Human Rights Watch World Report 1995
Iran-Human Rights Developments
The human rights situation in Iran
showed no improvement in 1994. A picture emerged of new obstacles to the rule
of law, a marked worsening in the situation of religious minorities, heightened
enforcement of intrusive restrictions on every day life, limitations on basic
freedoms of expression, thought, opinion and the press, and discrimination
against women. The government generally excluded independent human rights
monitors.
The cumulative effect of the erosion of human rights in Iran
was reflected in March in a resolution of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights
condemning Iran's
violations of human rights. Its wording was strong, particularly with reference
to Iran's
failure, for the third consecutive year, to grant access to the U.N. Special
Representative on the Human Rights Situation in Iran.
The resolution expressed "deep concern at the high number of executions,
cases of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment and punishment."
In August 1994 the U.N. Sub-Commission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities denounced widespread violations of
human rights by the Iranian government including "arbitrary and summary
executions, arbitrary arrests and imprisonment, unexplained disappearances, the
absence of guarantees essential for the protection of the right to a fair
trial." The Sub-Commission regretted the refusal of the Iranian government
to implement existing agreements for delegates of the International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) to visit Iranian prisons.
In a population of sixty-two million, Iran's
religious minorities include 3.5 million Sunni Muslims, 350,000 followers of
the Bahai faith, 80,000 Christians and 30,000 Jews.
Tens of thousands of Christians, Jews and Bahais have
fled Iran in
the past fifteen years. During 1994 the government mounted a fierce campaign
against the small Christian minority. Churches have been shut down, scores of young Christians -- many of them converts
from Islam -- have been imprisoned and tortured, especially in the cities of Gorgan and Kermanshah.
Three leading Evangelical Christians were killed in suspicious circumstances.
In January, Bishop Haik Hovasepian
Mehr, who had come to international prominence
leading a campaign for the release of Pastor Mehdi Dibaj, was murdered. Mehdi Dibaj, who converted from Islam to Christianity about
forty-five years ago, had been imprisoned in Sari, northeastern Iran,
from 1983 to 1994. In late June, another evangelical minister, Tateos Michaelian was shot and
killed. He was acting chair of the Council of Protestant Ministers in Iran,
a post he assumed following the murder of Bishop Hovasepian
mehr. Pastor Mehdi Dibaj was killed a week later in early July.
There was no evidence of a thorough official investigation
into the killings, and Christian sources held the government responsible for
the deaths. Iranian officials claim that evangelical churches have political
agendas besides worship.
There was also no let up in the persecution of the Bahai minority, which is not recognized as a religion under
the Constitution of the Islamic Republic and is referred to as a heretical
sect.
In February a judge released two Muslims who had killed a Bahai citing a religious authority to the effect that Bahai blood may be shed with impunity. The judge based his
ruling on the late Ayatollah Khomeini' s fatwa (edict)
that a Muslim will not be killed for killing an apostate.
According to Amnesty International, Haji
Mohammad Ziaie, a Sunni Muslim leader from Bandar-Abbas, known to be critical of government policies, was
found dead in suspicious circumstances in July. He had been summoned for
interrogation by security forces in Laar, Fars province on July 15, and he was never
been seen alive again.
These incidents appear to illustrate the growing strength of
militant forces within the Islamic leadership. The persecution of religious
minorities, which received widespread media attention in the West, worked
directly against the interests of others in the government who had hoped to
normalize relations with the West.
One of the few remaining public voices of dissent in Iran
appeared to have been silenced with the detention in Tehran
in March of Ali Akbar Saidi-Sirjani.
His associate, Mohammad Sadeq Said, a poet, whose
pen-name is Niazi-Kermani, was also arrested. The
arrest of Saidi-Sirjani, a prolific writer, further
narrowed the scope of expression in the Islamic Republic.
