Home Blog Page 432

Lawyer Threatened, Interrogated, Denied Permission to Leave Iran

0

Massoud Shafiee, the lawyer who represented the three Americans who were released after more than a year in an Iranian prison, said in an exclusive interview with the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that since his clients left Iran he has been repeatedly interrogated and has faced new limitations for taking on political cases. He also alleged that intelligence organizations are listening to all his conversations, “even what is happening in [his] bedroom.”

Shortly after his clients’ departure from Iran, Shafiee planned to take a trip abroad to visit his children. After receiving the exit stamp in his passport, plainclothes Intelligence Ministry forces kept him from taking his flight, took him out of the airport, and confiscated his passport. He recounted his subsequent interrogation, which included threats against his freedom, to the Campaign.

Shafiee has represented several highly visible political prisoners in Iran, including brothers Kamiar and Arash Alaei; Kian Tajbakhsh; the three American hikers Sarah Shourd, Shane Bauer, and Josh Fattal; and several union activists such as Reza Shahabi and Rasould Badaghi.

During his interrogation sessions, Shafiee told the Campaign, he observed Intelligence Ministry forces adding external, unrelated issues to his case in an attempt to soil his reputation and complicate his case.

He has not filed a grievance about the tapping of his phone, but that he has informed the Intelligence Ministry and the Prosecutor’s Office. “They tell me what my email and Facebook passwords are, to show that they know everything,” he told the Campaign. Shafiee said that when the Intelligence forces went to his home, they told his son, “Your father released the Americans, now he has to go there [prison] himself.”

Asked about whether he has received any support from the Iranian Bar Association, Shafiee said, “The Bar Association claims to be independent. Is it there to renew memberships once a year, or to hold its annual celebration of its independence? The Bar Association has let go of us like orphan children on the street, where everyone abuses us and there is no one to respond. What are the responsibilities of the Bar Association? I have submitted photocopies of all my correspondence with the Prosecutor’s Office to the Bar Association.”

“There is no reason why all political-security cases are reviewed by only two or three judges,” he added. “There is no shortage of judges. More than 90% of our judges are healthy, good, and independent judges. Why don’t these judges interfere?”

Shafiee told the Campaign that he remains unable to travel abroad. “My passport has an exit stamp on it and anything could happen to me. I asked them to inform me of my charges. At least the lives of my imprisoned colleagues are safe now, because an establishment such as the Prisons Organization is responsible for their lives. But I don’t even see that in my own case. When I brought up these concerns, they summoned me and there was a long interrogation. Right now, I am deprived of my most basic rights such as visiting with my family. My sister died abroad and I was unable to attend her funeral. I can’t see my children who live outside of Iran, and they have created personal and professional problems for me,” he said.

Expanding on the professional problems these events have caused for him, Shafiee told the Campaign that his colleagues are afraid of coming to his offices because they have been intimidated by the related organizations. He added that continuing his work is practically impossible with the impediments caused for him by the Judiciary. “With what authorization does Judge Salavati of Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court summon suspects or families of suspects whose defense I have represented in the past, telling them I cannot continue to represent their cases?”

Shafiee described the initial search and detention: “A few days after my three American clients left Iran, seven or eight individuals from the Intelligence Ministry came to our home and took my personal and professional documents. I asked them to show me a search warrant, which they did. In the warrant it was written that after searching my home, they were to take me with them to Evin Prison. After that they came to my offices and took my computers and the files for the political-security cases I represented. We set off for Evin. Near Evin, one of them said that instead of going to prison we should return to my home. They returned my documents to me that same day. I told them that I was planning a trip in a couple of days, because my sister had passed away and I had to go see my kids abroad. I told them to tell me if I was banned from foreign travel. They said no and they even returned my passport to me.”

“On Sunday, October 2, 2011, I was going to take a flight on Turkish Airlines to go to Chicago. After I received the exit stamp on my passport, indicating that I had left the country, several plainclothes forces from the Intelligence Ministry came toward me, took my passport and gave me a receipt to go to an office affiliated with the President’s Office to follow up [about my passport]…. When I contacted that office they told me that I had a case there and they couldn’t give me my passport, and that I had to go to the courts,” he continued. “Ten months have gone by and I have gone to the Prosecutor’s Office and even to the Prosecutor himself. I have submitted several bills and letters to the Prosecutor, but, unfortunately, none of them have been answered. In my numerous visits to Branch 6 of Evin Prison Court, I was only able to enter once. They told me that time that I had to contact the Intelligence Ministry. Despite knowing that Intelligence forces cannot make any judicial decisions and can only enforce them, I did contact them by phone anyway, but I didn’t receive any good answers,” Shafiee said.

