UNITED
NATIONS
Economic
and Social Council
Distr.GENERAL
E/CN.4/2002/NGO/133
13 February 2002
ENGLISH
Original:
ENGLISH/FRENCH
COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Fifty-eighth session
Item 11 (c) of the provisional agenda
CIVIL
AND POLITICAL RIGHTS, INCLUDING THE QUESTIONS OF:
FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
Written statement* submitted by the Reporters sans frontières international,
a non-governmental organization in special consultative status
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement which is
circulated in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution 1996/31.
[18 January 2002]
IRAN
On 1 January 2002 Iran had the sad record of being
the biggest jail for journalists in the Middle East,
with 18 media professionals behind bars (almost twice as many as in 2000).
After their February 2000 defeat in the parliamentary elections, the
conservatives launched a large scale offensive against the media. The
consequences are serious: over 50 publications have been closed down (e.g. Asr-é-Azadegan,
Fath and Iran-é-Farda) and dozens of journalists charged for
"anti-Islamic propaganda", "spreading false news" and
"insulting Islam", among other things.
In June 2001 the wife of a jailed journalist said that these arrests were
"illegal" and that the prisoners had had "no opportunity to
defend themselves". Apart from the arbitrary nature of these cases of
detention, ordered by Judge Mortazavi, president of Court 1410, the so-called
"press court", many friends and members of the families of detainees
have also complained about conditions of detention: solitary confinement, lack
of health care, visits forbidden, psychological pressure, etc.
During the past few years Iranians and particularly the youth have discovered
satellite TV and the Internet. There again, government hardliners have not
hesitated to take drastic action. In May, 400 cybercafés were closed down in Tehran. In October at
least 1,000 satellite dishes (theoretically forbidden) were confiscated.
Eighteen journalists behind bars
On 27 November 1999 Abdollah Nouri, director of the daily Khordad, was
arrested. The special religious court sentenced him on the same day to five
years in jail and a fine of 15 million rials (about 8,000 euros). Abdollah
Nouri was found guilty on 15 counts, including "anti-religious
propaganda", "insults against Imam Khomeyni",
"destabilising public opinion" and "relations with the United States".
On 22 April 2000
Akbar Ganji, journalist with the daily Sobh-é-Emrouz, was arrested at
the end of a press court hearing. The journalist was charged for his
disclosures on murders of opponents and intellectuals in late 1998, and for his
articles in favour of Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri. He was also accused of
participating in the Berlin
conference on reform in Iran,
judged anti-Islamic by the country's authorities. On 13 January he was
sentenced to ten years in jail. In May his sentence was reduced to six months,
on appeal. But on 15 July the supreme court quashed that decision, under the
pretext of irregularities in the appeal procedure, and sentenced him to six
years' imprisonment.
Khalil Rostamkhani, journalist with the Daily News and Iran Echo,
was arrested on 8 May 2000.
He appeared on 9 November before the Tehran
revolutionary court. The prosecutor accused him mainly of being a "mohareb"
(fighter against God). The journalist was released on bail on 16 November. On 13 January 2001 he was
sentenced to nine years in jail. He remained free until 25 August when he was
sentenced, on appeal, to eight years' imprisonment. On 11 October he was
transferred from Evine jail in Tehran
to the Bandar Abbas prison.
On 29 May 2000
Emadoldin Baghi, journalist with the daily Fath, was arrested after a
trial in the press court. He was sentenced on 17 July to five and a half years
in jail for "breach of state security" and "spreading false
news". The journalist was accused of defending a modern view of Islam as
regards the death sentence, in an editorial in Neshat in September 1999.
The director of Iran-é-Farda, Ezatollah Sahabi, was arrested on 26 June 2000 on orders from
the Tehran
revolutionary court following his participation in the Berlin conference. He was released on bail
on 21 August but arrested again on 17 December and accused of
"anti-government propaganda". On 13 January 2001 he was sentenced to four and a
half years in jail. After visiting him in jail in February, his family said
they were "shocked" by the physical and psychological state of the
75-year-old journalist, who was not even able to recognise them. In December
his sentence was reduced to six months. Hassan Youssefi Echkevari, theologian
and contributor to the monthly Iran-é-Farda, was incarcerated in Evine
jail in Tehran
on 5 August 2000
after participating in the Berlin
conference in April. During his trial in camera in the special religious court,
in October, he was accused above all of "subversive activities against
national security" and of being a "mohareb" (fighter against
God). On 1 January 2002
the verdict had still not been made public.
Hoda Saber, one of the editors of the banned magazine Iran-é-Farda, was
detained on 28 January 2001.
In July his sister, Firouzeh Saber, was detained for a few days for
"refusing to collaborate" with the judicial authorities.