Since 1989, the authorities have imposed a complete ban on
all of Saidi-Sirjani's seventeen volumes of essays
and social commentary. The writer responded to this muzzling by circulating
open letters to the authorities, courageously denouncing censorship and the
lack of freedom in Iran.
A month after his arrest the authorities produced an alleged
confession they attributed to Saidi-Sirjani, of a
wide range of crimes "conspiring to defame the Islamic regime and its
founders." He also purported to have confessed to being a homosexual (a
criminal offense in Iran
punishable by death), as well as to gambling, drinking, and smoking opium. At
the end of the year Mr. Saidi-Sirjani's status was
unclear.
Iran's
news media, too, suffered strict controls and editors and journalists faced
arbitrary arrest and imprisonment. For example, in April, Abbas
Abdi, edito- in-chief of
the newspaper Salam, and a frequent critic of
President Rafsanjani's policies, was released after
serving ten months of a one year sentence on payment of a bond.
In June, the Press Council, a government appointed body,
announced the withdrawal of the right of publication of a magazine, Havades, which it deemed "obscene and empty."
In an episode that has chilled freedom of
expression worldwide, Salman Rushdie and all
associated with the publication and translation of his novel, the Satanic
Verses, remained under the express threat of assassination on the authority of
the Iranian state. In June, Ayatollah Meshkini
-- head of the eighty-two member Assembly of Experts, which appoints the leader
-- endorsed the principle that one fatwa (edict) can be challenged by another,
thus opening the door for Ayatollah Khamenei to
revoke the death sentence on Rushdie. In a public sermon, Ayatollah Meshkini said "if even a religious leader issues a
fatwa, and [the current leader] issues a ruling, the latter takes
precedence." Yet Khamenei, despite hi title as Iran's
supreme spiritual leader, remains a junior religious figure relative to
Khomeini. For conservative Muslims, any countervailing fatwa he may issue on
the Rushdie case would be unlikely to gain mass support. In addition President
Rafsanjani in his interview with Le Figaro, in September, said "there is
no question of pardon in Rushdie's case, because the
fatwa was pronounced against him. One cannot reverse this. It is not in the
interests of the West to protect someone who has insulted a billion
Muslims."
A bill on banning the use of television satellite reception
equipment passed through the parliament in September, but is not yet law.
Before the bill passed, the Head of the Judiciary announced that judges may
order the removal of satellite dishes in order to halt the spread of
"corruption." Ayatollah Yazdi justified the
immediate removal of the offending dishes by saying that "in the view of
Islamic judges, satellite programs come under the category of spreading
corruption." Yazdi's opinion appeared to
short-circuit the parliamentary process, and opened the door for the security
forces to enter houses by force to remove dishes with no basis in law for these
actions.
There were conflicting signals for women in Iran,
and increasing arbitrary harassment. In December 1993, the government lifted
all restrictions on what women can study in the nation's universities. On the
other hand, single women were still banned from traveling abroad to study.
In April parliament ratified a bill concerning the selection
of judges enabling qualified women to work as assessors in administrative
tribunals, and in other low-level judicial positions. This was the first time
since 1979 that women were permitted by law to work as judges of any kind.
Such small advances for women had to be weighed against a
constant barrage of arbitrary restrictions. For example, in June the police
issued a statement condemning women's smiles as something which could arouse
corruption in men. In September, the daily newspaper Jomhuri-
e-Islami reported on a meeting of officials in which
the Minister of the Interior had called for not toleration of non-compliance
with the Islamic dress ode (Bad Hejabe). He also
condemned women who ride motorcycles with men as disrespectful of Islamic
principles.
Public discontent over economic and other conditions led to
riots in Iranian cities. Serious public demonstrations, leading to violent
confrontations between demonstrators and the security forces, took place in Tehran,
Zahedan, Qom,
Qazvin, Tabriz, Najafabad
and many other cities.