Shafiee told the Campaign that judicial authorities told the family of Iranian-American prisoner Amir Hekmati that they could not choose him as their lawyer. “Mr. Hekmati’s sister told me that the case judge said I cannot accept any cases. What authorization does he have to do such a thing? The representative from the Prosecutor’s Office asks me why I represent Rassoul Badaghi or Reza Shahabi pro bono? Well, what should I say? I say, how can I charge these financially strapped families? They want to insinuate that I must get paid from somewhere. They tell me that so-and-so who calls me is from the Mujahedin [MEK] Organization media. I am a lawyer. I have to provide general information and news about my clients. Of course, nobody tells me officially not to work, but this is what is actually happening,” he said.

Expanding on his history of representing political defendents, Shafiee told the Campaign, “I represented the case of the Alaei brothers [Arash and Kamiar], and I was able to prove in this case that the US is not ‘an enemy state.’ They are active in service to the country in the field of AIDS research, whether inside Iran or abroad. Or in the case of Kian Tajbakhsh, where at appeals stage they repealed his sentence of 15 years in prison. Or in the case of our Baha’i fellow countrymen. Or in the last case of the three American citizens accused of espionage and illegal entry into Iran. I had read these cases and could not see any reason for such charges. If they were spies, why did they leave? I had a justified defense in the case of the three Americans. Or, if the Alaei brothers, as stipulated in their charges, were cooperating with an enemy state, why did you allow them to leave? I have practically defended what was the truth, and unfortunately, I am paying a price for it. Should I have called the three Americans ‘spies’ in my interviews to be free from these issues?”

Shafiee recalled some of the threats his interrogators made to him. “The interrogator says, ‘Ms. Sotoudeh or Mr. Seifzadeh sat in the same seat you are in right now.’ Or another one of them says, ‘What did they do after all?’ If I did what my colleagues like Nasrin Sotoudeh or Abdolfattah Soltani or Mohammad Seifzadeh did, then I should go to prison like them. And if they did the same things as I did, then why are they in prison? All these individuals have worked so sincerely and now they are in prison. It appears that taking on political cases is an issue and if we are not allowed to take on political or security cases, they should pass a law that we would know about and to refrain from doing it. But presently, what we do is legal. I told the Prosecutor that I defend my clients within the framework of the law and Sharia,” Shafiee added.

This ordeal has left Shafiee with more questions than answers. “My question is, why did my passport have to be confiscated? Why wouldn’t they tell me the reason for it? Why isn’t anyone accountable? Why aren’t the Intelligence Ministry or the Prosecutor’s Office accountable? What authorization does the judge have not to allow cases to come my way? Or in a case where a client has been referred to me, to make the suspect and his family to dismiss me as their lawyer? This violates both my rights and the rights of my client who wishes me to represent his case,” Massoud Shafiee concluded.

Source: Iran Human Rights

Baha’i citizens arrested in Iran

Iranian human rights activists report that Baha’is are being arrested in several Iranian cities.

The Society Against Education Discrimination reported on Wednesday that more than 10 Baha’i citizens were arrested in the past day in Esfahan, Shahin Shahr, Villa Shahr and Yazd.

The group also reports that a number of Baha’is have been arrested in Arak.

The Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA) confirmed that Esfahan Baha’i citizens were arrested, adding that on Tuesday, Esfahan intelligence ministry officials arrested these people at their homes and transferred them to an unknown location.

The report adds that the homes of these citizens were searched and their computers, CDs, books and documents were confiscated.

In the past three weeks, some 20 other Baha’i citizens have been reportedly arrested in Tehran, Shiraz and Mashhad.

The Baha’i faith is not recognized as an official religion in the Islamic Republic constitution and Baha’i citizens face widespread discrimination in Iran in all walks of life.

Source: Radiozamaneh

Former Intelligence Ministry official employee arrested

An former Intelligence Ministry official has been arrested in Iran.

According to opposition site Kaleme, Ahmad Shojaei (alias Farshid), a former member of the Intelligence Ministry, was arrested on 28 July along with his son Sajjad. The two were then taken to an unknown location.

The report suggests that Shojaei and a number of his colleagues were dismissed from the Ministry a few years ago. It also states that he emulated dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Montazeri who passed away in December 2009.

