International is calling for the immediate and unconditional release of
all prisoners of conscience - those held for the peaceful exercise of their
rights to freedom of expression, assembly and association, or on account of
their family relationships to perceived opposition figures. Others detained
should be released if not to be charged with recognizably criminal offences and
brought to trial promptly and fairly, without recourse to the death penalty.
Anyone detained should be protected from torture or other ill-treatment and, if
charged, should be tried in full conformity with international fair trial
standards or released. Defendants should not be forced to incriminate
themselves.
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