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Nobel Peace
Winner Threatened With Arrest
by Omid Memarian*
August 28, 2006 - (IPS) Nine Nobel
Prize laureates have sent a letter to the Iranian government asking
it to retract its threat to prosecute Iran's most prominent independent
human rights organisation founded by Dr. Shirin Ebadi, winner of
the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize.
On Aug. 2, Iran's Ministry of Interior
declared that Ebadi's Defenders of Human Rights Centre (DHRC) had
failed to obtain a valid license and warned that the organisation
would be prosecuted because its activities were "illegal."
The DHRC has been a devoted and powerful voice for human and minority
rights in Iran since its inception in 2001.
Two weeks later, the Dalai Lama (1989),
Jody Williams (1997), Bishop Carlos Belo (1996), Wangari Maathai
(2004), Betty Williams (1976), Rigoberta Menchú Tum (1992),
Adolfo Pérez Esquivel (1980), Máiread Corrigan Maguire
(1976), Elie Wiesel (1986), all Nobel Prize winners, sent a letter
to Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki expressing their concern
over the Interior Ministry's position.
"As we understand, the work of
the DHRC, as a civil and peaceful association, is legal according
to the Iranian Constitution," the letter said. "We urge
you to reconcile the discrepancy of the 'permit' that the Iranian
government declares is necessary for the organization to function
yet seems inconsistent with the Iranian constitution which states
that non-governmental organizations that observe the law and do
not disrupt public safety do not need a permit." Under the
U.N. Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, individuals and associations
have the right "to promote and to strive for the protection
and realisation of human rights and fundamental freedoms,"
and to "complain about the policies and actions of individual
officials and governmental bodies with regard to violations of human
rights."
It further says that states "shall
take all necessary measures to ensure the protection by the competent
authorities of [human rights defenders] against any violence, threats,
retaliation, de facto or de jure adverse discrimination, pressure
or any other arbitrary actions." Ebadi's centre is a member
of the International Federation for Human Rights and was awarded
a prize by the Human Rights National Commission in France. In addition,
Dr. Shirin Ebadi was recognised with a Nobel Peace Prize in 2003
for her work to protect human rights.
As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, Iran is obligated to uphold a commitment to freedom of association.
The DHRC has made every effort to be in compliance with Iranian
law and applied for a permit in 2002, which Iran's Ministry of Interior
would not issue or explain why it refused.
Hadi Ghaemi, a Human Rights Watch researcher,
told IPS that the Iranian government's threat to arrest Shirin Ebadi
and lawyers associated with her centre is a serious attack on fundamental
rights in Iran. "The government is basically demonstrating
its intolerance of independent advocates who are trying to promote
and protect human rights under the law," he said. "It
can also be viewed as an attempt to undermine the country's legal
system, because if the government disallows human rights lawyers
from public advocacy and threatens them with prosecution, then the
lawyers have no security in defending their clients in the courtroom,"
he added.
A few days after the government's announcement,
Ebadi sent an email message to human rights activists and media
correspondents, asking them to publicise the government's threat
and gather public support for her centre. "The Government of
Iran announced that this Center is illegal and provided we continue
our activities, they shall arrest us," she wrote. "Of
course I and the other members of the center do not intend to shut
down the center and we shall continue our activities. However, there
is a high possibility that that they will arrest us." "The
government's action in this regard is illegal," she wrote.
"This Center has been established and working for more than
four years now. I believe this decision of the government has been
triggered by my memoir being published. In any case, I am happy
that my memoir has been published, for the truth must be told."
Mohammad Seyfzadeh, Mohammad Ali Dadkhah,
Mohammad Sharif, and Abolfatah Soltani, all well-respected lawyers
in Iran, are among the co-founders of the DHRC. Over the years,
Ebadi and her colleagues have taken on prominent cases like that
of Iranian-Canadian photojournalist Zahra Kazemi, who was murdered
while in prison in 2003; killings of dissidents and writers in 1998;
the student uprising in 1999; arrests of bloggers and journalists
in 2004; and the imprisonment of Iran's most prominent dissident,
Akbar Ganji.
Ganji, who spent six years in jail
and was released only recently, told IPS that it is unlikely that
the Islamic government would actually arrest Dr. Ebadi.. However,
he said that threatening human rights organisations into silence
is part of the government's goal to create a monolithic society.
"They are against any kind of critical voices. They perceive
opposition voices as part of an attempt to create a Velvet Revolution
(like that in Czechoslovakia in 1989, as well as Ukraine and Georgia).
For this reason, the Islamic regime
is trying to shut down non-governmental organisations (NGOs) such
as DHRC," said Ganji, who was represented by Ebadi for the
six years of his detention. "Everybody involved in political
and social activism is facing the risk of arrest and prosecution
in Iran today. Dr. Ebadi and her colleagues should continue their
activities. They do not need governmental license for their peaceful
activities since it's not against the constitution," he said.
Ganji emphasised that activists around
the world can support Ebadi and her colleagues by condemning the
government's action against human rights NGOs. Such condemnations
would make it harder for the government to impede the work of social
activists within Iran.
Hussein Bastani, an Iranian journalist
and political activist, worked with Dr. Ebadi in 1993, when they
were both members of the Association for Defending the Rights of
the Child. He told IPS that Dr. Ebadi was mostly engaged in non-political
cases, yet even so she was threatened from time to time by anonymous
callers who considered her position on the discriminatory laws regarding
women and children to be "anti-Islamic". "During
the years I worked with Shirin Ebadi, I have two memories that never
leave my mind. First, when it was proven that her name was on the
'list of terror'. This was a list of Iranian intellectuals who were
killed in 1998 by agents of the Ministry of Intelligence,"
he said. "Four were murdered before this list came to light.
Second, when, during a telephone conversation in 2000, she told
me she was summoned to court, and would probably be sent to prison
the next day. I didn't agree with her. I couldn't imagine that someone
like her would be arrested... but the day after; I heard the news
of her imprisonment."
The restrictive policies against human
rights NGOs mean that journalists and political and social activists
are now more vulnerable in the face of government charges. The premature
death of Akbar Mohammadi, a student activist who died in Evin prison
in July, and the recent threats against Dr. Ebadi's centre are an
ominous sign for those who fight for human rights in Iran today.
*Omid Memarian is an Iranian journalist
and civil-society activist. He has won several awards, including
Human Rights Watch's highest honour in 2005, the Human Rights Defender
Award.
From: http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=34487
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