Source: Iran Green Voice

Taliban opens office in Iran

Iran has increased its support for the Taliban by allowing the militants to open an office in the country while considering the supply of surface-to-air missiles, according to Afghan and Western officials.

By helping the Taliban, Iran aims to derail a decade-long “strategic partnership” signed between Afghanistan and America in April. Tehran would also have the option of stirring violence in Afghanistan in retaliation for any US strike on its nuclear facilities.

A member of the Taliban’s “Shura”, or ruling council, was allowed to set up an office in May in the eastern Iranian city of Zahedan. Two months later, intercepted communications showed members of the Quds Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps discussing plans to send surface-to-air missiles to Afghanistan, although there was no evidence of the weapons actually being dispatched.

If they were given to the Taliban, this would mark a significant escalation of Iranian support. Iran’s Shia regime was an enemy of the Sunni Taliban when the latter ruled most of Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001. When Taliban forces captured the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in 1998, they murdered nine Iranian diplomats.

However the US was now seen as “the bigger enemy” a Western official in Kabul told the Wall Street Journal. “Iran is willing to put aside ideology and put aside deeply held religious values for their ultimate goal: accelerating the departure of US forces from Afghanistan,” he said.

Nato commanders say Iran has long provided small arms and training to the Taliban. William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, last year complained to Tehran after British SAS soldiers seized a convoy carrying Iranian-manufactured 122mm rockets destined for the Taliban.

US: Iran Remains Leading State Sponsor of Terrorism

The United States says Iran remains the world’s biggest state-sponsor of terrorism. The annual U.S. report on global terrorism expresses concern about increasing attacks in Nigeria and Pakistan.

U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin said the international community is increasingly alert to Iranian threats and is working to disrupt them.

“We are deeply concerned about Iran’s activities on its own through the IRGC Quds Force, and also together with Hezbollah as they pursue destabilizing activities around the globe,” said Benjamin.

The annual terrorism report says a September plot last year to kill Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to Washington “underscored anew Iran’s interest in using international terrorism – including in the United States – to further its foreign policy goals.” It says Iran is training Hamas and Taliban militants in Afghanistan, as well as allowing al-Qaida to use its territory to funnel materiel and personnel to South Asia.

Benjamin said last year’s death of al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden and other key operatives put their terror network “on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse.”

“We saw millions of citizens throughout the Middle East advance peaceful public demands for change without any reference to al-Qaida’s incendiary world view. This upended the group’s long-standing claim that change in this region would only come through violence,” said Benjamin. “These men and women have underscored in the most powerful fashion the lack of influence al-Qaida exerts over the central political issues in key Muslim-majority nations.”

But Benjamin says al-Qaida supporters remain adaptable and have shown resilience in conducting regional attacks that constitute a serious threat to U.S. national security.

Among al-Qaida affiliates, the report says al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula represented a particularly serious threat last year, taking control of territory in southern Yemen and exploiting unrest in that country to advance plots against regional and Western interests.

The report says that in the Sahel, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb gained financially in 2011 through ransoms from kidnappings, while taking advantage of instability in Libya and Mali.

In the Horn of Africa, the report says, al-Shabaab pursued a diverse set of targets, demonstrating the willingness and ability to conduct attacks outside of Somalia. It says the group was weakened last year as a result of the African Mission in Somalia, and Kenyan and Ethiopian military offensives that forced it to retreat from Mogadishu.

Benjamin said Nigeria experienced a steady increase in terrorist attacks in 2011, particularly in the northern states of Borno, Yobe, Bauchi, Gombe, Plateau, and Kaduna. The increased terrorism also extended to the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja, with Boko Haram militants killing government and security officials, Muslim and Christian clerics, and numerous civilians.

“We’ve been engaging with the Nigerian government, in particular, at the highest levels to move them toward greater engagement with communities that are vulnerable to extremist violence by addressing the underlying socio-economic problems in the north,” said Benjamin.

In Pakistan, Benjamin said, safe havens remain for terrorist groups seeking to conduct domestic, regional and global attacks, including the Haqqani Network and Lashkar-e-Tayyiba.

“We’ve urged Pakistan to take more action against Lashkar-e-Tayyiba. We would certainly like to see more progress on the trial regarding the atrocities in Mumbai. It remains a major concern on the terrorist landscape, without a doubt,” he said.

Benjamin said there has been an increase in the number of al-Qaida operatives fighting against the Syrian government, but that the United States believes “the overwhelming majority of the opposition in Syria is composed of ordinary Syrians who are tired of their dictatorship.”

