Human Rights News from Iran

Monday, August 30, 2004

IRAN: Reformist websites blocked - OCHA IRIN

TEHRAN, 30 Aug 2004 (IRIN) - Three websites with links to Iran's reformist parties have been blocked by conservative hardliners and several contributers have been arrested amid increasing crackdowns in Iran.

The Paris-based press freedom organisation Reporters Without Borders (RSF) released a statement saying the move was, "A new step in the cowing of the Iranian media." RSF said this move furthers censorship of online Internet activity.

Some six people were arrested by the Tehran prosecutor's office for working for Internet service providers (ISPs) or as webmasters for the targeted sites.

Mohammad Reza Khatami, the secretary-general of the Islamic Iran Participation Front - the main reformist party to which the websites are linked - has complained to the deputy head of the judicial affairs section of Iran's prosecutor's office. He has said that the ISPs are under pressure by morality police to block websites they find unacceptable.

By law, ISPs must block websites deemed anti-Islamic or anti-regime, although many analysts say this latest measure has overstepped the mark. The blocking of the websites are part of increasing social restrictions being imposed by the conservative dominated parliament, who won February's controversial elections after thousands of reformist candidates were barred from standing.

Some analysts believe that the crackdown is a political move by the conservatives and does not herald a new, stricter era."It's simply the conservatives flexing their muscles and letting the reformists know that their days are numbered," one Tehran-based analyst told IRIN.

But RSF fears that the latest restrictions on the Internet will badly affect press freedom. The Internet in Iran is regarded by many as the only forum where Iranians have access to uncensored information and the move to block increasing numbers of websites has been met by dismay by human rights groups and Internet users alike.

In February, the newspaper 'Iran' published a draft of a proposed law on "the punishment of crimes linked to the Internet." It said that anyone found disseminating information that 'poses a threat for the country's internal or external security' should receive a prison sentence of one to three years and up to 15 years if the information is passed to 'foreign states or foreign organisations'. Hefty fines and prison sentences are also proposed for connections to sites of a sexual nature.

The bill states that ISP and cybercafe owners should be responsible for monitoring all content to which they offer access and owners who do not comply risk five years in prison and losing their business. RSF said the law would create "a legislative framework that would severely restrict free expression online."

A host of reformist papers have been shut down in 2004, including dailies Nassim Sabah and Vaghayeh Etefaghieh. The daily reformist 'Jomhouriat' has announced it will cease publication after its managing editor was summonsed to appear in court. Three cybercafes in the southern city of Bushehr have also been shut down, a move strongly denounced by RSF.

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Thursday, August 26, 2004

Iranian Nobel winner Ebadi says feels threatened

deepikaglobal.com - Latest News Detail

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Iranian Nobel laureate's home broken into twice

Thursday, August 26, 2004 - ©2004 IranMania.com
TEHRAN, Aug 25 (AFP) - The door to Iranian Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi's home was forced open twice in the past 10 days, she said Wednesday, adding that she believed the break-ins were intended as a threat.

"I'm taking it as a threat, some people want to make me understand that, even at home, I am not secure," she told AFP."They want me to stop my legal activities, but they will not accomplish their goals," the human rights lawyer said.

Ebadi leads a team of volunteer lawyers which handles cases involving students and opposition figures. Last month she notably warned Iran's regime she could take the case of an Iranian-Canadian photographer killed in custody here to an international court if justice was not served in the Islamic republic.

Her comments came after Iran's hardline judiciary, accused of a cover-up in the death of Zahra Kazemi, abruptly halted the case.

Ebadi, who last year became the first Muslim woman to win the coveted Nobel Peace Prize, lives in an apartment underneath her office in central Tehran.

She said she believed the intruder or intruders broke the door while she was not at home. She added that nothing was missing from her apartment and that she had informed the police.

Her office acknowledged she has been the target of several threats since she won the peace prize and that authorities had offered her protection. She has refused to comment on the threats.

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Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Amnesty International outraged at reported execution of a 16 year old girl

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

Public Statement

AI Index: MDE 13/036/2004 (Public)
News Service No: 210
23 August 2004

IRAN: Amnesty International outraged at reported execution of a 16 year old girl
Amnesty International today expressed its outrage at the reported execution of a girl who is believed to be 16 years old, Ateqeh Rajabi, in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, on 15 August, for "acts incompatible with chastity" (amal-e manafe-ye 'ofat). Ateqeh Rajabi was reportedly publicly hanged on a street in the city centre of Neka.