During a search on 11 March 2001 at the home of Mohammad Bastehnaghar (one of
the leaders of the progressive opposition and journalist with Asr-é-Azadegan),
Taghi Rahmani from the banned weekly Omid-é-Zangan, Hossin Rafaï and
Saide Madani from Iran-é-Farda (a suspended monthly), Ali-Reza Redjaï of
Asr-é-Azadegan, Morteza Khazemian and Reza Raïs-Toussi from Fath
(a suspended daily) and Mohammad Bastehnaghar, were all arrested. According to
the president of the Tehran
revolutionary courts, they "were plotting against the Islamic
government". Hossin Rafaï, Ali-Reza Redjaï, Morteza Khazemian and Mohammad
Bastehnaghar were released but Taghi Rahmani, Saide Madani and Reza Raïs-Toussi
are still behind bars.
On 7 April Reza Tehrani, editor-in-chief of the magazine Kian (suspended)
and Fazlollah Salavati, editor-in-chief of the Ispahan weekly Navid-é-Esfahan
(suspended), were arrested for "collaborating with
counter-revolutionary groups". These persons were all close to the
Movement for the Liberation of Iran (MLI), a progressive Islamist party, banned
in March. On 17 April Fazlollah Salavati was released on bail. Reza Tehrani is
still in jail.
On 9 May Hamid Jafari-Nasrabadi and Mahmoud Mojdayi, respectively editor and
journalist with the student magazine Kavir, were detained in Tehran after being
questioned for several hours by a judge of the press court. They were accused
of writing an article judged "blasphemous" and "indecent".
The court also ordered the suspension of the magazine.
On 25 June Ali Fallah and Babak Ghani-Pour, members of the editorial staff of
the magazine Arman published at Yazd University
in central Iran,
were arrested following "complaints by several cultural and Islamic
associations" in the same university.
On 10 November Issa Khandan, head of the society section of the two dailies Khordad
and Fath was arrested on order of the clerical court. His wife has
stated that she does not know the reasons for his arrest.
On 24 November Siamak Pourzand, who worked with Iranian radio stations based in
the United States,
was arrested. His arrest could be related to his position as director of the
Majmue-ye Farrhangi-ye Honari-ye Tehran,
the Tehran
cultural centre where he received artists, intellectuals and writers. The
journalist is known for his articles hostile to the Islamist regime.
On 31 December 2001
Ahmad Gabel was arrested by order of the special clerical court. As a
journalist for Hayat-é-No, Ahmad Gabel also wrote editorials in many
reformist publications and regularly gave interviews to foreign radio stations.
He is known for being very critical of the conservative camp and particularly
Ali Khamenei, the Guide of the Islamic republic.
The trial of ten journalists opened on 8 January 2002. Reza Alijani, Ezatollah Sahabi, Hoda
Saber, Saide Madani (Iran-é-Farda), Taghi Rahmani (Omid-é-Zangan),
Ali-Reza Redjaï, Mohammad Bastehnaghar (Asr-é-Azadegan), Reza
Raïs-Toussi, Morteza Kazemian (Fath) and Ahmad Zeid-Abadi (Hamshari)
are accused of "subversive activities against the state" and of
"blasphemy", charges liable to the death sentence. Among these
journalists, Reza Alijani, Reporters Sans Frontières–Fondation de France
prize-winner in 2001, spent 295 days in prison. On 24 February 2001 the editor-in-chief of
the suspended monthly Iran-é-Farda was arrested by security agents and
then jailed on orders from the revolutionary court, without any explanation. He
was released on bail on 16
December 2001.
Hundreds of cybercafés closed
In the period from 8 to 13
May 2001, about 400 cybercafés were closed in Tehran. The Iranian authorities gave
cybercafés an ultimatum to obtain a "work permit and Internet operating
licence" as soon as possible. Those who did not have approval from the Union of administrative machines and computers (a
conservative-run body) could be forced to close down. After the election of
Mohammed Khatami as president of the Islamic republic in 1997, hundreds of
cybercafés opened in Tehran.
Hundreds of satellite dishes confiscated
In late October 2001 at least 1,000 satellite dishes were confiscated and 70
people arrested either for owning one or for installing them. These measures
were intended to prevent access to foreign channels, especially opposition
channels based in the United
States. The latter reportedly broadcast
pictures of demonstrations following football matches, which allegedly worsened
the violence of the participants. In 1995 the Iranian parliament passed a law
prohibiting satellite dishes with a view to "cleansing" Iran of
Western influences. This law is not, however, strictly observed. Iranians hide
their satellite dishes under canvas covers or disguise them in air conditioning
systems.
______________
*This written statement is issued, unedited, in the language(s) received from
the submitting non-governmental organization(s).
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