Benjamin said that as long as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad remains in power and the country’s political transition is blocked, “the danger grows of more foreign fighters, including extremists of the al-Qaida type infiltrating Syria.”

Source: Inside of Iran

Political prisoner beaten by prison guards

Abolfazl Qadiani, a member of the Revolutionary Mujahadeen, was taken to the hospital after having been severely beaten by prison guards, but was returned to prison after the prison guards refused the doctors’ request to hospitalize him.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Revolutionary Court sentences two Mahabad residents to imprisonment

One of the persons, Shahu-Parto’I, was convicted to three years of imprisonment on charges of “cooperating with the opponents of the (Islamic) system.” The other person, Shamzin Ahmadnezhad, was convicted to one year imprisonment on security-related charges. The third, Rasul Qader-Haji, was arrested about two months ago on charges of cooperating with the opponents of the system.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

4 Azeri citizens are being held in East Azerbaijan Province

Yusef Khodadadi, Chairman of the Ardabil Revolutionary Court, reported the arrest of two Azerbaijani “spies.” He said that four Azeri citizens are currently being held in prison in the province. Two of them are charged with spying, while the other two are charged with drug trafficking. Azerbaijani poets Farid Huseynov and Sahriyar Hacizada were detained on drug charges in Tabriz (East Azerbaijan Province) in early May. Their charges were later changed to spying against Iran.

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Basij Commander: No one can confront Iran if it decides to close Strait of Hormuz

Basij Commander: No one can confront Iran if it decides to close Strait of Hormuz; warmongers should bear in mind that a single bullet can inflame the entire region.

Deputy Chief of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces in charge of Basij (volunteer forces) and Defense Culture, Brigadier General Massoud Jazayeri, said that it is quite clear that a major part of world energy passes through Strait of Hormuz, which is part of Iranian territory. He added that military experts believe that no country ‘can do a damn thing’ (as Khomeini once said…), if Iran should decide to close the Strait of Hormuz. He said that Iran closely monitors all movements and developments in the region and tries to let the Strait of Hormuz remain open for world nations until Iranian interests are respected. Jazayeri dismissed US “media hyped” threats against Iran if nuclear talks fail. He said that Iran is well prepared to strongly thwart any US military action. “Such threats are merely a bluff and part of psychological warfare. The US is unable to target Iran, and the Zionist regime (Israel) is too weak to venture into confrontation with Iran… Those warmongers should bear in mind that single bullet can inflame the entire region.”

Source: Iran Daily Brief

Iranian authorities hold political prisoners hostage

Shirin Ebadi, Nobel Peace Laureate, International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), and the Iranian League for the Defense of Human Rights (LDDHI) said in a joint statement today: “Conditions of prisoners in Iran are deteriorating by the day. Political prisoners and prisoners of conscience suffer a series of torture and other ill treatment during pre-trial detention, lack access to their lawyers and families and due process, and are subsequently tried under conditions far from international standards of fair trials, on charges related to their professional work, human rights work, freedom of expression, assembly and association, and other legitimate rights recognized by international human rights treaties, to which the Islamic Republic of Iran is state party”. 

Following the trials, often lasting only a few minutes, political prisoners receive extremely unfair sentences that are occasionally illegal even under the Iranian highly flawed laws. A well-known example is ‘imprisonment in exile’ in remote Iranian prisons, which does not exist in any Iranian law and effectively punishes both the prisoners and their families.

Families of political prisoners frequently face other forms of harassment. Occasionally, some family members are detained or sentenced to imprisonment merely for publicizing their prisoner’s case or pursuing their fate with the judicial authorities. On other occasions, security agents meddle in the private sphere of prisoner’s family, e.g. advising wives to complain against their husbands or to divorce them.

Later on, many political prisoners, while serving their sentences, face further harassment frequently when new cooked up charges are brought against them intended to prolong their imprisonment before their prison term runs out or even after their term has run out. Occasionally, political prisoners and prisoners of conscience are exiled to other remote prisons, even though their sentence does not provide for ‘imprisonment in exile’.

Many prisoners of conscience are in pressing need of proper medical care and treatment, which is not available inside the prisons, but the authorities frequently refuse to provide the mandatory health care as required both under the international treaties and the Prisons Regulations of Iran.

