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Iran: Suspend Heavy Sentence for
Women’s Rights Activist
November 10, 2007 – (HRW) The head of Iran’s
Judiciary, Ayatollah Shahrudi, should suspend a two-and-a-half-year
prison sentence upheld this week against women’s rights activist
Delaram Ali, Human Rights Watch said today. Such a step is permitted
under Iranian law. The government should also release at least 10
other students and activists it has detained for their participation
in peaceful demonstrations and campaigns.
On July 2, Branch 15 of the Revolutionary Court
in Tehran sentenced Ali, a 24-year-old sociology student and women’s
rights activist who works with the One Million Signatures Campaign
for Equality, to two years and 10 months in prison and 10 lashes
for participating in a peaceful demonstration on June 12, 2006,
which police and security forces had violently disrupted. On November
4, Branch 36 of the Appeals Court in Tehran upheld her conviction
on charges of “acting against national security” and
“advertising against the system,” but reduced her sentence
to two and a half years. It is not clear whether her sentence still
includes lashing. Human Rights Watch opposes lashing in all circumstances
as a cruel and inhuman punishment, illegal under international human
rights law. Court authorities have informed Ali that she is to begin
serving her prison sentence on November 10.
“Instead of punishing a young woman for peacefully
protesting, the Iranian government should hold security forces accountable
for violently disrupting a demonstration of women activists,”
said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch.
Ali’s sentence suggests a new intensity in
the government’s crackdown on campaigners for the equal rights
of women, in contrast to prior periods when the authorities have
handed down only suspended sentences. Women’s rights activists
in Iran who spoke to Human Rights Watch have expressed concern that
they may face even further governmental persecution.
In the past month, the authorities have arrested
at least three other women’s rights campaigners. On September
25, eight security officers in the northwestern city of Sanandaj
arrested women’s rights activist Ronak Safazadeh, 21, as she
was leaving her house to go to work. Eighteen days after her arrest,
court authorities informed her family that they had extended a temporary
detention order against Safazadeh for an additional month. Safazadeh’s
family has not been able to meet with her, and the court has not
allowed lawyers who have volunteered to represent her to examine
her case files.
On October 23, seven security officers arrested
Hana Abdi, 21, another women’s rights campaigner in the city
of Sanandaj, as she left her grandfather’s home.
Both Abdi and Safazadeh are members of the Azarmehr
Association of Women of Kurdistan, a group that organizes capacity-building
workshops and sports activities for women in the city of Sanandaj
and elsewhere in the Iranian province of Kurdistan. Abdi and Safazadeh
are also active with the One Million Signatures Campaign for Equality.
In the last month, the authorities also have arrested
a number of other activists. On November 4, security forces arrested
student activist Ali Azizi at his home in Tehran. On November 8,
security forces searched the home of student activist Ali Nikonesbati
and arrested him. Both students are members of the Office of the
Consolidation of Unity, a prominent reformist student organization
with branches in universities throughout Iran. Nikonesbati and Azizi
have been vocal critics of the government’s crackdown on peaceful
student activists. The authorities have not announced any charges
against them.
Human Rights Watch is also concerned about the
cases of five students in the southwestern city of Ahvaz. On October
16, security forces in the city of Ahvaz arrested five student journalists
and activists on the campus of Chamran University – Roozbeh
Karimi, Javad Tavalli, Javad Alikhan, Mehdi Mansouri, and Raee Nikzad.
In statements to the press, Farzad Farhadirad, the deputy of the
Prosecutor’s Office of the General and Revolutionary Courts
in the city of Ahvaz, claimed that the government carried out the
arrests to preempt the students from distributing fliers that “insulted
Islamic sanctities.” Article 513 of the Islamic Penal Codes
of Iran criminalizes “insults” to any of the “Islamic
sanctities.”
“Women’s rights activists, student
activists – no one who criticizes the government is safe in
Iran,” said Whitson. “These arrests should be seen as
a sign of the Ahmadinejad administration’s utter desperation
and insecurity about the basis of its own popular support in the
country.”
Human Rights Watch called on the Iranian government
to amend or abolish provisions that impose criminal penalties for
the free expression of ideas, such as Article 513 and 514 of the
Islamic Penal Codes, as well as vague “security” laws
that unduly restrict the right to peaceful association and assembly,
such as Articles 500, 610 and 618.
From:http://hrw.org/english/docs/2007/11/10/iran17302.htm
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