In March, people in Tehran
clashed with security forces who had been ordered to suppress all public
manifestations of the traditional " fire=day" observances which mark the
Iranian new year. Leader of the
Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Khamenei, codemned such maniestations as
"atheist celebrations." According to journalist Safa Ha'eri, a secret official
report recorded eleven dead and more than five hundred wounded in the clashes.
In August, in Tabriz,
the capital of Iranian Azerbaijan, hundreds of angry demonstrators were
arrested and some were reported killed in protests after the Basij (militia) attacked young women who had mixed with
young men at the end of a soccer match. The government' s
interpretation of Islamic rules forbid social mixing of men and women.
According to Middle East International, Qazvin, an industrial town 150
kilometers west of the capital, was the scene of social unrest and virtual
insurrection in August. After the rejection by parliament of a bill to promote
the status of the surrounding district to a province, thousands of Qazvinis poured into the streets of the city to show their
frustration. The peaceful demonstration deteriorated into violent confrontations
as soon as non-native security forces were rushed to the scene with orders to
open fire to disperse demonstrators. At least thirty people were killed, 400
wounded and over 1,000 arrested. Putting down the riot in Qazvin, turned out to be one act
of repression too many for some members of Iran's
army. Four generals who claimed to be speaking on behalf of the whole of the
armed forces including the Pasdaran (Revolutionary
Guards), which are generally considered more loyal to the Islamic leadership,
warned the political leadership that the army could "no longer remain
silent" while the country was threatened by "aggression from outside
and disintegration from within."
Nevertheless, in November Associated Press reported that the
parliament passed a bill authorizing law enforcement officers to shoot and kill
demonstrators "to restore law and order at times of unrest."
In June a bomb explosion killed twenty-six and injured
scores of other pilgrims at Iran's
holiest shrine in Mashhad.
This was the most shocking incident in a year of widespread social unrest, and
came as yet another sign of spreading discontent. No group claimed
responsibility, but in the politically charged atmosphere conspiracy theories
were rampant.
Closer cooperation between the governments of Iran
and Turkey, in
security measures targeting opposition groups from both countries, threatened
the security of thousands of Iranian refugees and asylum- seekers in Turkey.
Iranians who were recognized as refugees by the office of the United Nations
High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), and some whose cases were pending, were
forcibly returned by the Turkish authorities to Iran,
even though many of them risked serious human rights violations in Iran.
For its part, in March the Iranian government handed over four alleged members
of the separatist Kurdistan Working Party (PKK) to stand trial in Turkey,
where torture of political prisoners is endemic. Other PKK supporters were
attacked or harassed by the Iranian authorities.
Another group of Iranians at risk in Turkey
were refugees who had been registered by UNHCR in Iraq,
but who had moved to Turkey
looking for better living conditions. Some of these refugees feared persecution
in Iraq as
Kurds or as former members of the Iranian opposition group, the People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI), based in Iraq.
UNHCR refers to such cases as "irregular movements" and encourages
them to return to Iraq
despite the risk of persecution there as well as in their native Iran.
Iran's
Kurdish minority continued to suffer persecution inside and outside the
country. In April, two villages in Iraq
sheltering displaced Iranian Kurds were virtually destroyed by Iranian
shelling. According to the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI), in
October the Iranian government activated plans, dating from 1975, to depopulate
the border region with Iraq.
Inhabitants of six villages in Piranshahr region,
part of Western Azerbaijan province in Iran,
were ordered to evacuate. Members of Kurdish opposition groups were
assassinated in attacks attributed to the Iranian government by Kurdish
sources. In January Taha Kerminch,
a refugee, was killed in Turkey.
A leader of the PDKI was assassinated on August 4, in Baghdad.
Opponents of the Iranian government living abroad continued
to fear attack by Iranian government agents active in Turkey
and throughout Europe. In November, the trial began in Paris
of the accused killers of former Prime Minister Shahpour
Bakhtiar. The three defendants, all with links to the Iranian government, went
on trial for the August 1991 murder. Despite the more than sixty murders of
Iranian dissidents abroad, this is only one of the few times an assassination
case has been tried. In most of the other cases the suspected assassins either
escaped arrest or were permitted to return to Iran
by western governments fearing reprisals against their interests or their
nationals by the Iranian government.
