Iran: 25 women's rights
campaigners arrested
September 18, 2007 – (Women
living under muslim laws) An educational workshop on women’s
rights in Khoram Abad was disrupted after police violently attacked
participants and took them into custody.
Twenty-five participants spent
several hours in prison and were released at around midnight the
same day. Three of these participants, Reza Dolatshah, Bahman
Azadi, and Khosrow Nasimpour, who are social activists in the
city of Khoram Abad who were beaten in the process of arrest remain
in prison and despite inquiries by their families and friends,
no information has been provided as to their whereabouts and status.
Their crime is the holding of
an educational workshop in a small house with a limited number
of participants with the aim of discussing unequal rights such
as polygamy, testimony, blood money, etc. In other words the same
legal issues that state officials address and discuss on a regular
basis.
What follows, is a moving account
of the incident and the inhumane treatment of civil society activists
by police and security officials:
On Thursday September 13th, Mansoureh
Shojaie, Jelveh Javaheri, Zara Amjadian and Nafishe Azad, all
members of the Education Committee of the Campaign, traveled from
Tehran to the city of Khoram Abad, Lorestan Province, to hold
an educational workshop on women’s legal rights. The workshop
was to be held in the home of Reza and Mahtab Dolatshah, both
social activists in the city of Khoram Abad and supporters of
the Campaign.
Campaign members from Tehran spent
their first day in Khoram Abad familiarizing themselves with the
city and the local community as well preparing for the implementation
of the workshop.
On Friday September 14, the workshop started with a slight delay.
The trainers were still presenting the introductory section and
the history of the Iranian women’s movement, when at 11:40
Am they heard severe pounding at the door. When Bahman Azadi,
one of the participants in the workshop opened the door, 10 armed
police and security officials dressed in uniform and plain clothes
and 3 female police officers entered the home forcefully.
Bahman Azadi was attacked immediately.
He was beaten and kicked and attacked with the stock of rifles,
carried by the police. In the midst of the surprise and disbelief
of the 25 participants present at the workshop, the police brutally
and disrespectfully divided the participants and took them to
two separate rooms. In one of the rooms women were forcefully
and violently forced to undress and were body searched. The men
went through the same ordeal in the other room. Additionally,
all the personal belongings of the home owners were searched and
seized. The police and security forces were extremely rude and
disrespectful toward those present at the workshop.
After an hour of continuous insults,
search of property and beatings of participants the security forces
and police handcuffed the men and removed them from the premises.
The hysterical objections on the part of women, in particular
Zara Amjadian, prevented the authorities from handcuffing the
women while they were escorted to the detention center. On their
way out of the house, the workshop participants in disbelief faced
the harassment of a crowd of onlookers, who had gathered outside
of the premises at the urging of police. The onlookers had been
told that those being arrested had engaged in acts of "pleasure
and debauchery" and thus were being arrested for their promiscuity!
The vans transferred the participants
to the police station and the detention center which housed addicts
and drug traffickers. The arrests were complimented with insults,
and threats of beatings and of being handcuffed. "They had
taken the men to a different location and the women, 14 of us,
were forced to wait for hours in the dark corridors of the police
station." Finally the judge arrived and reminded us that
"you are the same women who instead of wanting only one husband
are seeking to take 4 husbands….you want to enlighten the
poor women of Khoram Abad?"
The arrested women were crammed
into two cells which were three meters in size. One of the young
women who suffered from asthma and experienced an attack during
this ordeal, asked for medical attention and to see a physician.
She was told to "wait. You will be done here soon."
Finally at 3:00 in the afternoon some men arrived with desks and
chairs and transformed the dark corridor of the police station
into an interrogation room, and the questioning of participants
was officially started. "They asked us about our background,
the Campaign, and how we came to know the owner of the home [where
the workshop was being held]."
After the interrogations were
over the women were once again transferred out of the police station,
but were forced to keep their heads down while on their way to
their new location. "They kept threatening us that if we
raised our heads, we would be a smack in the head!!" The
next destination was an office affiliated with the Ministry of
Intelligence. All 14 women were held in a large bright room
"We waited until 4:30 and
nothing happened. We finally started beating on the door and calling
for the guards and insisting that our case be attended to. Finally
we were taken one by one again for interrogation. After all were
done with their interrogations, the security officials insisted,
especially of the women from Khoram Abad, that we provide a written
guarantee not to participate in any more illegal meetings, without
permits.
We kept objecting that this meeting
was not illegal, but no one listened. The security officials instead
insisted that their actions were legal. Of course, they announced
that according to Article 498 of the penal code, even gatherings
in private homes required a permit. And we kept insisting that
according to Article 27 of the constitution we have the right
to assemble freely and no permit was required. We explained that
we had the right to assemble even in public spaces as long as
we were not armed and the gathering was peaceful."
Despite the claims of the Judge,
Article 498 of the Penal Code does not address the holding of
educational workshops in private homes. Rather it discusses the
establishment of groups or societies. According to this Article,
"anyone with any aim, who without an official permit, engages
in the creation of a group, society or the branch of a society
with more than 2 members nationally or internationally under whatever
name or title, is subject to a term in prison ranging from 3 months
to 5 years." Of course it seems that the honorable judge
had invented a new law.
The final scene in this bizarre
event was the enactment of the confessional show…"they
placed all the women in one room, a few agents entered the room
with video equipment and cameras. The judge who was a wearing
a turban and was from Isfahan, and who adamantly continued to
believe that our aim was to take 4 husbands, and only allow our
husbands to take one wife, proceeded to advise us. He claimed
that we had been fooled by the Campaign and Mr. Dolatshah, and
while dispersing kindly advice, he invited us to listen to the
words of Mr. Dolatshah.
Two agents escorted Mr. Dolatshah
into the room. With swollen and red eyes and shaky legs, the Mr.
Dolatshah brought before us, did not resemble our host of previous
day. He sat down on a chair before us. Mr. Dolatshah proceeded
to apologize for the problems that we had faced.
But the interrogator, despite
the fact that scrutiny of opinion is illegal, kept pressing Mr.
Dolatshah to introduce himself fully, to confess who he really
was, and to explain about his ideas and beliefs….finally
Reza Dolatshah, with a mild and kind tone, which was the only
thing familiar about the man sitting in front of us announced:
"I am Reza Dolatshah. I am an activist and I support the
rights and demands of workers…"
From:http://www.wluml.org/english/newsfulltxt.shtml?cmd[157]=x-157-556726