Shirin Ebadi, FIDH and LDDHI said: “We have consistently drawn the attention of the international community to the conditions of political prisoners in Iran, including in the joint FIDH-LDDHI report, Iran: Suppression of freedom, prison, torture, execution… A state policy of repression. We draw the attention of the international community once again to the following prisoners of conscience who have been recently subjected to ill treatment, but wish to emphasise that the list represents only a fraction of ill-treated prisoners and it is far from being conclusive and comprehensive.

▪   Ms. Nargess Mohammadi was taken to hospital from prison on 9 July 2012 after she suffered severe injury to her face when she fell. She suffers from muscular paralysis and convulsion. Her family had no news of her for 12 days until she contacted them around 22 July, after she had been returned to prison. She said that she had even lost her eyesight for five days. Despite the presence of prison guards around her, she had been handcuffed to her bed every night while sleeping. Ms. Mohammadi is vice president of Defenders of Human Rights Centre (DHRC) and is serving a 6-year imprisonment sentence on charges related to her human rights work. The authorities, who have illegally transferred her to Zanjan prison where she is held with common criminals, finally granted her sick leave today, 31 July, to pursue her treatment out of prison. It is not, however, clear how long her leave will last.

▪   Ms. Zaynab Jalalian suffers from intestinal bleeding and eyesight problems caused by severe torture during pre-trial interrogations. She is a Kurdish political prisoner who is serving life imprisonment in Sanandaj prison.

▪   Ms. Kobra Banazadeh Amirkhizi and Ms. Sedigheh Moradi, two political prisoners, were transferred to Gharachak prison on 11 July, where common criminals are held under extremely non-standard conditions. They are serving prison sentences of 5 years and 10 years in internal exile, respectively, on charges said to be related to their family ties to opposition members abroad.

▪   Ms. Nasrin Sotudeh, human rights lawyer and DHRC member, is serving a sentence of 6 years in Evin prison. The authorities banned her husband and even her 12-year-old daughter from travelling abroad, according to information received on 11 July.

▪   Ms. Hanieh Farshi Shotorban, blogger, who is serving 7 years in Evin prison, was refused medical care and medication by the prison clinic for her kidney and bladder problems, in mid-July.

▪   Mohammad Seifzadeh suffers from acute health problems, including severe pain in his legs and knees, his back and spinal cord, arthritis of the neck and hands, and heart ailment. He has been denied medical care since last January. Mr. Seifzadeh, lawyer and a founding member of DHRC, is serving a two-year imprisonment sentence in Evin prison on charges related to his human rights work and is facing new charges brought against him for writing open critical letters.

▪   Abdolfattah Soltani, who suffers from anaemia and other health problems, was scheduled to be taken to hospital in the final week of June, but his transfer was called off upon the insistence of the authorities to handcuff him. Mr. Soltani, lawyer and a founding member of DHRC, has been detained since September 2011 and was recently sentenced to 13 years imprisonment in internal exile in the remote city of Borazjan for his human rights work. If exiled to Borazjan, his family will have to travel 1,200 km each way every time for a short prison visit.

▪   Shahrokh Zamani, a trade unionist, was sent to the Quarantine Section of Yazd prison on 29 July, a week after his open letter was published, in which he had criticised the terrible conditions of Yazd prison. Having been sentenced to 11 years imprisonment on charges related to his efforts to establish an independent workers union, he was ‘exiled’ to Yazd prison from his domicile city of Tabriz in north-west Iran in May 2012, even though his sentence does not provide for ‘imprisonment in exile’.

▪   Mohsammad Sadiq Kaboudvand recently went on a long hunger strike demanding to visit his son, who suffers from an incurable disease. He finally ended his protest on 24 July after 59 days. Mr. Kaboudvand, president of Human Rights Organisation of Kurdistan, is serving an imprisonment sentence of 10 years and six months on charges related to his human rights work, and has suffered three strokes and at least one heart attack in prison, prostate and kidney problems, and has had periods of dizziness and unconsciousness. However, he has not had consistent access to all necessary medical care.

▪   Bahman Ahmadi Amou’i, an economic journalist, is serving a five-year imprisonment. In mid-June 2012, when political prisoners in Evin prison’s Section 350 organised a ceremony to commemorate the anniversary of demise of the late political prisoner Hoda Saber, prison officials sent him and several prisoners to solitary confinement. He was subsequently banished to the remote Rajaishahr prison. There, he was insulted and confined to solitary cells for nearly 20 days. He remains in the same prison, even though his sentence does not provide for ‘imprisonment in exile.’