Amnesty International is alarmed that this execution was carried out despite reports that Ateqeh Rajabi was not believed to be mentally competent, and that she reportedly did not have access to a lawyer at any stage.

The execution of Ateqeh Rajabi is the tenth execution of a child offender in Iran recorded by Amnesty International since 1990. Amnesty International has urged Iran's judicial authorities to halt further executions of child offenders - people who were under 18 years old at the time of the offence. This is to bring Iran's law and practice in line with requirements of international human rights law.

A bill to raise the minimum age for execution to 18 was reportedly under consideration by parliament in December 2003. However, the bill is not believed to have been ratified by the Guardian Council, Iran's highest legislative body.

Amnesty International believes that the execution of Ateqeh Rajabi underlines the urgent necessity that Iran pass legislation removing provision for the execution of child offenders, thereby preventing further execution of child offenders, and bringing Iran into line with its obligations under international law.

Further, the organization is urging the authorities to clarify whether Ateqel Rajabi had legal representation and whether a legally approved doctor deemed her psychologically fit to stand trial.

Background
According to report on Peyk-e Iran, Ateqeh Rajabi was sentenced to death approximately three months ago, by a lower court in Neka in the northern Iranian province of Mazandaran, for "acts incompatible with chastity".

During her trial, at which she was reportedly not represented by a lawyer, the judge allegedly severely criticised her dress, harshly reprimanding her. It is alleged that Ateqeh Rajabi was mentally ill both at the time of her crime and during her trial proceedings.

It is reported that although Ateqeh Rajabi's national ID card stated that she was 16 years old, the Mazandaran Judiciary announced at her execution that her age was 22.

The case reportedly attracted the attention of the Head of the Judiciary for the Mazandaran province, who ensured that the case be heard promptly by the Supreme Court. In Iran, all death sentences have to be upheld by the Supreme Court before they can be implemented.

The death sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court, and Ateqeh Rajabi was publicly hanged in the city centre of Neka on 15 August. According to Peyk-e Iran, the lower court judge that issued the original sentence was the person that put the noose around her head as she went to the gallows.

On the same night that she was buried, Ateqeh Rajabi's corpse was reportedly removed from the grave by unknown individuals. The Rajabi family have lodged a complaint and have called for an investigation.

The co-defendant of Ateqeh Rajabi, an unnamed man, was reportedly sentenced to 100 lashes. He was released after this sentence was carried out.

As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is bound not to execute child offenders. Both treaties provide that capital punishment shall not be imposed for offences committed by persons under 18 year of age at the time of committing the offence.

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Thursday, August 19, 2004

Int. Observers Call To Attend Iranian Trial

Thursday, 19 August 2004, 9:18 am
Press Release: International Confederation Of Free Trade Unions

"Grant international observers entry", says ICFTU to Iranian authorities ahead of trial
Brussels, 18th August 2004 (ICFTU Online): In the run- up to the court appearance of four Iranian labour leaders, accused of collaborating with the banned political organisation 'Komala', the international trade union movement stepped up its calls for the trial to be attended by international observers.

The International Confederation of Free Trade Unions' (ICFTU) three observers - Mattias Landgren (lawyer for the ICFTU affiliate, LO-Sweden), Louise Brundwill (lawyer and member of the Swedish section of "Lawyers without Borders") and Mr. Raji Sourani (Director of the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights in Gaza) are still yet to be granted visas to observe the trial.

Previous attempts to secure entry visas indicate that the Iranian embassies approached by the observers are awaiting orders from Tehran before issuing the entry documents.

The ICFTU is appealing to the Iranian authorities to guarantee the entry of the observers to ensure the fair judicial process of the labour leaders. "International observers are essential in this case, not least because the very charges of fraternising with 'Komala' are questionable.

This is a case of high sensitivity - the issue of respect for trade union rights and human rights in Iran will come under the microscope in the trial of the four labour activists," said the ICFTU. "It is in the interests of justice and of the Iranian authorities that international observers are allowed into the country, and crucially, that they be permitted to attend the case's proceedings".