In any country, the law, upheld by a strong impartial court
system is the basis of human rights protection. After six years of discussion,
a law reorganizing the court system passed the parliament in August. It is
envisaged that this system will be implemented gradually within a five-year
period. In places where the new General Courts (Dadgahayeh
Aam) are established, existing structures of
revolutionary courts, penal courts, and other courts will be dissolved.
However, in places where the new system is not implemented, the old systems
still pertain. This means that different parts of the country will have widely
varying court structures; defendants accused of the same crimes will not
necessarily be tried before the same type of court or enjoy the same procedural
safeguards.
For example, the new law provides for the abrogation of the
function of the prosecutor. In the new General Courts, the judge acts as both
investigator and judge. Among the major objectives of this new law is to
expedite the legal process. This means that the two-phase study of a case,
first by an investigating magistrate and then by a trial judge, will be reduced
to a single phase. This will shorten the time needed for cases to pass through
the system at the expense of the rights of the defendant. A right of appeal to
a higher court is not clearly established in the law, and in some cases it is
explicitly ruled out, further contravening international fair trial standards
to which Iran
is a party. In support of the new law Ayatollah Yazdi,
the Head of the Judiciary, asserted that giving powers of investigation to the
judge is more consistent with Islamic Law.
Another special characteristic of the new law is that power
over the judiciary, and the appointment of judges in particular, is
concentrated in the hands of the Head of the Judiciary. No reference is made in
the law to regulations governing the qualifications required by those serving
as judges, thus opening the door for unqualified but compliant judges to be
appointed at the discretion of the Head of the Judiciary. The concentration of
such wide powers in the hands of one man works against the independence of the
judiciary, and to the detriment of the rule of law.
Despite continuing efforts by the Head of the Judiciary to
promote judicial reform, the workings of the judicial system continued to be
capricious. Basic fair in trial safeguards have long been absent, particularly
in political trials, which take place before revolutionary courts. Defendants
in such trials have no access to legal counsel and are held in indefinite
incommunicado pre-trial detention.
In an incident that highlighted the contradictions at the
heart of the task of judicial reform in a theocracy, Ayatollah Yazdi traveled to the province
of Khuzestan, in May, to negotiate
with local tribal leaders and government officials "to put an end to
practices contrary to religious and civil law." Ayatollah Yazdi in particular drew attention to the practice of
fathers who murder their own daughters but go unpunished because, under Islamic
Law, they "own the blood." Ayatollah Yazdi
condemned "honor crimes" -- crimes committed on the pretext of
defending family honor -- saying, "although the
Lord of the Universe has given the right to the owner of blood, he has also
given the right to the government."
Incidents of corporal punishments which violate
international human rights standards were also reported. According to the daily
newspaper Abrar, in Gilan
province seven thieves were punished in one day by amputation of the four
fingers of their right hands in accordance with the penal code. Human Rights
Watch/Middle East received reports of two cases of women
stoned to death for adultery, one in Evin Prison, Tehran
in February, the other in Qom in March. In May an American
woman was given eighty lashes in public for alleged "prostitution."
If the Head of the Judiciary was able to reassess
traditional interpretations of Islamic Law in Khuzestan, he could have acted to
prevent such abusive punishments. President Rafsanjani has been quoted on a
number of occasions in the international press expressing his disapproval of
such practices, and in September, he told Le Figaro, evidently in error, that
the punishment of stoning no longer took place in the Islamic Republic. If the
government asserts that it has a right to legislate against practices which
some defend as condoned by Islamic law, such as honor crimes, then its
arguments that Islam is an immutable system preventing compliance with
international norms lose consistency.