▪   Anvar Hossein Panahi, a Kurdish civil activist, who is serving 16 years in Sanandaj prison, suffers from kidney and intestine infection. Reports detailing his pre-trial tortures indicate that his ribs were broken and he was forced to stay naked in prison yard in cold winter nights. One of his brothers was killed under dubious circumstances while he was carrying a petition proclaiming his brother’s innocence to submit to judicial authorities. His other brother was detained several times, lost his eyesight by 50% under torture and then sentenced to one year imprisonment.

▪   Abolfazl Ghadiani, political activist, suffers from heart ailment and has undergone surgery several times. Prison officers reportedly took him to hospital for medical examination yesterday (30 July) after beating and handcuffing him. He refused to be examined in protest and was returned to prison. In mid-July, he was denied sick leave, which the Medical Commission had recommended. Mr. Ghadiani was due to be released in late November 2011 after serving his one-year imprisonment sentence, but the authorities brought new charges against him for ’insults against the Supreme Leader and the president’ and sentenced him to one more year imprisonment. He is facing new charges.

▪   Mostafa Tajzadeh, former deputy interior minister, is serving a sentence of 6 years and suffers from lumbar disc, arthritis of the neck and skin disease and problems of eyesight. The authorities refuse to transfer him to public sections of the prison.

▪   Kurosh Kuhkan (Kohkan), political activist, is serving a prison sentence of three and a half years. He suffered right knee meniscus tear under torture. His knee failed to function in mid-July as a result of which he fell down the stairs. Prison officials failed to take timely action for his treatment.

▪   Kayvan Samimi-Behbahani, veteran journalist and human rights defender, is serving a six-year prison sentence in the remote Rajaishahr prison and suffers from a risky liver ailment.

▪   Sa’eed Matinpour, Iranian Azeri cultural activist and journalist, is serving an eight-year prison sentence and suffers from lung infection.

▪   Ahmad Zeidabadi (Zeydabadi), journalist, is serving a six-year prison sentence and suffers from unexplained extreme loss of weight.

▪   Heshmatollah Tabarzadi, political activist, is serving an eight-year prison sentence and suffers from heart problems and high blood pressure.

▪   Abdollah Momeni, political activist, is serving a sentence of four years and 11 months and suffers from kidney ailment, skin disease and hearing problem as a result of damage to his eardrums under torture. He is facing new charges

▪   Ghassem Sholeh Saadi, defence lawyer, is serving a sentence of 1.5 years and suffers from damages to his spinal cord reportedly caused under torture during his previous prison term. He is facing new charges.

▪   Hamed Rouhinejad, student, is serving a sentence of 10 years in internal exile in Zanjan prison, and suffers from Multiple Sclerosis as a result of which he has been reported to have problems of eyesight and hearing and one of his hands is not functioning.

▪   Mohammad Hossein Kazemeyni Borujerdi, dissident cleric is serving an 11-year prison sentence in Evin prison, and has been reported to suffer from Parkinson’s disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney and heart problems and loss of vision in one of his eyes.

▪   Saleh Kohandel, political prisoner, is serving a sentence of 10 years in the remote Rajaishahr prison and suffers from severe irregularity of blood platelet count.

▪   Siamak Ighani, a follower of the Baha’i faith, is serving a sentence of three years in Semnan prison and suffers from lung problems and rheumatism.

▪   Mohsen Javadi Afzali, political prisoner, is serving a sentence of two years and six months in Evin prison, and suffers from acute ear infection and hearing problems.

▪   Ja’afar Eghdami, political prisoner, is serving a sentence of 10 years in the remote Rajaishahr prison, and suffers from a neurotic syndrome in his waist and leg that might paralyse him completely.

▪   Ebrahim (Nader) Babaei, political prisoner, is serving a sentence of six years in the remote Rajaishahr prison and suffers from heart ailment and lumbar disc.

▪   Arash Honarvar Shojaei, dissident cleric, is serving a four-year imprisonment sentence in Evin prison, and suffers from heart problems and epilepsy.

Karim Lahidji, vice-president of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and president of the Iranian League for the Defence of Human Rights (LDDHI), said today:“Political prisoners and prisoners of conscience are hostages held by the Iranian authorities, who exert as much pressure as possible on them and their families. The authorities consistently violate the provisions of the ‘Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment’ adopted by the UN General Assembly in December 1988 and the’ Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners’ adopted by UN Economic and Social Council on 13 May 1977. The authorities refuse to provide proper and regular medical treatment to political prisoners, deny all their other rights and subject them to all kinds of torture, inhuman punishments and other ill treatment. They even punish the families of political prisoners.”

Source: Fidh