MM. Mahmoud Salehi, Jalal Hosseini, Borhan Divangar and Mohammad Abdipoor were arrested earlier this year for the "crime" of celebrating Labour Day (1st May 2004). With the four due to appear in court on 24th August 2004, the ICFTU has expressed serious doubts ahead of the trial date as to the veracity of the charges made against them.

"All of the charged are independent labour activists and do not have links with political parties" it said in an earlier letter to the Iranian President Khatami.

As the world's largest trade union organisation, the ICFTU is concerned that the defendants are in fact being prosecuted simply for their support for labour rights and for exercising fundamental human rights and trade union rights including the right to freedom of expression and assembly. The ICFTU is also troubled by the timing of the initial arrests on 1st May 2004, occurring just two days after the labour activists had met with the ICFTU mission on 29th April 2004, a meeting which was closely monitored by the Iranian security service.

ICFTU letter to the Iranian authorities: http://www.icftu.org/displaydocument.asp?Index=991220480

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Wednesday, August 18, 2004

"Grant international observers entry" says ICFTU to Iranian authorities ahead of trial

"Grant international observers entry" says ICFTU to Iranian authorities ahead of trial

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Internet Content Filtering in Iran: Verification of Reported Banned Iranian Websites

Internet Content Filtering in Iran: Verification of Reported Banned Iranian Websites

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Iranian Parliament Refuses To Define Political Crimes

Iranian Parliament Refuses To Define Political Crimes

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Monday, August 16, 2004

Family's Lawyers Appeal to Iran's Supreme Court to Reopen Kazemi's Death in Custody Case

8/16/04
Family’s Lawyers Appeal to Iran's Supreme Court to Reopen Kazemi’s Death in Custody Case
Source: Radio Farda Newsroom
In their appeal to the Supreme Court, lawyers of the Zahra Kazemi summoned the intelligence minister and former head of the Majles complaints committee to testify against Tehran prosecutor Said Mortazavi, member of the family's legal team Mohammad-Ali Dadkhah said.

August 15, 2004 - “In our appeal, we have asked for summons to be issued against intelligence minister Ali Yunesi, Tehran prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi and head of the Majles complaints commission Hossein Ansari-Rad,” Tehran-baed lawyer Mohammad-Ali Dadkhah, a member of the Zahra Kazami family’s legal team, told the Associated Press.

The legal team under Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi has asked the Islamic Republic judiciary’s Supreme Court to reopen her death in custody case, which was closed by a Tehran criminal court after it acquitted an intelligence ministry official, the only defendant.

Kazemi, 54, died in July 2003 from a blow she received to her head during interrogation at the Evin prison, where she had been taken after being arrested for photographing prisoners’ families outside, according to a panel of three cabinet ministers appointed by President Khatami to probe the murder.

He said the appeal was based on the “incomplete preliminary proceedings” of the lower court and the need to reclassify Kazemi’s death as murder. The only defendant in the case had been charged with “semi-intentional manslaughter,” which carries a maximum punishment of three years in prison.

The intelligence minister and the former head of the Majles complaints committee, each had led separate investigations on Kazemi’s death, which show that prosecutor Mortazavi was present during Kazemi’s fatal interrogation.

"We hope the appeal court acts in a way that Kazemi’s son (Stephan) does not have to take the case to other legal bodies outside Iran,” he warned.

The judiciary said Kazemi's death seemed to have been accidental as “the only suspect” had been found not guilty.

Ebadi, who alleged in court that a justice official in Evin prison, Mohammad Bakhshi, was the real killer, renewed charges of a top-level cover-up and urged the head of the judiciary to allow an independent probe

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Saturday, August 14, 2004

US, Canada see eye-to-eye on Iranian nuclear program, human rights concerns

US, Canada see eye-to-eye on Iranian nuclear program, human rights concerns

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TheStar.com - Kazemi family seeks new jail probe

TheStar.com - Kazemi family seeks new jail probe

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Wednesday, August 11, 2004

Mathaba.Net News- Iranian journalists on hunger strike in protest against censorship

Mathaba.Net News

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Diplomat heads delicate Swiss mission in Tehran (English Window, NZZ Online, 10. 8. 2004)

Diplomat heads delicate Swiss mission in Tehran (English Window, NZZ Online, 10. 8. 2004): "The new Swiss ambassador to Iran says one of his top priorities will be to continue the dialogue with Tehran on human rights."

