Source:
International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran
(1 September 2010) Authorities in the Islamic Republic of Iran
are continuing to arrest and jail civil society activists while persecuting and
prosecuting independent lawyers, the International
Campaign for Human Rights in Iran reported today.

Human
rights lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh
"With a majority of Iranian human rights activists and lawyers
already imprisoned or forced into exile, their remaining colleagues are
systematically being taken down by the government of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad," Aaron
Rhodes, a Campaign spokesperson
said.
Shirin Ebadi, the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, told the Campaign,
"The Judiciary's lack of independence is resulting in persecution of lawyers. If
we look at the Judiciary's approach during the past year, we see that lawyers
defending political prisoners have all been targeted," said Ebadi.
Ebadi noted that prominent lawyers Mohammad Ali Dadkhah and
Abdolfattah Soltani have both been imprisoned during the past year and released
on large bails, Mohammad Seifzadeh is awaiting his trial, Mohammad Oliaeifar is
serving a one year prison sentence, and Shadi Sadr and Mohammad Mostafaie have
been forced into exile.
Two members of the One
Million Signatures Campaign advocating
for gender equality, Fatemeh Masjedi and Maryam Bidgoli, have been sentenced to
one year in prison. On 22 August, security forces arbitrarily detained human
rights activists Hassan Asadi Zeidabadi and Ali Jamali. Prominent human rights
lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh, has been summoned and her assets frozen.
In an interview with the Campaign,
Sotoudeh said that a new method of persecuting human rights lawyers by the
authorities is to make unfounded financial allegations on tax grounds.
"I was referred to the taxation bureau and while there I noticed
in addition to my name, they are conducting special investigations into thirty
human rights lawyers," Sotoudeh told the Campaign.
She noted that while human rights lawyers take on cases on pro-bono bases,
authorities are using bogus tax charges to prosecute them.
Sotoudeh said she believes these developments are aimed at
putting an end to any legal defense by the human rights community. "The only
institution capable of defending lawyers is the Bar Association, but the
authorities are putting it under tremendous pressure and attempting to
incorporate it into the Judiciary and take away its independence," she said.
With the arrests of Ali Jamali and Hassan Asadi Zeidabadi, almost
all members of the Central Council of ADVAR, a student alumni organization
devoted to human rights and social enhancement, have been arbitrarily
imprisoned. ADVAR is a group of young Iranian citizens committed to improving
the welfare of the people of Iran, and committed to peaceful methods and
nonviolence to promote and protect Iranian citizens' human rights. The Campaign is
aware of no evidence that justifies prosecuting members of this group, and
indeed, no such evidence has been presented in trials in which its members have
been convicted and sentenced. The arrests and prosecution of ADVAR members have
thus been politically motivated and at variance with Iranian and international
law.
The Change for
Equality website reported that
two women's rights activists and members of the One
Million Signatures Campaign, Maryam Bidgoli and Fatemeh Masjedi, were
sentenced to prison terms of one year following their conviction on charges of
"spreading propaganda against the state, through the collection of signatures
for changing discriminatory laws and publication of materials in support of a
feminist group (Campaign) which works in opposition to the Regime." Both women
denied the charges in their trial in the Second Branch of the Revolutionary
Courts in Qom, explaining that the activities of the One
Million Signatures Campaign are
not in violation of any Iranian laws. Mina Jafari and Mahnaz Parakand, lawyers
representing the women's human rights defenders, plan to appeal the verdict.
The Campaign expressed
its serious concern over the abuse of judicial powers by Iranian authorities to
target members of the human rights community and civil society activists.
... Payvand News - 09/02/10 ... --