Dear Friends,
please find below the text of a statement issued by Amnesty International
yesterday. It can be viewed at:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE130202007?open&of=ENG-IRN
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Public Statement
AI Index: MDE 13/020/2007 (Public)
News Service No: 039
26 February 2007
Iran: Ethnic minorities facing new wave of
human rights violations
Amnesty International is greatly concerned by
continuing violations of the rights of members of Iran’s ethnic minorities,
including Iranian Azerbaijanis, Kurds, Baluchis, and Arabs. Within the past two
weeks, hundreds of Iranian Azerbaijani linguistic and cultural rights activists
have been arrested in connection with demands that they should be allowed to be
educated in their own language; Kurdish rights activists have been detained, and
demonstrators killed or injured; and a Baluchi accused of responsibility for a
bomb explosion on 14 February 2007 was executed just five days later.
As Iran’s ethnic minorities face growing
restrictions, Amnesty International is calling on the government to ensure that
all Iranian citizens are accorded, both in law and practice, the linguistic and
cultural rights set out in Iran’s constitution as well as in international law,
and are able peacefully to demonstrate in support of such rights. The Iranian
authorities must also ensure that the police and other law enforcement agencies
do not use excessive force, that all detainees are protected from torture or
other ill-treatment, and that all reports of torture or other ill treatment,
excessive use of force or killings by the security forces are investigated
promptly, thoroughly and independently, with the methods and findings made
public. Anyone suspected to be responsible for abuses should be brought to
justice promptly in a trial that complies with international standards of
fairness, and without recourse to the death penalty.
Iranian Azerbaijanis
The arrests of Iranian Azerbaijanis occurred in
the run up to, and during, peaceful demonstrations on International Mother
Language Day, an annual commemoration initiated by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) on 21 February.
The demonstrations were held to support demands
that their own language should be used as the medium of instruction in schools
and places of education in those areas of north-west Iran where most Iranian
Azerbaijanis reside. The protest organizers are reported to have sought official
authorisation in advance, though it is not known whether it was granted. Most of
those detained in advance of the demonstrations, which were held in Tabriz,
Orumiye and other towns in the north-west, were soon released as of 26 February
between 10-20 people may still be held.
Ebrahim Kazemi, Ja’afar ‘Abedini and Mehdi
Mola’i, were among a group of up to 12 people detained in Qom on or around 11
February 2007, at least two of whom were reportedly arrested for having painted
slogans on walls, including ‘Türk dilinde medrese’ (Schooling in [Azerbaijani]
Turkic). They were reportedly held for several days before being released on
bail. Ja’afar ‘Abedini and Mehdi Mola’i were reportedly ill treated while
in detention by being forced by Ministry of Intelligence officials to drink
liquids which caused them to vomit.
In Orumiye, up to 60 Iranian Azerbaijanis have
reportedly been arrested, including Esmail Javadi, a journalist and Iranian
Azerbaijani cultural rights activist. He was arrested on 18 February 2007 and
may continue to be held in a Ministry of Intelligence detention facility in the
Doqquz Pilleh district of the city.
At least 15 arrests are said to have been made
in Zenjan, where a reportedly peaceful demonstration was held in the city’s
Sabze Square. Those detained include journalist Sa’id Metinpour, well-known
locally for his human rights activities; he is said to have had blood on his
lips when he was taken away raising concern that he may have been assaulted by
police.
Ramin Sadeghi, who was detained in Ardabil on
19 February 2007, is one of approximately 20 who were detained in the city in
connection with International Mother Language Day events. Only he remains in
detention at the time of writing and his family are reportedly concerned about
his medical condition.
Kurds
On 20 February 2007, Kurdish students held an
event at Tehran University’s Department of Literature. They called for the
teaching of Kurdish in Iran’s education system and at the University of
Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province. The students reportedly signed a
public statement which stated, in part, that ‘In today's multicultural climate
in the world, based on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other
humanitarian principles, every nation should have a right to develop and advance
its language.’
In recent months, several Kurdish journalists
and human rights defenders have been detained and some are facing trial. In
addition, on 16 February 2007, three Kurds, including one woman, were reportedly
killed in the course of a demonstration in Mahabad. An unconfirmed report states
that a dispute between demonstrators and security forces resulted in the death
of Bahman Moradi, aged 18, a woman called Malihe, whose surname is not known to
Amnesty International, and one other. Dozens were reportedly injured in the
course of the demonstration.
Iranian security forces have a history of the
violent suppression of demonstrations by Kurds. For example, in February 2006
similar clashes between Kurdish demonstrators and the security forces in Maku
and other towns reportedly led to at least nine deaths and scores, possibly
hundreds, of arrests. In March 2006, Kurdish members of parliament (Majles)
wrote to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad demanding an investigation into
the killings and calling for those alleged to be responsible to be brought to
justice. An investigation was reportedly set up, but its findings are not known.
Some of those detained later reportedly received prison terms of between three
and eight months.
Baluchis
In the province of Sistan-Baluchistan, the
circumstances surrounding the extremely summary trial and execution of an
Iranian Baluchi man, Nasrollah Shanbeh-Zehi, who was executed on 19 February
2007, calls into question the standards of administration of justice enjoyed by
minorities without discrimination. Among five people reportedly arrested
following the 14 February bombing of a bus carrying Revolutionary Guard security
officials, which to date has killed a total 14 and injured around 30, Nasrollah
Shanbeh-Zehi was shown “confessing” to the bombing on Iranian television on
behalf of an Iranian Baluchi armed opposition group, Jondallah, and was executed
in public at the site of the bombing.
Jondallah, which has carried out a number of
armed attacks on Iranian officials and has on occasion killed hostages,
reportedly seeks to defend the rights of the Baluchi people, though government
officials have claimed that it is involved in drug smuggling and has ties to
terrorist groups and to foreign governments. In March 2006, Jondallah killed 22
Iranian officials and took at least seven hostage in Sistan-Baluchistan province.
Following the incident, scores, possibly hundreds, of people were arrested; many
were reportedly taken to unknown locations. In the months following the attacks,
the number of executions announced in Baluchi areas increased dramatically.
Dozens were reported to have been executed by the end of the year
Amnesty International condemns unequivocally
the killing of hostages and urges Jondallah to desist from such and similar
practices immediately. However, Amnesty International is concerned that
Nasrollah Shanbeh-Zehi’s “confession” may have been forced, and that the
rapidity of his execution indicates that he did not receive a fair trial and was
not permitted an adequate opportunity to appeal against his death sentence, if
that was imposed by a court.
Arabs
In January and February 2007, Amnesty
International deplored the execution of eight Iranian Arabs convicted after
unfair trials of bombings in Khuzestan province in 2005. Other Iranian Arab
prisoners are also at risk of execution after unfair trials.