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wfn.org | Iran's Baha'is Kept Out of University in Human Rights Breach

wfn.org | Iran's Baha'is Kept Out of University in Human Rights Breach

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Monday, August 09, 2004

Pantagraph.com - Opinion - Eliminate death penalty for murderers under 18 08/09/04

....
In the past four years, only four countries other than the United States have executed people for committing crimes as juveniles: China, Congo, Iran and Pakistan. Those nations are hardly role models for human rights....
MORE

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Friday, August 06, 2004

Amnesty International - Human rights commitments not matched by reality

The recent hunger strike in Tehran's Evin prison and the unabated wave of arrests and temporary detention of students, journalists and workers are some of the signs of a worsening human rights situation in Iran. These have renewed international concern over the situation in the Islamic Republic.

The international community accepted at face value statements made by judicial officials throughout 2003 that the penalty of stoning had been suspended as a result of a "moratorium". Yet, to widespread dismay, the judiciary initiated an amendment to existing laws detailing how to carry out a stoning and crucifixion in November 2003.
International human rights organizations, along with many states, fear that such contradictory behaviour undermines Iran's commitment to international human rights law.
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Payvand Iran's government cracking down on Internet freedom, RSF says

Iran's government cracking down on Internet freedom, RSF says

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Reporters sans frontires - Journalists boycott the official press day and step up their struggle

Reporters Without Borders voiced support today for the journalists who plan to hold a one-day hunger strike to protest against press freedom violations tomorrow - Press Day in Iran - and to boycott an official ceremony at which the minister of culture and Islamic guidance is to award prizes to the press.

"While staging a pseudo-homage to the work of journalists, the Iranian authorities try to strip them of their right to work and push forward day by day with their campaign of repression," the organisation said. "We reaffirm our support for the movement of Iranian journalists who bravely refuse to let themselves be gagged, and we call on the Iranian authorities to listen to their demands."

Tomorrow's protest will be a continuation of the movement begun on 26 July with a sit-in by more than 250 people outside the Journalists Association in Tehran. It will be a day of "mourning" for the closure of the major reformist newspapers and the threats hanging over the press. Tehran state prosecutor Said Mortazavi announced at the end of July that journalists who wrote for the closed newspapers will be banned from working altogether. They are appealing for international support and solidarity for their movement.

It is also tomorrow that Emadoldin Baghi - a figurehead of the reformist press - is due to appear before the Tehran prosecutor. No explanation had been given for this summons, the latest of many Baghi has received since his release in February 2003.

Baghi was sentenced in October 2000 to three years in prison for "threatening national security" and "dissemination false news." Following his release, he edited the reformist daily Jomhouriat, which was forced to close on 18 July. He also founded a group that defends prisoners' rights.

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Wednesday, August 04, 2004

IFJ Condemns “Dirty Politics” of Iranian Judiciary as Press Closures Follow Court Travesty

IFJ Press Release on Iran


Media Release

03 August 2004

IFJ Condemns “Dirty Politics” of Iranian Judiciary as Press Closures Follow Court Travesty



The International Federation of Journalists today condemned the Iranian authorities over a catalogue of closures of independent media outlets and accused court officials of “a travesty of justice” in the Zahra Kazemi case.



Over the course of the past three weeks, three publications have been targeted for their reporting of the trial of the intelligence agent accused of murdering Canadian freelance photographer Zahra Kazemi. The dailies Vaghayeh Etfaghieh and Jomhuriat were suspended and the monthly Aftab, has been closed down indefinitely.

“There is a touch of dirty politics in the tyrannical approach of the General Prosecutor towards the media, which must be brought to an end,” said Aidan White, IFJ General Secretary. “Blacklisting journalists and blatant negligence by the judiciary in the Zahra Kazemi case reflects the regime’s profound hostility to press freedom”.

Yesterday, the IFJ affiliate, the Association of Iranian Journalists (AOIJ) organized a sit-in involving close to 50 journalists in Teheran to protest against the suspension of Vaghayeh Ettefaghieh, Jomhouriat and Aftab daily newspapers. The first sit-in took place on 26 July and included the Nobel Peace Prize winner and lawyer of Zahra Kazemi, Shirin Ebadi and the families of imprisoned journalists.

More

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Tuesday, August 03, 2004

Reporters sans frontieres - Taking tougher line on Internet, authorities try cyber-dissident and draft harsh bill

Reporters Without Borders voiced concern today about increased efforts by the Iranian authorities to gag the Internet, including the trial of a theology student at the end of July for a message posted on a news website and a proposed law that would throttle online dissent.

"The authorities recently took a tougher line with online publications and we saw censorship being stepped up since the legislative elections in February," the organisation said. "Now they seem to be going a step further by directly targeting cyber-dissidents and by preparing a bill that would give a legal basis for cracking down."

Cyber-dissident brought to trial

Mojtaba Lotfi, a theologian and former journalist with the reformist daily Khordad (which was closed in 2000), was arrested at the start of May and imprisoned in the holy city of Qom. Reporters Without Borders has been told that he was tried at the end of July for "spying" and for "publishing false information" but the judicial authorities have not announced their verdict.

Lotfi posted an article entitled "Respect for human rights in cases involving the clergy" on www.naqshineh.com, a website based in Qom. Naqshineh is also subject to judicial proceedings, in particular because of articles about the recent legislative elections. The site has been blocked since March on the orders of the Qom authorities.

Disturbing bill

Reporters Without Borders has examined the official draft of the proposed law "on the punishment of crimes linked to the Internet," published in February in the newspaper Iran. It would create a legislative framework that would severely restrict free expression online.

It proposes prison sentences of one to three years for the dissemination of "information that poses a threat for the country's internal or external security" and five to 15 years if the information is passed to "foreign states or foreign organisations."

The bill envisages combatting "nauseating" content such as "sexual organs or sexual acts, including those involving heterosexual relations as well as homosexual relations or relations with animals." The sentences proposed for this kind of offence are up to a year in prison and a fine of 10 million rials (950 euros).

One of the most serious crimes in this draft law is the dissemination of "false information" about the Supreme Guide or other regime officials, which is punishable by six months in prison and a 10 million rials fine.

The bill also defines the responsibilities of Internet companies such as cybercafés and ISPs, which would be required to monitor all content to which they offer access, and would have to block "nauseating" or illegal sites. They would also be required to alert the police and help identify those responsible for disseminating such content.

Cybercafé and ISP owners who did not comply would risk sentences of up to five years in prison, the closure of their company and a ban on working in the Internet sector for as long as the judge saw fit. They would also be required to preserve all connection data and the identity of their clients for three months after each online session.

The police would not need a judge's authorisation in order to search Internet users' homes or the premises of any legal entity involved in Internet activity. And when carrying out searches, the police would be able to confiscate any computer equipment or computer files. At the same time, an individual or company could refuse to let the police conduct a search, in which case the police would have to get a court warrant.

In its final section, the bill's authors say the legislation should conform to international norms and conventions concerning the Internet and they propose that a commission be set up both to study this issue and to explain the Islamic Republic's measures to the international community. But they add : "the foreign laws will not apply if they are contrary to the sharia or Iranian law of if they run counter to the country's security and interest."

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TehranTimes: EU To Continue Policy Of Engagement With Iran

Description of Selected News

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Monday, August 02, 2004

Iranian academic jailed for blasphemy released - AUG 2, 2004

Iranian academic jailed for blasphemy released - AUG 2, 2004

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Sunday, August 01, 2004

A club kid is politicized - Stephan Hachemi has transformed his life since his mother was killed in Tehran

National Post

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    Who are we?


    IHRAG (Iranian Human Rights Activist Groups in EU and North America) is a non-profit network formed in the fall of 2001 by the independent Iranian associations based in Europe and North America.

    IHRAG activities are based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as well as UN’s Human rights conventions.

    Contact : E-mail : IHRNENA@gmail.com
    Phone: 1 - 514 - 365 9212 (Canada) or 46 -704 124 500 (Sweden)
    Address: K.F.M.R.I, BOX 5047, 165 10 Hässelby, Sweden




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